formatting
formatting
http://www.fourteen30.com
formatting
Artists          Exhibitions          Gallery          News         
formatting
formatting
formatting


NATASCHA SNELLMAN
May 14 - June 26, 2010
  


Fourteen30 Contemporary is pleased to present the work of Los Angeles-based artist Natascha Snellman. The opening reception
will be held on Friday, May 14, from 6 to 9 p.m., and the exhibition will be on view through June 26, 2010.

Gender metaphors and archetypes mix with corporeal sensibilities in Natascha Snellman’s recent photographs and sculpture.
Snellman’s works utilize surrogates from popular culture, the art world, and the animal kingdom to question relationships between
animal and man/woman, man and woman, and the other. Her work has been included in both Other Arrangements (Organized by
Diana Thater + Helen Varola, Pacifc Design Center, Los Angeles) and We Children of the Zoo (Rocksbox Contemporary Fine Art,
Portland.) Snellman holds degrees from the Art Center College of Design, and the Pacific Northwest College of Art.

Snellman’s exhibition continues the gallery's year-long collaboration with writer John Motley. As part of a continued commitment to
fostering vital discourse surrounding contemporary art, Fourteen30 Contemporary commissioned recent Creative Capital | Warhol
Foundation Arts Writers Grant recipient John Motley to produce a critical essay for each gallery exhibition through September 2010.
Each essay appears as part of a limited quantity of offset printed posters, available at the gallery or by request.

In an excerpt from his essay on Snellman, Motley writes:
“That Natascha Snellman lives and works in Los Angeles, where Hollywood seeps into the ruts of daily life under sunglasses and the
lowered brims of ball caps, may explain how the artist began cross-wiring ideas related to zoos and captivity with imagery shored from
the endless photo stream of tabloid culture. After all, we monitor celebrities and movie stars, in particular, with the guiltless entitlement
of watching animals pace their cages; we devour marital meltdowns, text message transcripts, and myth-deflating snapshots with the
effortlessness of breathing. Snellman’s sculptures and two-dimensional work, which are largely predicated on appropriation, reflect this
ravenous kind of looking. The work often employs materials related to zoos and animals (cages, python skin, and the faces of snarling
jungle cats), but, like a python, it also swallows images whole, from photographs of celebrity sex symbols (Nastassja Kinski, Brigitte
Bardot, Debbie Harry, et al) to similarly familiar forms, ideas, and figures throughout twentieth century art history. This approach is like
a collagist’s, in which the disjointed stimuli of the world are resuscitated through composition and context. Yet Snellman’s synthesis of
captive animals, sexualized female celebrities, and Modernism’s mostly male legacy create a stage to address how the objectifying
gaze defines us as subjects.

When we look, we aspire to master the object of our scrutiny, to transform knowledge into subjugating ownership. But, as Snellman’s
work so often reveals, this relationship between subject and object is not so plainly parasitic. That the animals at the zoo are prisoners
in their pens and cages is obvious, but the imprisonment of the watchers—who neither look away nor realize their gazes are never met
—is covert, insidious. The dynamic spirals into an uneasy symmetry: the subject holds the object captive and is, in turn, captivated by it.
When distinctions between empowerment and vulnerability blur, predator and prey may each be disguised as the other.”



John Motley is a Portland, Oregon-based arts writer, and a 2009 recipient of a Creative Capital | Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant.
From 2005 to 2009, he served as visual arts critic for The Portland Mercury, covering the city's evolving arts community. His writing on art,
literature, and music has also appeared in Art Papers, Pitchfork.com, Under the Radar, Resonance, Prefixmag.com, and The Oregonian.



Face Facade | Installation view
 
SNELL 1


L:Personage Playing Bankhead, 2010
R:Merci Lion, 2010, Merci Leo, 2010


 
SNELL 2


Personage Playing Bankhead (detail), 2010

 
SNELL 3


L:Kid in Hollywood, 2010
R:I can shoot dice, 2010
 
SNELL 4


L: I can shoot dice, 2010

 
SNELL 5


Baby Take A Bow (suspended), 2010

 
SNELL 6


 

formatting

formatting
formatting formatting
Formatting
Formatting

     © 2008
formatting
ManagedArtwork.com
formatting