Pushing and pulling, pulling and pushing

Mike Kelley
November 3, 2018 – February 16, 2019

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The 500 Capp Street Foundation is proud to present one of the most influential artists of our time: Mike Kelley (1954–2012).

The David Ireland House at 500 Capp Street is a body in question, the former home cum museum of late Bay Area conceptualist David Ireland. 500 Capp Street is an architectural body in pieces—fragmented—its limits, interior and exterior, are ambiguous and extensive; its forms, literal or metaphorical, are no longer confined to the recognizably human; its power no longer lies in the model of unity, but in the allusion of the fragmentary. A domestic space, deliberately provoking disquiet and unease, in order to reveal the hidden undertones of the institution.

Here, contemporary conversations and ideas merge with historic voices, echoing through the foundation like feedback. This exhibition brings together artworks from Mike Kelley’s Educational Complex (1995) and Day Is Done (2004–2005) into the uncanny environment of 500 Capp Street. With a wide range of media, Kelley’s work explores themes as varied as punk politics, religious rituals, social class, and repressed memory. Using architectural models to represent schools he attended, Educational Complex presents forgotten spaces as frames for private trauma, both real and imagined. These works are intended to evoke not only Kelley’s own memories but also broader social issues concerning childhood. Educational Complex is a series of artworks that investigate these ‘blank architectural areas’—unobtainable memories from school experiences that lay dormant or repressed. Within his Extracurricular Activity Projective Reconstruction series, Kelley attempted to produce narratives that would fill in these blanks. Pushing and pulling, pulling and pushing becomes a site of excavation, a visual framework to actively contemplate what is not there, a structural constellation looking at the ‘just past,’ in order to map the ideological confines of the present.

At the heart of the exhibition, presented on the floor in Ireland’s upstairs Parlor Room, is Kelley’s Mechanical Toy Guts (1991–2012). This artwork spans the gap between Kelley’s Educational Complex, as well as Day Is DoneMechanical Toy Guts, is one of Kelley’s last completed artworks; it consists of stripped sound boxes from children’s toys arranged in two groupings: white sound boxes on a white textile, and black boxes on a black textile. While the cacophony emanating from the sound boxes evokes his early performance and experimental recordings, the piece also references Craft Morphology Flow Chart, his genealogical groupings of stuffed animals from the early 1990s. The toys’ deconstruction and the color-coordination of the sound boxes are subtle and poignant reminders that Kelley’s work, even at its most theoretical, is grounded in the real world.

Day Is DoneExtracurricular Activity Projective Reconstructions #2-32 (2004–05) features 31 carnivalesque videos based on photographs found in high school yearbooks. Kelley’s intention was to make 365 videos using the year (a series of 365 tapes) as a structure relating to natural cycles, creating a symbolist artwork. Originally presented as a 50 channel video/sculptural installation, this version of Day Is Done has been re-edited into a single channel format installed in the Garage. The photographs are carefully selected grainy yearbook pictures, each paired with a detailed reconstruction by the artist. These found, plausible, and fantastic images represent ritual forms and a social unconscious of Midwest Americana. This work creates an archive for the recovery of missing time, a visual guide where fiction and memory become confused. Installed throughout 500 Capp Street, the photographs from Extracurricular Activity Projective Reconstructions #2-32 (2004–05), are presented both fluidly and architecturally, salon-style.

For this exhibition, four iconic David Ireland artworks will be on view. Harp (1992), Untitled (Capillary Action,) 1995, Irish Headache (1987), and Flag of Spain, (1992–1994). These works were generously loaned from the Oakland Museum of California, University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, as well as a private collection in San Francisco. All four sculptures were made during a specific time period when both Ireland and Kelley shared an exhibition experience in Madrid, Spain, titled The Savage Garden, curated by Dan Cameron. These artworks have not been displayed in 500 Capp Street in over twenty years.

The critical ideas of play and theater in Kelley’s work, and the language that sustains these ideas, have become the driving force behind this exhibition. In expanding and reconstructing the physical infrastructure of Ireland’s home, a negotiation between Ireland and Kelley is made: a stage is set, space is considered, architecture is confused, and it becomes difficult to separate the psychological borders between what is real and imagined.

Organized by Bob Linder and Diego Villalobos

I (HEART) MIKE KELLEY

A talk by Matthew Higgs
Thursday, November 8, 2018

Matthew Higgs is an artist, curator and the director of White Columns, New York City’s oldest alternative art space. Matthew Higgs will discuss his 2003 exhibition Capp Street Project: 20th Anniversary Exhibition that featured Mike Kelley’s, Light (Time)-Space Modulator (2003)and how working with Kelley on this exhibition remains a highlight of his life both professional and otherwise.

Mike Kelley and the Proposal for the Decoration of an Island of Conference Rooms (With Copy Room) for an Advertising Agency Designed by Frank Gehry

A talk by Paul Schimmel
Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Paul Schimmel is an American curator of contemporary art based in Los Angeles. Schimmel served as the chief curator of The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, from 1990 until 2012, where he organized numerous exhibitions. From 2013 through 2017, he was a vice president and partner with the art gallery Hauser Wirth and co-founder of Hauser Wirth & Schimmel in Los Angeles. Schimmel has played a pivotal role in establishing Southern California’s unique contemporary art scene as a potent force on the global cultural stage. In a slew of memorable exhibitions and publications, he has examined the artists whose work and lives have defined the city.

