Cynthia Daignault: There is nothing I could say that I haven鈥檛 thought before
The FLAG Art Foundation presents Cynthia Daignault: There is nothing I could say that I haven鈥檛 thought before, on its 10th floor gallery from January 19 鈥 May 13, 2017. Daignault鈥檚 new series of paintings 鈥 part solo exhibition, virtual group show, and curatorial project 鈥 is a collaboration with 36 artists exploring ideas of agency, appropriation, and the traces we leave behind.
Daignault has experimented with collaboration throughout her career, often asking artists, curators, and volunteers to share in the creation of her work. In that spirit, she initiated this exhibition at FLAG, inviting artists who explore themes of appropriation, readymades, and display to participate in a group show, where she would make and exhibit painted copies of their works in lieu of the actual objects. As it is now more common to encounter a digital surrogate than a physical artwork, Daignault painted from JPEGs, rendering the simulacra as paintings. The artist suggests that: 鈥淭o make any copy is to perform a shadow dance where the artist mimics and mirrors their subject.鈥
At the heart of each artwork is an act of appropriation, yet one in which Daignault has re-empowered the artists being referenced by granting them the permission to say no and the agency to choose. She recasts appropriation as collaboration and reverses the power dynamic of a nihilistic approach where all images are rights-free and up for grabs. Each finished painting is a hybrid of two practices and styles鈥攁n exchange between artists鈥攁 fact Daignault highlights by giving the artists a small painted copy of their work. The artist continues her use of serial forms, with these works all created in traditional portrait scale, and presented in a linear non-hierarchical installation, forging meaning across the group of images as a whole.
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The FLAG Art Foundation presents Cynthia Daignault: There is nothing I could say that I haven鈥檛 thought before, on its 10th floor gallery from January 19 鈥 May 13, 2017. Daignault鈥檚 new series of paintings 鈥 part solo exhibition, virtual group show, and curatorial project 鈥 is a collaboration with 36 artists exploring ideas of agency, appropriation, and the traces we leave behind.
Daignault has experimented with collaboration throughout her career, often asking artists, curators, and volunteers to share in the creation of her work. In that spirit, she initiated this exhibition at FLAG, inviting artists who explore themes of appropriation, readymades, and display to participate in a group show, where she would make and exhibit painted copies of their works in lieu of the actual objects. As it is now more common to encounter a digital surrogate than a physical artwork, Daignault painted from JPEGs, rendering the simulacra as paintings. The artist suggests that: 鈥淭o make any copy is to perform a shadow dance where the artist mimics and mirrors their subject.鈥
At the heart of each artwork is an act of appropriation, yet one in which Daignault has re-empowered the artists being referenced by granting them the permission to say no and the agency to choose. She recasts appropriation as collaboration and reverses the power dynamic of a nihilistic approach where all images are rights-free and up for grabs. Each finished painting is a hybrid of two practices and styles鈥攁n exchange between artists鈥攁 fact Daignault highlights by giving the artists a small painted copy of their work. The artist continues her use of serial forms, with these works all created in traditional portrait scale, and presented in a linear non-hierarchical installation, forging meaning across the group of images as a whole.
Artists on show
- Allan McCollum
- Andy Coolquitt
- Anthea Hamilton
- Awol Erizku
- Barbara Kruger
- Canyon Castator
- Carol Bove
- Charles Ray
- Chason Matthams
- Conor Backman
- Cory Arcangel
- Cynthia Daignault
- Daniel Heidkamp
- Dylan Vandenhoeck
- Ed Ruscha
- Erin Shirreff
- Fred Wilson
- Gregory Edwards
- Jason Bereswill
- Jeff Koons
- Jenna Rosenberg
- Jessica Eaton
- Jim Hodges
- John Houck
- Jonathan Monk
- Josephine Halvorson
- Josephine Meckseper
- Julia Wachtel
- Letha Wilson
- Lorna Simpson
- Louise Lawler
- Magali Reus
- Margaret Lee
- Matt Hansel
- Matthew Higgs
- Paul Jacobsen
- Peter Dreher
- Peter Harkawik
- Richard Phillips
- Robert Gober
- Roe Ethridge
- Roula Partheniou
- Sadie Barnette
- Sara Cwynar
- Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa
- TM Davy
- Todd Bienvenu
- Tom Sachs
- Tristan Unrau