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Mariah Robertson

May 5 – June 16, 2017

Mariah Robertson 142

Mariah Robertson
142
2016
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
32 x 30 inches (81.3 x 76.2 cm)
MRo 56

Mariah Robertson 303

Mariah Robertson
303
2016
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
46 x 50 inches (116.8 x 127 cm)
MRo 57

Mariah Robertson 066

Mariah Robertson
066
2017
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
50 x 50 inches (127 x 127 cm)
MRo 62​

Mariah Robertson 052

Mariah Robertson
052
2017
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
50 x 50 inches (127 x 127 cm)
MRo 60

Mariah Robertson 062

Mariah Robertson
062
2017
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
51 x 50 inches (129.5 x 127 cm)
MRo 61

Mariah Robertson 024

Mariah Robertson
024
2017
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
30 x 50 inches (76.2 x 127 cm)
MRo 53

Mariah Robertson 017

Mariah Robertson
017
2017
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
47 x 50 inches (119.4 x 127 cm)
MRo 54

Mariah Robertson 337

Mariah Robertson
337
2016
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
30 x 24 inches (76.2 x 61 cm)
MRo 52

Mariah Robertson 335

Mariah Robertson
335
2016
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
30 x 26 inches (76.2 x 66 cm)
MRo 59

Mariah Robertson 063

Mariah Robertson
063
2017
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
69 x 50 inches (175.3 x 127 cm)
MRo 55

Mariah Robertson 083

Mariah Robertson
083
2017
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
48 x 50 inches (121.9 x 127 cm)
MRo 69

Mariah Robertson 080

Mariah Robertson
080
2017
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
50 x 50 inches (127 x 127 cm)
MRo 66

Mariah Robertson 086

Mariah Robertson
086
2017
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
93 x 47 inches (236.2 x 119.4 cm)
MRo 73

Mariah Robertson 084

Mariah Robertson
084
2017
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
44 x 50 inches (111.8 x 127 cm)
MRo 68

Mariah Robertson to be titled

Mariah Robertson
to be titled
2017
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
76 x 49 inches (193 x 124.5 cm)
MRo 74

Mariah Robertson 076

Mariah Robertson
076
2017
Unique chemical treatment on RA-4 paper
54 x 50 inches (137.2 x 127 cm)
MRo 64

11R is pleased to present an exhibition of new works by American artist Mariah Robertson, on view May 5 – June 9, 2017 in 11R’s East Gallery. Robertson will present several bodies of work, installed together to present a larger thesis about representation, reproduction, and ideas concerning psychological power dynamics. The works exhibited include a new series of photograms, tintypes, sketchbook drawings and various ephemera.

 

The largest groups of work featured in the exhibition are recent photograms, for which Robertson is known. These works are made from basic elements of the traditional darkroom, color filters in the enlarger, and the artist’s hands masking light from the lens or moving a cardboard dodger and burn masks, as her left foot sets off short bursts of light with a foot pedal.  The resulting images are evidence of the un-witnessed, intuitive, corporeal, performance that occurs between Robertson, her materials and the dark.

 

All the photographic paper works exhibited have a highly considered yet problematic and active relationship to their own frames. Just as the work comes directly out of Robertson’s physical actions in the darkroom, her presentation of the work in their frames – sliced, curling, and crammed – asserts the material work in a way that echoes her effort in the darkroom. The deliberate presentation is a collaboration with the artist’s framer, who provides regularity and precision to the artist’s degenerate manipulation of photo paper.

 

Shown for the first time in this exhibition is a series of male nude tintypes. A crew of Robertson, tintype artist Rowan Hasty and an assistant went to the homes of models to make from start to finish wet plate collodion prints. For nearly a decade Robertson has been engaged in a long slow performance piece concerned with the inversion of standard gender binary power dynamics. Through the language of photography Robertson reverses the canonized roles of male and female. This content is coupled with Robertson’s joy of process, which consciously foregrounds its own construction via conspicuous manipulation. Robertson describes the tintypes series as:

 

“Taking that all up a notch, I've been making, with help, field tintypes in the small New York apartments of young men (cis-males, this time). My period started in 1990 and they were all chosen because they were born 1991-1999. i.e. are legal. The whole enterprise is a sort of difficulty fetish. And the result is an obsessively beautiful silvery 8x10" object that you can hold in your hands or trade."

 

Mariah Robertson was born 1975 and graduated from UC Berkeley (BA) and Yale (MFA), and currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. Recent solos include M+B, Los Angeles, CA and American Contemporary, NY. Her work is included in the permanent collections of The Museum of Modern Art, NY, and Los Angeles County Museum of Art, CA