Amir Zaki
Ron Nagle

Alexander Kroll
Jason Hirata

Akio Takamori
Danny Lyon
Mary Ann Peters
Luis Tomasello
Eric Elliott
Andrew Witkin
Jeffry Mitchell
Steve Davis
Introductions: David Huffman
Adam Sorensen
Francois Van Reenen
Beth Campbell
Claude Zervas
Stephanie Syjuco
Todd Simeone
Jason Teraoka
Vik Muniz

Scott Foldesi
Mark Mumford
Claire Cowie
Yunhee Min
Roy McMakin
Tania Kitchell
Richard Rezac
Carlos Vega
Eric Elliott
Squeak Carnwath
Maki Tamura

Margot Quan Knight
Gary Hill
Message In A Bottle
Adam Sorensen
Claire Cowie
Bing Wright
Roy McMakin
Katrina Moorhead
Claudette Schreuders
Marcelino Goncalves
room X room
Rashid Johnson
Scott Foldesi
Shaun O'Dell
Claude Zervas
Amir Zaki
Glenn Rudolph
Angela Fraleigh
Jeffry Mitchell
Steve Davis
Mary Ann Peters
Mark Mumford
Roy McMakin
Geoffrey Chadsey
Patrick Holderfield
Junctions
Todd Simeone
Claire Cowie
Laura Letinsky
Keith Tilford
Mary Ann Peters
Jeffry Mitchell
Richard Rezac
Stephanie Syjuco
Claude Zervas
Squeak Carnwath
Marcelino Gonçalves
Peter Schuyff
Tom Baldwin
Tania Kitchell
Jeffry Mitchell

Shaun O'Dell

Mark Mumford

Efrain Almeida

Keith Tilford
Glenn Rudolph
Claire Cowie
Patrick Holderfield

Ramona Trent
Roy McMakin
Yunhee Min

Claude Zervas

Casey Keeler

Henry Turmon
Lisa Liedgren
Laurie Reid
Amir Zaki
Adam Ross
Richard Rezac
Geoffrey Chadsey
Claire Cowie
Michelle Fierro



Beth Campbell
May 7 - June 6, 2009


 

Installation view

 

 

James Harris Gallery is pleased to present our first solo exhibition of sculpture and drawing by Beth Campbell. The artist practice ranges from video and installation investigating spatial repetition, to drawing and sculpture.  The exhibition will include three hanging sculpture and two drawings. 

Finding meaning in the multiplicity of signs that is found today's culture, Campbell’s mobiles and drawings abstractly communicate a network of issues that often combine both personal and public information.  They suggest connection and interruption; and reveal outcomes that lead to multiple possibilities.  Reminiscent of flow-charts, both the elegant hanging sculptures and the drawings become reductive gestures that investigate form, line and volume. 

Although non referential, Campbell's mobiles are not without resonance.  Visually they formally lie with structure and segmentation but their implication of extendibility extends beyond their physical constraints.  The artist conceives them as matter of fact strategies for “drawings in space” formed around a specific investigation.  For example, “The Long Pause” is an investigation of truth, reality and fiction.  The bends and twists of Campbell’s wire not only are the endgame of the action of her hand, but also become the physical synapse representing a peculiar incident or investigation of subjectivity.  Thus the entire work becomes meditation on the limits of possibilities. 

Seen as a whole, the exhibition evokes a symptomatic hierarchy of continuity, often resulting in finality or renewal.  In Campbell’s hands, implied social, technological, and architectural systems are destined from stasis in our current viral environment. 

 

 

 


 

 


Something unexpected, 2009
Steel wire
30" x 30"

 


 
 

Not a table, 2009
Steel wire
72" x 48"

 
 

Vicissitude, 2009
Steel wire
60" x 42""

 
 

The Long Pause, 2008
Steel wire
95" x 35"

 
 

My potential future based on present circumstances (4/27/09)
2009
Graphite on paper
50" x 37.5"

 
 

Detail of above

 
 
My potential future based on present circumstances (4/20/09)
2009
Graphite on paper
62" x 40.5"
 
 
Detail of above