Fredericks
& Freiser is pleased to announce a solo exhibition
of new paintings and collage by Lamar Peterson. Over
the past few years, Peterson has become known for depicting
the black suburban everyman and his nuclear family set
in dreamlike landscapes. Twisted, however, represents
the artist's decided turn away from the childlike wonder
and vacant plasticity of his archetypal subjects and
their idyllic settings. Inspired partly by CNN and partly by
horror movies, his figures are twisted, stretched, and mangled.
Weather is a malevolent force. A dystopian vision has replaced
the eerie casual detachment: whereas once his characters
smiled, now they explode. For this exhibition, Peterson
incorporates a new sense of dimensionality with craft-store
supplies, framing devices, and a loosening of his once
irrefutable brushwork.
About the Artist
Lamar Peterson was born in 1974 in St. Petersburg, Florida,
and lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. He will be
the subject of a five-year survey in 2008 at the Contemporary
Art Museum, St. Louis, Missouri (traveling with catalogue),
and has had previous solo exhibitions at The Studio
Museum of Harlem, New York; Richard Heller Gallery,
Los Angeles; and Deitch Projects, New York. He has exhibited
in numerous group shows including the Fifth International
SITE Santa Fe Biennial 2004, New Mexico; The Drawing
Center, New York; and the Kemper Museum of Art, Kansas
City, Missouri (upcoming). This is his second solo exhibition
with Fredericks & Freiser.
|