Cyborgian Swamp Thang II: Or, The Post-Human Untergang

Julia Colavita, Anthony Hawley, Julian Kreimer, Heather Leigh McPherson, Kate Tiley, Jonathan Torres

Curated by Andrew Woolbright

Press:

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Installation view of Cyborgian Swamp Thang II: Or, The Post-Human Untergang. Julia Colavita, Anthony Hawley, Julian Kreimer, Heather Leigh McPherson, Kate Tiley, Jonathan Torres

Installation view of Cyborgian Swamp Thang II: Or, The Post-Human Untergang. Julia Colavita, Anthony Hawley, Julian Kreimer, Heather Leigh McPherson, Kate Tiley, Jonathan Torres

Installation view of Cyborgian Swamp Thang II: Or, The Post-Human Untergang. Julia Colavita, Anthony Hawley, Julian Kreimer, Heather Leigh McPherson, Kate Tiley, Jonathan Torres

Installation view of Cyborgian Swamp Thang II: Or, The Post-Human Untergang. Julia Colavita, Anthony Hawley, Julian Kreimer, Heather Leigh McPherson, Kate Tiley, Jonathan Torres

Press Release

The Cyborgian Swamp Thang was dissected. Part I of the exhibition (Dissecting the Cyborgian Swamp Thang, January 15- February 18, 2021) focused on the organistic relationships between nature, landscapes, and circuit systems. This exhibition now attends to the post-human presence that is embodied, fluid, and gooey within the organistic materiality of the present moment; while also considering the machine-tool –the car, the city, the infrastructure – that the swamp thang finds itself bobbing up and down in, within its shift and drift. The German word “untergang” is spoken to suggest both decadence and decline. The current l’informe, posed by the pre-Enlightenment usage of the word organ, and our present interstitial boundaries between form and machine, presents both an orgyastic flash and a sobering ennui. Solidity has been phased out, replaced with the exhilarating yet dreadful sublime of dematerialization, abjection, and the limbo wavepool of endless boundary confusion.   

Super Duchess now presents Part II of our two part exhibition, Cyborgian Swamp Thang II: or, A Post-Human/Machine Untergang, featuring the works of Julia Colavita, Anthony Hawley, Julian Kreimer, Heather Leigh McPherson, Katie Tiley, and Jonathan Torres.

Anthony Hawley. Birdless, Lost Things. HD Video. 6:04. 2016/21

Installation view of Cyborgian Swamp Thang II: Or, The Post-Human Untergang. Julia Colavita, Anthony Hawley, Julian Kreimer, Heather Leigh McPherson, Kate Tiley, Jonathan Torres

Jonathan Torres. Some Kind of Creature VII. Encaustic, feather, fake hair, latex, oil, acrylic. 27 x 14 x 23 inches.

Installation view of Cyborgian Swamp Thang II: Or, The Post-Human Untergang. Julia Colavita, Anthony Hawley, Julian Kreimer, Heather Leigh McPherson, Kate Tiley, Jonathan Torres

Jonathan Torres. Some Kind of Creature VII. Encaustic, feather, fake hair, latex, oil, acrylic. 27 x 14 x 23 inches.

Julia Colavita (b.1983, Philadelphia) is a multimedia artist based in Berlin, Germany.  She completed her MFA at the New York Academy of Art in 2010. Both her paintings and sculptures often reference the female body and its historical association with the grotesque. Recent exhibitions of her work include Assembly Room (NYC, US), Polansky Gallery (Brno, CZ), Duve Berlin (Berlin, DE), Olsen Gallery (Sydney, AU), Like a Little Disaster, (Polignano a Mare, IT), Sans Titre (Paris, FR). 

