1. Asja Jung solos at Black & White Gallery // Chelsea

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    artwork: Asja Jung - From the Series Neighbors, 2007, Acrylic on canvas - 60x60 inches, Images courtesy of Black & White Gallery  

    New York City - Black & White Gallery // Chelsea is proud to present The Proper Animal - the spring’08 season-long multidisciplinary program comprised of three successive solo exhibitions.  All three participating artists utilize highly original and sometimes disturbing animal iconography which inevitably brings ethical considerations into play.  The program title addresses complex issues of animal propriety in the context of human-animal power relations.  Whether each artist operates in an intuitive, sub-ethical way focusing on form rather than meaning remains an open question.  On exhibition March 13 – April 12, 2008.

    artwork: Asja Jung, From the Series Neighbors, Acrylic on canvas 96x40 inches - 2007In her solo debut exhibition, Asja Jung teasingly conspires with the animal  to render human authority ridiculous. Her paintings of humanoid apes in heavily ornate environments present a meeting of human and animal wherein it is hard to establish what is happening. The figures appear strangers to their surroundings. Their own bodies are reminiscent of Simon Dykes’ character in Will Self’s novel “Great Apes” - a primatomorphoised protagonist who struggles with the horrifying delusion that he is really a human trapped in a chimp's body. This discomfort can be interpreted as menacing or suggest a playful exchange between the human and animal.  Jung places the particular importance of “the look” of an animal’s eyes by skillfully interpreting the troubling or even accusatory power of the animal gaze. 

    Asja Jung is a native of Germany and currently lives & works in Astoria, Queens. Her education combines the study of art and plastination. Prior to earning a BFA degree in 2001 at the Academy of Art in Kiel, Germany, she studied varied methods of preserving and documenting the human and animal body at the University of Bochum in Bochum, Germany and at the Virchowsche Foundation in Berlin (1994-1997).

    Black and White Gallery // Chelsea is located at 636 West 28th Street, Ground Floor, New York, NY 10001.   
    Gallery Hours: Tuesday - Saturday, 11am - 6 pm.  For more information please contact the gallery at (212) 244 3007
    Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it    Website : www.blackandwhiteartgallery.com




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