Photo credit: Daniell Trese

Amulet or He calls it chaos

March 9 – June 1, 2019

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I think my worst demon is myself….I don’t like to do the same thing over and over again. I like to search out the new frontier and go past the place where I really understand what I’m doing. That’s excitement, to get out in space where some wires might get crossed and there’s no way back to earth.

-David Ireland

And that song is our amulet.

-Roberto Bolaño

The dates become stacked like firewood…1975, 1991, 1992, 2014, 2016, 1985, 1983, 2015, 2003,

1990, 1987, 1980, 2012, 1971, 2018, 2019, 1999, and so on.

Amulet drifts through 500 Capp Street, providing a story about transformations taking place inside “the institution.” He calls it chaos overlaps this story, unfolding an abstract narrative, shifting viewers’ expectations whenever possible. Through the wall, up the stairs, into the explosions, your nose alive, your ears alarmed. The windows shout to the street, while condensation builds inside the cube. Back down the stairs, your reflection is caught in the green hue of her mirror, he is she, and your hands warm over his fire. In the house, installed side by side or overlapping, each work is pulled from a distinct narrative thread.

Abstract as this may seem, exhibitions allow us the opportunity to restructure narrative, to slow down time. Building monuments, or maybe moments that represent meaning—using sculpture, video, and painting as a way to tell stories. This exhibition reflects courage and mirrors, desire and pleasure, and it will sustain and survive, even as destruction or construction continues constantly. It is science-fiction, fantasy, and authenticity of the most hopeful sort.

Amulet or He calls it chaos, chooses the illogical, philosophical, yet recognizable material world of Magical Realism, while also addressing the power and sensitivity of architecture, gender, politics, and mortality. Crossing wires, searching for new frontiers and getting lost while doing it, Amulet or He calls it chaos, is two simultaneous exhibitions, but also one.

The exhibition will include works by Mathis Altmann, Tony Cokes, Moyra Davey, Michel Houellebecq, Hans Haacke, Katharina Grosse, Rashid Johnson, Sherrie Levine, Mark McCloud, Cady Noland, Will Rogan, Jorge Satorre, Cindy Sherman, Gabriel Sierra, Oscar Tuazon, and Andra Ursuţa.

Organized by Bob Linder and Diego Villalobos

Mark McCloud and Will Rogan in Conversation

Friday, May 10, 2019
7:00 – 9:00 PM

McCloud and Rogan discuss: Finding meaning in objects, relating to the world through personal narratives, and the desire to both connect and disassociate from culture through alternative strategies such as art, magic, mysticism, psychedelia and time itself.

Will Rogan makes photographs and sculpture. He teaches at The San Francisco Art Institute and Mills College and lives on a houseboat in Sausalito, CA. Mark McCloud holds the most comprehensive collection of decorated LSD blotter paper in the world, housed in San Francisco’s Institute of Illegal Images. Both artists are currently featured in 500 Capp Street’s current exhibition, Amulet or He calls it chaos.

Drag-Out

Nina Canell
June 22 – July 6, 2019

In the Garage and on the terrace: The 500 Capp Street Foundation is proud to present Drag-Out, a solo exhibition by the Swedish born, Berlin-based artist, Nina Canell, whose practice has consistently addressed material and immaterial sculptural relations.

Drag-Out draws significant attention to the infrastructure of our built environment and its relationship to natural material creep. At the center of the exhibition is Energy Budget, (Nina Canell & Robin Watkins, 2017-18): a two-part video that juxtaposes a slow-moving leopard slug on an electrical switchboard, with a series of large passages that have been built into housing complexes at Telegraph Bay, Hong Kong. 

The closely framed video shifts our sense of scale and heightens the slug’s textured body. Guided by light, humidity and smell, the subject operates like a vessel transferring energy that is contingent to its environment. The second part of the video takes place in Hong Kong’s Telegraph Bay, where at the end of the 19th century, the island’s first subsea telegraphy cable was installed. Slowly zooming out, the video reveals large architectural passageways known as dragon holes, that were designed to allow dragons to descend from the mountains to drink and bathe in the ocean, while also creating portals for energy to move freely through the city. By combining real-time motion with a pneumatic zoom lens, the video is caught in a hesitant symbiosis. 

The slow-moving and surreal undertones of the video are carried unto a series of sculptures installed on the Foundation’s terrace. Both sculptures in the exhibition are materially diverse, allowing a space between the synthetic and organic to function as a conductor of energy and information. Brief Syllable (Bare), 2017, is a short segment of a subsea umbilical cable, a section of cut infrastructure that literally exposes the engineering of transfer and exchange. Gum Drag, 2017, is comprised of two sculptures made from mastic gum––a viscous tree resin extracted from the pistachio tree––that slowly transforms through the duration of the exhibition. Operating on an unhurried timescale, the gum responds to material friction, temperature, and humidity, as it spreads across the terrace floor. The sculpture follows a gradual, viscous trajectory, such that the natural surroundings of the outdoor space at 500 Capp Street will effect the transformation of these works over the two-month long exhibition.  

Nina Canell (b. 1979, Växjö, Sweden) lives and works in Berlin. Recent solo exhibitions have been held at S.M.A.K., Ghent (2018); Kunstmuseum St. Gallen (2018); the Artist’s Institute, New York (2017); Centre d’art contemporain d’Ivry – le Crédac, Paris (2017), Arko Art Center, Seoul (2015); Moderna Museet, Stockholm (2014); Camden Arts Centre, London (2014) and Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin (2012-2013). Her group exhibition history includes the Venice, Sydney, Lyon, and Liverpool Biennials; exhibitions at the Museo Tamayo, Mexico City; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Palais de Tokyo, Paris and the Fridericianum, Kassel.