• Laurie Kang
  • CV
  • Her Own Devices
  • In Practice: Total Disbelief
  • Beolle
  • Eidetic Tides
  • Guts
  • Terrene
  • If I have a body
  • Asphodel Meadows
  • NADA House
  • Channeller
  • A Body Knots
  • Fascia Lines
  • Line Litter
  • How deep is your love?
  • Nesticulations
  • Knots
  • Babble On
  • The Mouth Holds the Tongue
  • Untitled
Laurie Kang
CV
Her Own Devices
In Practice: Total Disbelief
Beolle
Eidetic Tides
Guts
Terrene
If I have a body
Asphodel Meadows
NADA House
Channeller
A Body Knots
Fascia Lines
Line Litter
How deep is your love?
Nesticulations
Knots
Babble On
The Mouth Holds the Tongue
Untitled

In Practice: Total Disbelief, SculptureCenter

Jan 16 - Mar 23, 2020

Catalogue

Qais Assali, Andrew Cannon, Jesse Chun, Hadi Fallahpisheh, