|
The
Gallery at Marmara - Manhattan is pleased to announce its
summer exhibition, Sun Divers, works by Michael Kuch.
Kuch uses archetypal symbols from the natural
world, as well as biblical and mythological narratives to
plumb the depths of the human condition. Working in diverse
media, including monotype, etchings, lithographs, ink and
watercolor drawings, oil paintings and bronze sculptures,
Sun Divers is a compilation of various series from Kuch's
imagination. Kuch has gained particular acclaim for his Double
Elephant Press. His limited edition books of etchings are
housed in the collections of the Library of Congress, Yale
University, Colombia University, the British Library, and
the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Etchings and related material
from three books, Amour and Armor, Lemons Descending,
and Falling
to Earth, are represented in the exhibition.
From the 1996 publication, Amour and Armor, human figures
are juxtaposed with seashells to represent human defenses.
Bronze bas-reliefs of nudes wearing crab-shell armor demonstrate
the sharper side of self-protection. Lemons Descending
of 2001, was a musical collaboration with cellist Matt
Haimovitz and composer Luna Woolf. Kuch illustrated poems
previously set to music by various composers.
A folding screen in the show holds large watercolors
of an anthropomorphic fly, bee, and humming bird produced
as a backdrop for a musical performance of three Emily Dickinson
poems. Falling
to Earth from 2002 was Kuch's reaction to the
terrifying and tragic collapse of the World Trade Center Towers
and the United States subsequent bombing campaign. Large preparatory
watercolors for the book of etchings and poems will be on
display. A six by three feet vibrantly hued monotype of Pegasus
seems to embrace Kuch's diverse themes as it dives from the
sun.
Michael Kuch grew up in Northern Vermont. He began
drawing in Pen and Ink at the age of eleven and the following
year had a one-person show at a local museum. He remained
self-taught until he came under the wing of Leonard Baskin
at Hampshire College. His extensive exhibition record includes
most prominent places like R. Michelson Galleries, B. Beamesderfer
Gallery, Marlen Gallery and Discovery Museum.
Kuch currently divides his time between his apartment
in Manhattan and his studio in Northampton, Massachusetts.
|