DAILY OPERATION: Ethan Greenbaum 

lutzjon:

Untitled, 2012, direct to substrate print on 3 acrylic panels, 44 x 228 in.

Ethan Greenbaum is an artist that I’ve really enjoyed working with in the past. He did an amazing edition for Daily Operation and also participated in my faux private collection show. Wherever they’re…

@18 hours ago with 4 notes
christopherschreck:

install shot from Kate Steciw’s show “Live Laugh Love,” now on view at the Green Room (London)

christopherschreck:

install shot from Kate Steciw’s show “Live Laugh Love,” now on view at the Green Room (London)

@6 days ago with 11 notes
theglaze:

Noam Rappaport

theglaze:

Noam Rappaport

@6 days ago with 62 notes
Michael Delucia @ Eleven Rivington

Michael Delucia @ Eleven Rivington

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Carroll Gardens

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Imi Knoebel @ Nada NY

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Valerie Hegarty @ Marlborough

@3 weeks ago
Thanks Chris
christopherschreck:

STUDIO VISIT: ETHAN GREENBAUM
there seems to be a shared interest among many young artists right now (particularly painters and sculptors) in referencing/appropriating everyday street materials in their work. it’s a familiar and long-standing impulse, for sure, but one which has picked up some steam again these past few years, resulting in a lot of really interesting work.
among those making strong efforts along these lines is brooklyn-based artist Ethan Greenbaum, who replicates industrial materials (cinder blocks, cement slabs) and urban surfaces (cracked sidewalks, tarred streets, chipped brick walls) as a means of highlighting the aesthetic potential of his surroundings.
his most recent work, consisting largely of low-relief photographs and plexiglass prints, is particularly interesting for its resistance to easy categorization: combining elements of photography, sculpture, painting, and digital manipulation, these pieces do a nice job of blurring the lines between abstract and figurative, 2D and 3D, etc.
having now seen these works up close, i will say that its pretty difficult to get a sense of what they’re about based solely on documentation shots. it might help to read up first on his process:
“The works often begin as digital photographs taken by the artist in his travels throughout the city. This prosaic imagery is then transcribed through various abstracting filters including digital editing, flatbed printing and vacuum forming. In his series of vacuum-formed photos of sidewalks, Greenbaum infiltrates the ubiquitous ground plane with unexpected strangeness and malleability. Actual size reproductions of sidewalk are printed on translucent plastic, which is then formed around broken ceiling tiles. The resulting low relief panels enact a series of inversions, where the outdoors is brought in, background becomes foreground and the horizontal plane becomes vertical.
In the plexiglass works, Greenbaum again recasts the visual peripheries of the urban landscape. Derived from a composite photo of a rock wall outside the artist’s studio, the work is printed on a transparent acrylic panel. The mortar connecting the flagstones has been digitally deleted, and visible between the stones is a high-resolution scan of Formica patterning. This double-sided overlapping of textures paradoxically creates spatial illusions and depth between the layered flatness of the two surfaces.”

View more of his work HERE, be sure to visit his show Cultured Stone (now up at Thierry Goldberg, running through June 3), and also check out The Highlights, his online arts journal/projects archive.
scroll down for some shots i took during my visit. (right-click for enlarged views)

Thanks Chris

christopherschreck:

STUDIO VISIT: ETHAN GREENBAUM

there seems to be a shared interest among many young artists right now (particularly painters and sculptors) in referencing/appropriating everyday street materials in their work. it’s a familiar and long-standing impulse, for sure, but one which has picked up some steam again these past few years, resulting in a lot of really interesting work.

among those making strong efforts along these lines is brooklyn-based artist Ethan Greenbaum, who replicates industrial materials (cinder blocks, cement slabs) and urban surfaces (cracked sidewalks, tarred streets, chipped brick walls) as a means of highlighting the aesthetic potential of his surroundings.

his most recent work, consisting largely of low-relief photographs and plexiglass prints, is particularly interesting for its resistance to easy categorization: combining elements of photography, sculpture, painting, and digital manipulation, these pieces do a nice job of blurring the lines between abstract and figurative, 2D and 3D, etc.

having now seen these works up close, i will say that its pretty difficult to get a sense of what they’re about based solely on documentation shots. it might help to read up first on his process:


“The works often begin as digital photographs taken by the artist in his travels throughout the city. This prosaic imagery is then transcribed through various abstracting filters including digital editing, flatbed printing and vacuum forming.
In his series of vacuum-formed photos of sidewalks, Greenbaum infiltrates the ubiquitous ground plane with unexpected strangeness and malleability. Actual size reproductions of sidewalk are printed on translucent plastic, which is then formed around broken ceiling tiles. The resulting low relief panels enact a series of inversions, where the outdoors is brought in, background becomes foreground and the horizontal plane becomes vertical.

In the plexiglass works, Greenbaum again recasts the visual peripheries of the urban landscape. Derived from a composite photo of a rock wall outside the artist’s studio, the work is printed on a transparent acrylic panel. The mortar connecting the flagstones has been digitally deleted, and visible between the stones is a high-resolution scan of Formica patterning. This double-sided overlapping of textures paradoxically creates spatial illusions and depth between the layered flatness of the two surfaces.”


View more of his work HERE, be sure to visit his show Cultured Stone (now up at Thierry Goldberg, running through June 3), and also check out The Highlights, his online arts journal/projects archive.

scroll down for some shots i took during my visit. (right-click for enlarged views)

@6 days ago with 27 notes
#Ethan Greenbaum 
theglaze:

Samuel T. Adams 

theglaze:

Samuel T. Adams 

@6 days ago with 11 notes
Via Luke Stettner

Via Luke Stettner

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Jay street station

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Noam Rappaport @ Fuentes

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Raimer Jochims @ NADA

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