Anthony Hawley (b.1977 Hartford, CT) is an interdisciplinary artist based in New York, whose hybrid practice spans video, sculpture, installation, performance, drawing, audio, writing, and more. His work is driven by a fascination with the interplay between narrative, power, various technologies old and new, and the many roles language plays in our lives. Hawley’s short films and solo exhibitions have been presented by Vox Populi Gallery in (PA); the CounterCurrent Festival with the Menil Collection and Aurora Picture Show (TX); the Guggenheim Museum’s Works & Process series (NY); Spazju Kreattiv in Valletta, Malta; The Salina Art Center (KS); The Bemis Art Center (NE) and others. With violinist Rebecca Fischer, he forms the multidisciplinary collaboration The Afield, whose most recent project “X Agent Destroy Monster Regimes,” premiered at Residency Unlimited in Brooklyn in October 2020. He is the author of two full-length collections of poetry as well as several chapbooks, and his artist book dear donald… is forthcoming from NoRoutine Books in 2021. His writing on art and film appears regularly in Frieze, The Brooklyn Rail, Hyperallergic, Artforum, BOMB, CARLA, art-agenda, and others. He has received residencies and awards from MacDowell, the Hermitage Artist Retreat, VCCA and Avaloch Farm and Music Institute, and he teaches in the Hunter College MFA studio art program and at the School of Visual Arts. 

Heather Leigh McPherson (b. 1984, Ann Arbor MI) is a visual artist based in Providence, RI. Her work combines painting, drawing, and sculpture into low relief objects. She has shown with the RISD museum, GRIN Providence, Providence College Galleries, the Decordova Museum, Actual Size LA, Vox Populi in Philadelphia, and Kristen Lorello and 315 Gallery in New York, among other venues. McPherson holds a bachelor’s degree from Washington University in St. Louis and a master’s from Rhode Island School of design; she joined the faculty of Providence College in 2009.

In McPherson's vibrant low-relief works, cast epoxy acts as both a painting support and container for the textiles and drawings embedded within. It selectively renders drawings transparent, emphasizing the shallow depth of a single piece of paper and collapsing front and back into one body. McPherson’s work captures the motion of a liquid in the form of a solid and explores materials’ capacities to act and be acted upon. From referential bits and pieces—madonnas, cartoon ecstasy, reaching hands—these works suggest experiences of wisdom and stupidity that spring from the eyes, the mind, and the body. 

Jonathan Torres (b. 1983, San Juan, Puerto Rico) received his BFA in 2009 from the Escuela de Artes Plásticas, San Juan, and his MFA from Brooklyn College in 2012 under the mentorship of Vito Acconci. Nominee of the Joan Mitchell Foundation grant, Torres was selected for the Biennale Mercosul (Brazil 2016), won the Charles G. Shaw Award (NY, 2012) and the Arcos Dorados Award (Argentina, 2011). Torres has been exhibiting in solo and group shows between New York and Puerto Rico for over ten years. His work has been featured in Flash Art, Beautiful/Decay, and Art Observed, among other publications. Torres lives and works in Brooklyn, NY and his work belongs to important collections such as the Museum of Fine Art, Boston and Museo Contemporáneo de Puerto Rico.

Heather Leigh McPherson. Who is Minding the Store. Painted chiffon, dyed cast epoxy, drawing. 47 x 32 inches. 2020

Installation view of Cyborgian Swamp Thang II: Or, The Post-Human Untergang

Heather Leigh McPherson. Penny. Painted chiffon, dyed cast epoxy, acrylic, drawing. 35 x 25 inches. 2019-2020

Installation view of Cyborgian Swamp Thang II: Or, The Post-Human Untergang.

Julian Kreimer. Llamando. Colored pencil on paper. 22 x 30 inches. 2017

Julian Kreimer. Llamando. Colored pencil on paper. 22 x 30 inches. 2017

Julian Kreimer. Separate Passes. Ink on paper. 18 3/8 x 12 3/4 inches. 2020

Julian Kreimer. Separate Passes. Ink on paper. 18 3/8 x 12 3/4 inches. 2020

Installation view of Cyborgian Swamp Thang II: Or, The Post-Human Untergang. Katie Tiley and Julia Colavita

Installation view of Cyborgian Swamp Thang II: Or, The Post-Human Untergang. Katie Tiley and Julia Colavita

Anthony Hawley. Fault Diagnosis (Manual Drawing). Ink, powdered graphite, toothpaste, shampoo and fixative on archival inkjet print. 37 x 27 inches (framed).

Anthony Hawley. Fault Diagnosis (Manual Drawing). Ink, powdered graphite, toothpaste, shampoo and fixative on archival inkjet print. 37 x 27 inches (framed).

Julian Kreimer. Quinteto. Colored pencil on paper. 30 x 22 inches. 2016

Julian Kreimer. Quinteto. Colored pencil on paper. 30 x 22 inches. 2016