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Jonathan
Viner
"Harem"
Exhibition: June 20 through July 18, 2009
Reception: Saturday, June 20th, 4 to 6pm
With “Harem” Jonathan Viner touches on a variety of issues
including the urge to possess rare specimens and organize them into collections,
the intense but fleeting power of youthful beauty, and the growing appetite
for material and status in a globalized world. Never one to be too heavy
handed, he prompts the viewer to consider these topics with elegant subtlety.
On its surface, "Harem" is a group of ten portraits of young
Russian women, each one apparently alone, nude, and listening to vintage,
high fidelity headphones. Upon further consideration, the tight, close
up compositions, leash-like headphone chords, and ambivalent facial expressions
give us a sense that these women are perhaps unwilling captives. But their
relaxed postures, soft surroundings, and vague facial expressions convey
an atmosphere of calm and comfort. This contradiction is embodied by the
headphones themselves, which isolate and tether these harem girls while
simultaneously providing them with enriching, faithfully reproduced sounds.
Each work stands alone - a solitary, frozen specimen. But when presented
together, with their uniform size and similar palette, within the confines
of a small space, they convey the feeling of a coveted collection.
A native New Yorker, Jonathan Viner earned his BFA from Rhode Island School
of Design. This project will be his third solo exhibition in New York.
Image: "Katenka," 2009, oil on panel, 12" x 12"
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