shift, skew, imitate

July 30 - Aug 3

Opening Tuesday, July 30 5 - 8 pm

featuring:

Elisabeth Molin

Yu Rim Chung

Marie Anine Møller

Furen Dai

Rebecca Krasnik

The exhibition explores fleeting connections between objects, images, and function. Through sculpture, video, photography and fresco painting, presentation and representation are put to the test and turned upside down. Each in their own way, the five artists work with how meaning and perception of objects and images change – over time, and with introduction of new technologies.

Elisabeth Molin is a multidisciplinary artist working with the hidden and overlooked to broaden a visual understanding. Elisabeth Molin holds a MA in Fine Arts from Royal College of Art London and has shown work at KW Institute, Berlin; Wiels, Brussels; Belmacz, London; No Show Space, London; PUBLICS, Helsinki; and ISCP, New York.

Yu Rim Chung is a Brooklyn-based sculptor working with found and common objects from domestic and industrial environments, creating new relationships between them through dense assemblage. Most recently she has shown work at SHISANWU, Queens; PS122 Gallery, New York and Field of Play Gallery, Brooklyn. She holds an MFA in Visual Arts from Rutgers University.

Marie Anine Møller is a Danish artist based in New York. She has a BA (Hons.) in Fine Art Photography from the Glasgow School of Art followed by an MFA in Sculpture from Pratt Institute, New York. Her work integrates photography, sculpture, installation, and text and explores contradictions in materials and social policy issues by questioning fixed states and definitions of value. Møller has previously exhibited at, among others, The Locker Room, Brooklyn, UNTITLED Miami, SPRING/BREAK Art Show, New York and Arden Asbæk Gallery, Copenhagen.

Furen Dai’s work explores the origins of language and how categorization structures and systems function within a broader social and political context. Recent exhibitions include Offworlds at YveYang gallery, the New England Triennial, Shelley and Donald Rubin Foundation, and the National Art Center, Tokyo. Dai holds an MFA from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University and a BA in Russian Language and Literature from Beijing Foreign Studies University.

Rebecca Krasnik works between photography and computer-generated images and places her images in artists books and sculptural installations. She holds an MFA from School of Visual Arts in New York and has shown work at The Danish Printmaker Association, Copenhagen; Greene House Gallery, Brooklyn; Galleri Image, Aarhus and AGA Works, Copenhagen.