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Holly Johnson Gallery in Dallas is pleased to announce the opening of, Black Maps, an exhibition
of photographs by
the internationally known artist David Maisel. A reception will be held Saturday, March 28, from 5-8
p.m. The exhibition
continues through April 25, 2009.
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For more than twenty years, David Maisel has chronicled the tensions between nature and culture
in his large-scaled
photographs of environmentally impacted landscapes. Because the sites are often remote and inaccessible
the artist
frequently works from an aerial perspective, creating photographic images that are otherwise unattainable.
For the
artists first show in Dallas he has selected photographs from the multi-chaptered series Black
Maps.
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In The Lake Project (2001-2002), David Maisel documents the human destruction of Californias
Owens Lake,
destroyed in 1926 by the Los Angeles Aqueducts. The aerial photographs of the lake present the viewer
with images
that are both awe inspiring and unsettling. The artists aerial views scramble traditional depictions
of the landscape,
turning images of environmentally ravaged land into vast abstract fields.
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Terminal Mirage (2003-2005) continues the artists investigation of the impacted
environment transforming aerial views of polluted lands and bodies of water into planes
of saturated color, belying their foreboding subject matter. We sense that this violent
range of continuous colors is extra-ordinary and possibly dangerous, says Anne Wilkes
Tucker, Nevertheless, we are drawn in by their formal beauty.
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Oblivion (2004-2006) documents urban views of Los Angeles. Using an aerial vantage
point, he transforms the familiar into an ominous black and white map. The aerial
images in Oblivion describe a potentially desecrated urban fabric, says Maisel, Even as
they transcribe the commonplace; they cannot help but serve as portent of some future
conflagration.
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This past year his work has been acquired by The Victoria and Albert Museum, London,
The San Jose Museum of Art in California, and Bates College in Lewiston, Maine. Maisels
work is also in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art; the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art; the Brooklyn Museum of Art; the Santa Barbara Museum
of Art; and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Library of Dust an oversized monograph
was published by Chronicle Books in the Fall of 2008, as well as two other monographs
published by Nazraeli Press; The Lake Project (2004) and Oblivion (2006).
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Born in New York City (1961), Maisel received his BA from Princeton University, MFA from
California College of the Arts, as well as studying at Harvards Graduate School of Design.
He has been the recipient of an Individual Artists Grant from the National Endowment for
the Arts. Maisel has recently been an Artist in Residence at both the Getty Research
Institute and at the Headlands Center for the Arts. He is presently a candidate for the
Alpert Award in the Visual Arts, which will be announced in March, 2009. Maisel currently
lives and works in the San Francisco area.
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Holly Johnson Gallery is located at 1411 Dragon Street in Dallas. Gallery hours are 11 am
to 5 pm, Tuesday through Saturday. The gallery is a member of CADD (Contemporary Art
Dealers of Dallas). For information call 214-369-0169, or visit
www.hollyjohnsongallery.com.
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