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Francesca Gabbiani "Vague Terrains/Urban Fuckups"

Gavlak Los Angeles

April 13 – June 9, 2018

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Francesca Gabbiani

The Unresolved Story, 2016-2017

Ink, gouache and colored paper on paper

105 x 72 in

266.7 x 182.9 cm

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Francesca Gabbiani

Vague Terrain, 2016-2017

Ink, gouache and colored paper on paper

105 x 72 in

266.7 x 182.9 cm

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Francesca Gabbiani

One Eyed Jack, 2016-2017

Ink, gouache and colored paper on paper

72 x 105 in

182.9 x 266.7 cm

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Francesca Gabbiani

Lookout, 2016-2017

Ink, gouache and colored paper on paper

72 x 105 in

182.9 x 266.7 cm

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Francesca Gabbiani

Overlook (Belmont Tunnel), 2016-2017

Ink, gouache and colored paper on paper

72 x 105 in

182.9 x 266.7 cm

Press Release

 

Gavlak is pleased to present “Vague Terrains/ Urban Fuckups”, an exhibition of new work by Los Angeles based artist, Francesca Gabbiani. This is the artist’s first solo presentation with the gallery.

 

Non-place, a book by French anthropologist Marc Augé, explored spaces of transience where individuals are anonymous—airport waiting rooms, hotel lobbies, railway stations. 

 

Francesca Gabbiani’s beautifully crafted works have recently focused on a different and special kind of space, of wilderness that one finds in today’s urban texture, in abandoned grounds and unattended interstices of the city. 

 

The meticulously carved paper pieces by Gabbiani tell a story of another set of non-places that we often ignore in our day to day urban experience. These are littered, empty lots on which brambles and weeds flourish, suffocating all that is underneath them.

 

In her work we witness the growth of harsh vegetation, of vegetal species that have adapted to a hostile environment, negotiating their survival with cement and depleted topsoil, in a no-man’s-land that is neither nature nor metropolis.

 

Their effort is anarchic; I would say vegetal-violent. What is most intriguing in the work of Gabbiani is that these plots hold enough significance for her to be observed and reproduced as “real places”, with an intrinsic value. And here is where beauty and the beauty of her work speaks to this discovery of unlikely relevance. Referred to as landscapes, they are in fact descriptions of land—a very particular kind of land that either declares its extreme poverty or its (as of yet) oblivion from developers and rampant capitalism. 

 

Gabbiani’s works are labors of love, made painstakingly with a cutter and archival coloured papers. The fact that she spends months to years on each piece (working from a snapshot she takes) indicates more than a sociological interest on the vagaries of  “culture” being reclaimed by “nature”.  

 

This time and attention models an admiration for the resilience of a primary world that slowly manages to survive in the most inhospitable surroundings against most odds. I sense empathy for these abandoned lots, for the lives they support  and the quiet, invisible will by which they persist. Not unlike her earlier work of tree-houses: those semi-abandoned traces of human symbiosis with nature today have morphed into visually compelling depictions of derelict spaces. It is the expansion of her work, demonstrating a steady broadening and deepening of her vision, which gives us as viewers a humane and intense perspective on nature, the city, and the struggle for survival of that which we ignore." - Paolo Colombo, Curator (Athens, Greece 2018)

 

Francesca Gabbiani (b. 1965 in Montreal, Canada) earned her Master of Fine Arts degree from UCLA, having previously studied at Rijkskademie can Beeldende Kunsten (RAKB) in Amersterdam and Ecole Superieure des Beaux Arts (ESAV) in Geneva. She has had solo exhibitions at Marianne Boesky Gallery in New York, NY; Patrick Painter in Los Angeles, CA; Lora Reynolds Gallery, in Austin, TX; and Monica De Cardena in Milan, Italy, among others. Gabbiani’s work has been exhibited in such prestigious institutions as the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Geneva, Switzerland; Craft and Folk Art Museum, Los Angeles, CA, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA; Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; and Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, CA. Her work is included in such public collections as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY; Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; and Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, CA.

 

A reception for the artist will be held on Friday, April 13, from 6-8pm at Gavlak Los Angeles (1034 North Highland Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90038).


For more information concerning the exhibition or for press inquiries, please contact Lauren Wood at lauren@gavlakgallery.com, or (323) 467-5700.

 

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