highlike

Charles LONG

3 To 1 In Groovy Green

Charles LONG   3 To 1 In Groovy Green

source: walkerartorg

Charles Long’s whimsical sculptures transcend logic, resulting from the artist’s intuition and his childlike sense of wonder of everyday objects. In his process-oriented work, he manipulates synthetic materials such as rubber and plastic into tactile, organic shapes. Fusing biomorphic forms with functional objects and furniture, Long’s aesthetic is an amalgam of high and low cultures. His simple but eccentric forms stimulate the imagination and introduce what Long refers to as “bachelor-pad formalism.”

3 to 1 in Groovy Green, part of a series of sculptural listening stations entitled The Amorphous Body Study Center, continues Long’s investigation of “critical mass.” In this environment, he combines utilitarian furniture, a plastic form, and the music of the British band Stereolab. Inviting the viewer to participate by sitting on the couch, listening to the music, and touching the smooth green object, Long provides an interactive atmosphere that encourages introspection and “promotes a better understanding between the body and the mind.”
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source: tanyabonakdargallery
Since the early 1990’s, Charles Long has explored the possibilities of sculpture through a rich vocabulary of materials, colors, images and shapes. Incorporating references to art history, popular culture, nature and his own experiences, Long’s work embraces modernist convention as a means of connecting inner and outer realities, forming pathways between one’s mental and bodily experiences and the surrounding environment. Through his many bodies of work over the years, the artist has consistently confronted formal parameters associated with sculpture as obstacles to push beyond, seeing modernism’s trajectory as unfinished and full of possibility.
Born in 1958 in Long Branch, New Jersey, Long currently lives and works in California. In 1981, he received a BFA from Philadelphia College of Art while also participating in the Whitney Museum’s Independent Study Program that year, and later earned an MFA from Yale University in New Haven in 1988. Since then, the artist has received a number of honors and awards, most recently the 2008 Award of Merit Medal for Sculpture from the American Academy of Arts and Letters in New York. He currently teaches as a professor in the Art Department at the University of California, Riverside.
Throughout the past two decades, Long’s work has been the subject of major exhibitions worldwide. His most important solo presentations include CATALIN at The Contemporary Austin in Texas (2014), Fountainhead, a public commission in Dallas, Texas organized by the Nasher Sculpture Center (2013), Pet Sounds at Madison Square Park in New York City (2012), Seeing Green, a solo project in conjunction with All of this and nothing: The 6th Hammer Invitational at the UCLA Hammer Museum in Los Angeles (2011), 100 Pounds of Clay at Orange County Museum of Art in California (2010), and More Like a Dream Than a Scheme at David Winton Bell Gallery at Brown University in Rhode Island, which traveled to SITE Santa Fe in New Mexico (2005).
His work was featured twice in the Whitney Biennial at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York (1997, 2008), and has also been included in notable group exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, SculptureCenter in New York, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C., Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, Mori Art Museum in Tokyo, among other museums.
His work is represented in important public and private collections worldwide, including those of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Philadelphia Museum of Art, St. Louis Art Museum in Missouri, Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Denmark, and the Fogg Art Museum at Harvard University in Cambridge, MA.
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source: aptglobalorg
Charles Long (b. 1958 Long Branch, New Jersey) received an MFA from Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, in 1988; participated in the Whitney Indepedent Study Program at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in 1981; and received a BFA from the Philadelphia College of Art in Philadelphia in 1981. Selected solo exhibitions include knowirds at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery in New York (2007); Monads, Soul Houses and a Star-off Machine at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery in New York (2006); 100 Pounds of Clay at Orange County Museum of Art in Newport Beach, California (2006); Photographs at Dwight Hackett Projects in Santa Fe, New Mexico (with Gordon Hart paintings) (2005); Shoshana Wayne Gallery in Santa Monica, California (2005); and More Like a Dream Than a Scheme at SITE in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and David Winton Bell Gallery at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island (2005). Selected group exhibitions include Nina in Position at Artists Space in New York (2008); Transitional Objects: Contemporary Still Life at Neuberger Museum of Art in Purchase, New York (2006); The Uncertainty of Objects and Ideas: Recent Sculpture at Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C. (2006); Gone Formalism at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia (2006): and The Shape of Color: Excurisions in Color Field Art at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto (2005). He is represented by Tanya Bonakdar Gallery in New York. Charles Long lives and works in Los Angeles.