• I went to school with someone called Jonathon Monk
    Jonathan Monk
    September 11 – October 18, 2014
    Opening: Thursday, September 11, 6-8pm

    Casey Kaplan is pleased to announce I went to school with someone called Jonathon Monk, an exhibition by Jonathan Monk (b. 1969, Leicester, UK). Monk’s work is a continuing engagement with notions of authorship and identity, as he recasts iconic works of art with a consistent and incisive humour.

    In this exhibition, Monk’s own biography becomes a material as objects assume not only their former contexts, but also their relationship to Monk’s own life as an artist. Through this, works themselves become open to misremembrance and approximation. Sited in the first gallery is A Copy Of Deflated Sculpture No. 1, a facsimile of Monk’s subtly deflated copy of Jeff Koon’s iconic inflatable bunny, exhibited in his 2009 exhibition with the gallery, The Inflated Deflated. Created from photographic documentation, rather than the original’s specifications, the work not only points towards the shifting relationships of the work to Monk himself, but the role these images play in larger structures of commerce and circulation.

    This idea carries throughout as Monk navigates his relationship to a wide-ranging group of figures including Carl Andre, Alighiero Boetti, Dan Graham, Paul McCarthy and Paul McCartney, tracing narratives of transformation, and underscoring the myriad of ways in which artworks are evaluated and how objects are embedded in our cultural history. This results in works that function as composite views, which is exemplified in Three Part Piece (untitled wood destroyed). Taking a lost, early wooden sculpture by Carl Andre as its starting point, Monk displays the work in three variations – a charred replica, a photograph of its original condition, as well as video documentation of the work burning. These varied methods of reproduction highlight the almost nebulous connections that shape our complex understanding of an object both as an artwork and a cultural artifact.

    In what functions almost as a leveling effect, the same strategies applied to these stalwarts of contemporary art are applied to Monk’s own biography. He allows his own story to unfold alongside theirs, while also acknowledging their formative role in his own personal history and development as an artist. Alluding to an interest in Americana, storytelling, and his own impulse to collect, these works often function in sharp and pointed contrast to each other – the high-finish of steel and Plexiglas is placed alongside works with a homespun, kitsch feel. Monk’s life is charted on the walls in amassed coins from the year he was born until he left America and found souvenir scarves are sewn to form a map of the United States. A pedestal holds a pristinely carved, white marble skull, dulled on its planes from its former life as his son’s eraser. Together, these demonstrate time’s passage, and our ability to rebuild and shape history through the accumulated references and artifacts that survive it.

    Recent exhibitions of Jonathan Monk's work include: Centro de Arte Contemporáneo de Málaga, Málaga, 2013 (solo), Less Is More Than One Hundred Indian Bicycles (with words by Rikrit Tiravanija and a Silver Shadow), Kunstraum Dornbirn, Austria, 2013 (solo), There are Other Routes than Ours, Tamayo Contemporary Art Museum, Mexico, 2013, The Universal Addressability of Dumb Things, Nottingham Contemporary, Nottingham, 2013 and When Attitudes Become Form, Become Attitudes, Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, San Francisco, USA, traveled to The Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, MI, 2012.

    Mistakes Mistakes Mistakes

    2014

    Two c-prints mounted on aludibond

    16.9 x 11.8" / 43 x 30cm each

    Exhibition View

    A Copy Of Deflated Sculpture No. 1

    2014

    Stainless steel

    40.5 x 23 x 15" / 102.9 x 58.4 x 38.1cm

    Exhibition View

    Together Again But Always Alone

    2014

    Paul McCarthy dressed as in Tokyo Santa with young head of Paul McCartney standing, mixed media

    31.5 x 13.4 x 7.1" / 80 x 34 x 18cm

    Exhibition View

    Figurative Sandwich

    2014

    Black and white prints, radiant Plexiglas, brushed stainless steel frame

    47.2 x 71.3 x 18.9" / 120 x 181 x 48cm

    Figurative Sandwich

    2014

    Detail View

    You’ll Never See My Face In Kansas City

    2007

    Volkswagen Type I “Beetle” automobile hood, enamel paint

    54 x 34 x 14” / 137 x 86.3 x 35.5cm

    Exhibition View

    Exhibition View

    Parkett Piece

    2014

    100% Wool

    39.4 x 35.4" / 100 x 90cm

    Mistakes Have Been Made

    2014

    Marble

    9.8 x 9 x 11" / 25 x 23 x 28cm

    Exhibition View

    Untitled (July/August), Untitled (September/October), Untitled (November/December), Untitled (January/February), Untitled (March/April), Untitled (May/June)

    2014

    6 pencil drawings mounted on white backboard

    61 x 18.7 x 1.6" / 154.6 x 47.6 x 4cm each

    From One State To Another (Sewn Together To Make A Whole)

    2014

    Souvenir scarves from every American state

    137.8 x 354.3" / 350 x 900cm

    From One State To Another (Sewn Together To Make A Whole)

    2014

    Detail View

    Exhibition View

    From the year I was born until the year I left America

    2014

    31 C-prints mounted on mdf

    15.6" / 39.6cm diameter by 1.4" / 3.6cm depth each

    Deadman Reactivated

    2014

    Wax, rubber, human hair, oil paint, fabrics

    72 x 23 x 12” / 182.9 x 58.4x 30.5cm

    Exhibition View

    My Life In The Lives Of Others (1969-2013)

    2014

    45 calendar tea towels made of cotton, linen, synthetic fibers

    98.4 x 255.9" / 250 x 650cm

    My Life In The Lives Of Others (1969-2013)

    2014

    Detail View

    Three Part Piece (untitled wood destroyed)

    2014

    Print, film, object

    Print: 40.9 x 33.1" / 104 x 84cm Object: 31.5 x 15.7 x 15.7" / 80 x 40 x 40cm Film: 22:37 min, colour, silent, full HD

    Three Part Piece (untitled wood destroyed)

    2014

    Installation view

    Three Part Piece (untitled wood destroyed)

    2014

    Installation view

    Exhibition View

    Exhibition View

    Advert held in place by butterflies and a beatle

    2014

    Artforum ad, Delias hyparete ssp. luzonensis on needles and polystyrene in clear acrylic box

    20.1 x 19.3 x 3.5" / 51 x 49 x 9cm

    I went to school with someone called Jonathon Monk.

    Top