Space II: Sept. 2006 - Oct. 2006

RIMER CARDILLO
TATTOOED BIRD BOXES
A Traveler's Memo of Nature

Sept. 16 - Oct. 28, 2006

opening reception : 3-6 PM
Saturday, September 16th, 2006

Rimer Cardillo was born in 1944 in Montevideo, Uruguay. He received his MFA at the National School of Fine Arts, Montevideo in 1968, and later studied in Germany at the Weissenssee School of Art and Architecture, in Berlin, 1970, as well as the Leipzig School of Graphic Arts, Leipzig, 1971. Cardillo is a Professor of Art at the State University of New York, New Paltz. He lives and works both in New Paltz and New York City.
Cardillo's work reflects an intense relationship with ecology that involves both concerns and observations. Since the late 1960's, he has exhibited frequently both in the United States and internationally, often in installations.

Recent solo exhibitions are :

Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art, New Paltz, NY
Biennial of Venice, Italy
Bernice Steinbaum Gallery, Miami, FL
The Islip Art Museum, East Islip, NY
The Bronx Museum, NY
Cavin-Morris Gallery, NY
National Museum of Anthropology, Montevideo, Uruguay
Museo Fernando, Montevideo, Uruguay

Recent group exhibitions are :

Tate Modern, London UK
Dominik Rostworowski Gallery, Krakow, Poland
L'espace Alexandre Gallery, Paris, France
Medialia Gallery, New York, NY
The University of Scanton, PA
Meguro Museum, Tokyo, Japan
Chateau d'Argenteuil, Waterloo, Belgium

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Rimer Cardillo describes this most recent work :
 
These new series of boxes encapsulate environments, objects, and images that I came into contact with and imagined during my travels in the Amazon Rain Forest and in the landscape of New York's Hudson Valley.
These boxes from a traveler also represent ideas and thoguhts that I have played with while involved in different art projects in this last decade. I sketch things I see and images that come to mine while I traverse many realities and environments.
I work closely with carpenters and bronze casters, these boxes intend to show the excellent and sophistication of craftsmanship obtained by family trained, traditional artisans.
These containers and their objects, drawings in metal, ceramic pieces, engraved small bronzes, were finished for close examination and tactile contact with the materials. It is the inten for the view to experience the unity of concapt and craft as an expression of the human knowledge.
An excerpt from Karl Emil Willers' essay, written for the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art on Rimer Cardillo's exhibition, Impressions and Other Images of Memory :
 
For Cardillo, the box itself possesses a metaphorical plurality and psychological dualism; in some cases an object gather into a box had already appeared in a print, while in other instances items accumulated within a collection would only infiltrate into the artist's printmaking repertoire with time. Eventually, the Collection Boxes and their contents became the central subject matter and the primary source materials for Cardillo's art.

 

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