Monday, 16 January 2012

Will Kurtz's Extra F***ing Ordinary opens at the Mike Weiss Gallery

Will Kurtz's Extra F***ing Ordinary opens at the Mike Weiss Gallery


Installation view of Will Kurtz's Extra F***ing Ordinary. Photo: Courtesy Mike Weiss Gallery.
  
NEW YORK, NY.- Mike Weiss Gallery presents Extra Fucking Ordinary, Will Kurtz's debut exhibition
at the gallery. The show consists of life size figural sculptures constructed of collaged torn sheets of
newspaper, wood, wire, screws, tape and everyday objects which depict the characters captured by
 Kurtz's iPhone camera lens.

Utilizing the observing eye of a curious urban voyeur, Kurtz spends large portions of his days combing
the streets of New York for his subjects, which are later transformed into sincere and amusing life-size
sculptures. It is not the subjects' aesthetic appeal that draws Kurtz as much as their essence and strong
representation of the multitude of prototypes that typify New York City: from an old married couple and
endearingly eccentric dog owners to curmudgeonly middle-aged smokers.

Kurtz’s sculptures openly reference real people engaged in real scenarios, be it posing for group shots
at a tourist attraction, walking their dog, awkwardly changing their clothes or reluctantly sweeping the
floors. Kurtz holds an admiringly holds a magnifying glass to the genre of subjects and scenes that are
commonly overlooked. The subjects collectively present a candid and unapologetic mosaic of New
Yorkers in their blunt, colorful, borderline-manic ways made of the same papers they read in coffee
shops and subways during their morning commute.

As important as the subjects to understanding Kurtz’s works is the medium—discarded and recycled
bits of print publication, DIY building and packaging supplies, along with everyday objects that bring a
sense of familiarity to the works. Kurtz leaves the subjects’ skin and clothes unpainted, inviting a closer
inspection of the kaleidoscopic bits of text and images that form each figure. By emphasizing the
technique and the material life of his figures, Kurtz diverges from such realist sculptors as Duane Hanson
 and Ron Mueck, famous for their meticulous replication of the human skin. Kurtz’s figures, therefore,
are more emblematic than realistic, reminding viewers they are constructs of Pop-culture references—
from daily savings coupons and scandalous political headlines to the cultural and fashion icons of the
style section and page six. Kurtz’s work is more closely affiliated with the everyday reverence seen in
Bill Cunningham’s snapshots of fashionable New Yorkers than any unifying sense of timeless existence.
 It is Kurtz’s own insouciant and humorous reminder of life’s temporality.

Will Kurtz received his MFA from the New York Academy of Art where he was the recipient of the
Postgraduate Fellowship, 2009 – 2010. His work is currently in the Eileen S. Kaminsky Family
Foundation,Jersey City; Tullman Collection, Chicago; Krupp Family Foundation, Boston and the
Collection Majudia, Montreal. Kurtz was born in Michigan, and currently lives and works in Brooklyn NY.

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