The gallery is pleased to announce a two-person exhibition of work by Brooklyn-based painter James Hyde and Chicago-based photographer Jessica Labatte.
Generating a revisionist model of painting, James Hyde’s “Glass Box” paintings appear simultaneously illusionistic and literal. The paint, paper, wood, and other materials used to make the painting aren't so much painting materials as physical surrogates for painterly activity. To imagine Hyde's “Glass Boxes” as sculpture would be to see them as slap-stick contraptions caught in the act of painting themselves into being. These works redeem themselves as painting through the magic of what Duchamp called "delay in glass". By this logic the dimensional contents of the box inhere as inscription on the frontal plane of glass. This way, the illusionistic flow of traditional painting is reversed-- instead of seeing space in a flat surface, Hyde's petri dishes of formalist tropes present his dimensional constructions flatly.
Also on view is photographer Jessica Labatte’s work. Her work has been involved with the liminal space between photography, sculpture, and painting that can be generated through studio experimentations with reflective surfaces, light, color, and scale. Labatte creates color inkjet photographs of sculptural assemblages set up in her studio, but the resulting prints are never straightforward renditions. Rather, Labatte’s works are sophisticated abstractions that avoid the appearance of mindless Photoshop reverie by skillfully juxtaposing complex shapes and colors and by offering hints of the physical materials of her assemblages such as mirrors and cut paper.
Official Website: http://hortongallery.com/exhibition/179/james-hyde-and-jessica-labatte
Added by Horton Gallery on January 3, 2013