Denny Dimin Gallery is pleased to announce Timeframe, a solo exhibition by Michael Mandiberg, which will be on view at the New York location from November 5 to December 23, 2021.
Timeframe features two ongoing bodies of work that investigate memory, illness, and the relationships we build in the spaces we create for learning and labor. Live Study, a durational performance which began in 2018, will appear in two of its forms: an archive of 850 hours (and counting) of live-streamed video documenting the artist’s painting sessions, and a series of oil portraits and related color studies. The subjects of the paintings are Mandiberg’s studio assistants, apprentices, and consultants from the past decades, surrounded by the instruments, objects and technologies they used and imagery of the projects on which they were staffed. Timeframe includes the first chapters of this larger project, from 2004 to 2009, which includes a period when the artist had aggressive cancer. Evidence of how illness and its treatment stressed their bodymind surfaces throughout the exhibition. During this time, Mandiberg relied on assistants to meet external demands to remain productive, though the fog of illness left the artist dependent on digital archives to remember the details.
The subjects of the portraits are surrounded by documents relating to their work in the studio, such as letters of recommendation (Carlo has grown immensely) and emails that combine work and personal realities (The surgery was more intense than I or the doctors expected), over-painted with color studies. The studies are numerous because the artist, who has primarily worked as a conceptual, digital artist, learned to paint in the process of painting those who once learned from them. In 2019, The Whitney Museum of American Art’s artport platform began exhibiting the Live Study videos, which now extend for nearly a thousand hours. These videos will run throughout the exhibition.
Each Live Study portrait begins with a photograph of the subject from the time they worked in the studio, from which Mandiberg composites together a grayscale digital collage and prints them on canvas. Following classical painting techniques, the artist builds up layers of grisaille, oil glazes and velatura to yield luminous depth. The size of each portrait corresponds with the number of hours the assistant worked, and the pricing corresponds with the amount they were paid over the course of their work with Mandiberg. Painting sizes therefore range from Jessa Mendez (9 hours, 2004) at 3 x 3 inches to Simon Jolly (636 hours, 2007-2009) at 32 x 20 inches. The artist has made two copies of each portrait, one of which they will give to each former assistant as a gift. Mandiberg’s technique preserves the pixelation of the source material in some places, while painting over it in others. The contrast between brushstroke and pixel symbolizes how we rely on digital archives to create and maintain memories.
Michael Mandiberg began the second body of work in the exhibition, Zoom Paintings, during the early days of the coronavirus pandemic. As a coping mechanism and a way to memorialize this new yet increasingly common form of human interaction, Mandiberg began painting the skewed background of a participant from their numerous Zoom meetings. Mandiberg paints the bedrooms, office spaces, kitchens, empty walls, ceilings, and views out their windows in 6 x 11 inches, the proportions of a Zoom video. The artist has, however, omitted the figure that sat there, reinforcing a sense of loneliness and disembodiment. The Zoom Paintings continue Live Study’s themes of memory, loss and isolation, and likewise posit survival through support and connection.
In November 2020, the gallery exhibited ten of the earliest Zoom Paintings in a Zoom meeting room accessible through the Virtual section of the Denny Dimin Gallery website. In Timeframe, these paintings will be exhibited IRL for the first time, in a grid of paintings, as if in a large meeting. They will also be presented through Zoom again, accessible via the Virtual platform, as well as a tablet in the exhibition space.
The exhibition is accompanied by a catalog, which includes essays by danilo machado, Christiane Paul, and Michael Mandiberg.
Mandiberg received an MFA from California Institute of the Arts and a BA from Brown University. Mandiberg’s projects have been presented at the Whitney Museum of American Art, The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), The New Museum, Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Denny Dimin Gallery, Art-in-Buildings Financial District Project Space, Arizona State University Library/Museum, Eyebeam, and Transmediale amongst others. Mandiberg’s work has been written about widely, including Artforum, Art in America, ARTnews, The New York Times, and The New Yorker. Mandiberg is a Professor of Media Culture at the College of Staten Island/CUNY and is on the Doctoral Faculty at the CUNY Graduate Center. Mandiberg is also founder of the New York Arts Practicum and co-founder of Art+Feminism.
We invite you to join us for the opening reception of Michael Mandiberg’s solo exhibition Timeframe on Friday November 5th from 6-8pm. Masks will be required for entry.
Michael Mandiberg’s Timeframe exhibition gives the viewer a window into a period of time when they had to deal with the breakdown of their own body.
The Zoom Paintings is presented on the occasion of Michael Mandiverg’s IRL exhibition Timeframe from November 5th to December 23rd, 2021. One painting on view each day, for a total of thirty-two paintings.
Michael Mandiberg presents two ongoing bodies of work related to themes of memory, illness, and building relationships through work and learning.
artport is the Whitney Museum’s portal to Internet art and an online gallery space for commissions of net art and new media art. Originally launched in 2001, artport provides access to original art works commissioned specifically for artport by the Whitney.
Review of Michael Mandiberg’s “The Zoom Paintings” in The Economist.
We have selected and spoken to artists living and working in Berlin, Denmark, and New York City to reveal new artistic perspectives that their isolating experience created, taking inspiration from proximity, the feeling of home, the airy and empty cities as well as transforming the now constant digital experiences into tangible pieces.
For this upcoming exhibition, launching November 12th, the works will be presented in the digital sphere where they were born. The gallery will present the artworks on a public Zoom every day through the run of the show.
Published to coincide with the artist’s solo exhibition by the same name, Michael Mandiberg: Timeframe reviews two new bodies of work – Zoom Paintings and Live Study. The catalog includes essays by Christiane Paul, Curator of New Media Art at the Whitney Museum of American Art; danilo machado, poet and curator; and Michael Mandiberg.