Free Soil, Jun 19 – Jul 22, 2011

Past: 55 Chrystie St

Installation view, Free Soil, Canada, New York, 2011


Artworks

Aidas Bareikis,

Looking backwards over the shoulder into the woods,

2011,

72 × 48 × 72 in (182.88 × 121.92 × 182.88 cm)

Found objects

Aidas Bareikis,

The corpse of a young wind,

2011,

108 × 60 in (274.32 × 152.40 cm)

Acrylic and dirt on canvas

Lily Ludlow,

Untitled 12,

2011,

20 × 16 in (50.80 × 40.64 cm)

Acrylic and graphite on canvas

Lily Ludlow,

Untitled 11,

2011,

24 × 30 in (60.96 × 76.20 cm)

Acrylic and graphite on canvas

Robin Peck,

Plaster Maquettes,

2008,

Dimensions variable

Plaster over found cardboard boxes

Huma Bhabha,

Centaur,

2000,

16 × 24 × 48 in (40.64 × 60.96 × 121.92 cm)

Wood, styrofoam, jacket

Jeff Davis,

E.L.P. Alp Astrum,

2011,

24 × 18 ½ in (60.96 × 46.99 cm)

Gouache on paper

Keith McCulloch, Keith McCulloch,

Untitled 1,

2011,

12 ½ × 10 in (31.75 × 25.4 cm)

Watercolor on paper

Press Release

Thus we stand now between two infinities, ˜ the infinity of the Past, and the infinity of the Future; and the infinity of the Future is equal to the infinity of the Past. In comparison with these untold spaces before and after, what, indeed, are the six thousand years of human history ? In the contemplation of Man, what littleness ! what grandeur ! how diminutive in the creation ! how brief his recorded history ! and yet how vast in hopes ! how majestic and transcendent in the Future !

If there be any analogy between his Life on earth and that of the frailest plant or shell-fish, as now seen in the light of science, he must still be in his earliest and most helpless infancy. In vain speak of Antiquity in his history ; for all his present records are as a day, an hour, a moment, in the unimaginable immensity of duration which seems to await the globe and its inhabitants. In the sight of our distant descendants, successive eras of the brief span which we call History will melt into one; and as to present vision stars far asunder seem near together, so Nimrod and Sesostris, Alexander and Caesar, Tamerlane and Napoleon, will seem to be contemporaries. Nor is it any exaggeration to suppose that in the unborn ages, illumined by a tuth now, alas ! too dimly perceived, the class of warriors and conquerors, of which these are signal types, will become extinct, ˜ like the gigantic land reptiles and monster crocodileans belonging to a departed period of zoological hi! story.

-From Charles Sumner "The Law of Human Progress" 1848