Janet Malcolm: Free Associations

Gallery II

December 8, 2011 – January 14, 2012

Janet Malcolm
1949 Lost Everything
2011
Paper collage
13 x 7 ½ inches
(LBFA #4422)

Janet Malcolm
Dreams Take Us to the Gardens of Our Youth
2011
Paper collage
10 x 8 inches
(LBFA #4428)

Janet Malcolm
Equipment of the Operating Theater
2011
Paper collage
8 ¾ x 10 ¾ inches
(LBFA #4424)

Janet Malcolm
External Influence
2011
Paper collage
9 x 9 inches
(LBFA #4426)

Janet Malcolm
Irretrievable Hippopotamus
2011
Paper collage
12 ½ x 9 inches
(LBFA #4429)

Janet Malcolm
Jupiter, the Largest Planet
2011
Paper collage
10 ¼ x 8 ¼ inches
(LBFA #4417)

Janet Malcolm
Maple Syrup Disease
2011
Paper collage
10 ½ x 7 ¾ inches
(LBFA #4419)

Janet Malcolm
Ouch Ouch Disease
2011
Paper collage
13 x 6 ¼ inches
(LBFA #4430)

Janet Malcolm
Shelley Winters
2011
Paper collage
13 x 8 inches
(LBFA #4431)

Janet Malcolm
Temperature of World Cities
2011
Paper collage
13 x 10 inches
(LBFA #4421)

Janet Malcolm
The Sun with Spots Big Enough to Swallow the Earth
2011
Paper collage
10 x 8 inches
(LBFA #4425)

Janet Malcolm
Too Clinical
2011
Paper collage
16 x 8 ½ inches
(LBFA #4420)

Janet Malcolm
Alice
2011
Paper collage
Six works, each 8 x 6 ¾ inches
(LBFA #4432)

Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Janet Malcolm: Free Associations  IN GALLERY II

December 8, 2011 – January 14, 2012

Reception Tuesday, December 13, 6 – 8pm

Lori Bookstein Fine Art is pleased to present new collages by Janet Malcolm in Free Associations. This series of collages began to form in the artist's mind when the papers of an émigré psychiatrist who practiced in New York in the late 1940's and 1950's—many of whose patients were themselves émigrés—came into her possession. The extracts from case studies appear in combination with fragments from early 20th century medical, surgical, astronomical and technological texts, as well as appropriations from contemporary art, giving these works the atmosphere of dreams in which vaguely and somewhat disturbingly familiar times and places are evoked. 

In Free Associations, Malcolm continues her exploration of the aesthetic tradition of Schwitters and the Russian Contructivists, but brings hints of narrative previously present to a new level of explicitness. The collages' source materials of yellowed handwritten and typewritten notes play the dual role of verbal signifier and visual element. The melancholy of once cutting-edge, now antiquated textbooks dovetails with that of the Freudian case studies—which, in Malcolm's words, summon "a period in psychiatry that is as remote from today's practice as the manual typewriter is from the Macintosh computer." 

In a brochure which accompanies the exhibition, an essay by Hilton Als addresses the blurred line between the real and the imagined. He writes: "Malcolm’s desire to order the world is not so much the desire to re-create or control it as it’s an exploration of its various elements—those moments of being that are no more, and that were as true and fake as anything else. Grief and fiction are the central themes of her collages; the grief is real, the images are made up out of the real stuff of grief, which is to say artifacts from the past, a desire to not let go, and are the visual representations of the will to remember even as time erodes that will, and we are no more. But that’s not entirely true. The others that come after us remember us as Malcolm remembers her dead, or the not-known-at-all, their various fictions and facts intact as they swim in the muddying waters of what we erroneously describe as the real world."

This is Malcolm's third show of collage at Lori Bookstein Fine Art. Free Associations will be on exhibit through January 14, 2012. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 10:30 to 6. The gallery will be closed Saturday, December 24 through Monday, January 2. For more information or visual materials, please contact the gallery.