Marina Zurkow
Necrocracy

Marina Zurkow
Necrocracy

bitforms gallery

Marina Zurkow. Pictured left to right: Body Bag for Deer (Polyisobutylene / PIB), 2013. Solvent ink on Tyvek. Nylon thread, zipper, fill: plastic regrind and pellets. 48 x 50 x 6 inches / 122 x 127 x 15 cm. The Petroleum Manga, 2012. Solvent ink on Tyvek. Dimensions variable.
January 17, 2013

Marina Zurkow
Necrocracy

January 10–February 16, 2013

bitforms gallery nyc
529 West 20th St, 2nd Fl
New York NY 10011

www.bitforms.com
PDF exhibition guide
View installation photos

bitforms gallery is pleased to announce its first New York solo exhibition with artist Marina Zurkow. Exhibited widely throughout the US and recognized recently by a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, Zurkow is known for cross-disciplinary animation work and her participatory art environments.

The exhibition Necrocracy explores “governance of the dead,” focusing on the geologic chronology of oil and the culture of petrochemical production. Featuring four new projects, it furthers Zurkow’s investigations of human relationships with animals, plants and weather. The series rigorously engages politics of body’s interrelationships with landscape, and questions the Romantic-era division between the natural and human—specifically, how our society disturbs, worships and is dominated by beings that are long dead.

In 2011, Zurkow traveled to the high southern plains of the Llano Estacado in West Texas, where she met with geologists, naturalists, ranchers, activists and oilmen. The Permian Basin lies beneath these plains, between Marfa and Midland. In the Permian Period 250 million years ago, the geological riches of the area were formed, as marine microorganisms accumulated in sediments on the floor of a vast saline sea. Over millions of years, the seas dried out and these creatures transmuted into hydrocarbons.

The resulting works respond to complexities of the landscape above and below, honing in on the interdependency of humans and hydrocarbons—who, through their transformation into petrochemicals achieve a form of rebirth, even immortality. Thousands of sketches drawn from life and online research make up the character elements in Mesocosm (Wink, TX), a generative animation at the heart of Necrocracy. Another series of animations, NeoGeo, takes on petrogeology, leveraging the various debates around fracking and global dependency on oil. Using the muted 19th Century graphical notation of rock formations, these works visualize the liquidity of the earth and depict a drill passing through deep stratifications of time.

Debuting in the exhibition is a group of soft sculptures crafted by hand with Tyvek and adorned with imagery from The Petroleum Manga, a suite of pictures depicting everyday oil-derived products such as garbage bags, water guns, plastic chickens, balloons, food containers and credit cards. These include Zurkow’s Body Bag for Humans (Nylon Polymer), Body Bag for Cats (High-Density Polyethylene /HDPE) and Body Bag for Birds (Polyethylene Terephthalate / PET), among others. Working the flexible paper-like surface into flesh, each is filled with a colorful assortment of virgin and post-manufacture debris, such as regrind and floorsweep. As death masks, the folk-art quality of these somber pieces associates them with the rituals of remembering the dead and the storytelling traditions of representational embroidery. In her tender treatment of each subject, Zurkow evokes funeral urns and the tombs of Egypt’s royalty, as the decorative patterning on each vessel recalls a technologically manufactured and human vocabulary of excess.

A fully illustrated exhibition guide is available online and at the gallery.

For images and more information:
www.bitforms.com
www.o-matic.com

For further details, please contact info [​at​] bitforms.com or call (212) 366-6939.

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January 17, 2013

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