twisted horizon', exposición individual del artista cubano alexandre arrechea
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8/3/2019 'Twisted Horizon', exposicin individual del artista cubano Alexandre Arrechea
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TWISTED HORIZON
Alexandre Arrechea
Twisted Horizon
Location: NYC
MagnanMetz Gallery
March 2nd - April 7th 2012
Magnan Metz Gallery is pleased to present the fourth solo exhibition for Alexandre Arrechea. The show will be on view from
March 2 April 7 with an opening reception Thursday, March 1st. The artist will be present.
Twisted Horizon presents a new series of work that explores Arrecheas interest in making unlikely connections betweenplaces and/or objects that have conventionally been perceived as unrelated, or opposed. Employing utilitarian structures
such as bridges, roads and buildings as a point of departure these elements appear suspended in hands like trophies, floating
in the air or simply in motion varying in their intensity and gesture. They represent possession, triumph of power, history and
progress, but can also signal care, preservation and love. Through these gestures one ultimately discovers the possibility of
transformation - changing the original take on the object.
Arrecheas work has always been imbued with architectural references steeped in history and personal experience. In this
body of work, the artist takes himself a step further and out of his own comfort zone to put a twist on places and objects that
bear no personal reference to him directly. He explains, "I have conceived this new exhibition as a metaphor to the potential
difficulty we experience when we relinquish certain stances or attitudes. By losing the security that comes with holding onto
all we know and the way in which we know it, we are propelled into emotional vertigo that can bring about an inevitable
change in our attitudes toward the unknown." One such example is the Ouaquaga Bridge, a 19th century historic treasure in
New York State known for its lenticular trusses. Arrechea converts this sound structure into a rolling bridge atop a rail ofroad tracks removing all sense of security or stability it was meant to represent. The Champlain Bridge, built in the early 1930s,
was demolished after being pronounced unsafe, but its removal brought along economic hardships to the community. Arre-
chea also includes the Zollamtssteg Bridge in Vienna a survivor of Wars. They are all embedded in a history of triumph and
failure. These structures are themselves subjected to their own past and present history. Any effort to subvert or change
them becomes a struggle.
Alexandre Arrechea was born in Trinidad, Cuba and graduated from the prestigious Superior Art Institute of Havana in 1994.
He was a founding member of the collective Los Carpinteros (1994-2003). As a solo artist Arrechea has exhibited extensively
in the US and abroad. In the spring of 2013 he will have monumental sculptures along the Park Avenue Malls as well as an
upcoming book on his work through the gallery. Arrechea represented his homeland in the first ever Cuban Pavilion at the
Venice Biennale (2011) and will participate in the 11th Havana Biennial in May 2012. Since his 2010 exhibition at Magnan
Metz, Arrechea has been the Spring BAMbill cover artist as well as featured in Hola Havana, Brooklyn Academy of Music as
part of the Si Cuba! Festival (2011). Recent exhibitions include The Global Africa Project, Museum of Arts and Design, New
York; Orange Tree at the Bronx Museum also used for a Pepsi campaign in the borough. He has participated in Portugal Arte
2010, Bienal del Pontevedra, Spain (2010), the Moscow Biennial (2009); Thessaloniki Biennial of Contemporary Art, Greece
and the Havana Biennial (2009).
For more information or images please contact the gallery at [email protected] or 212-244-2344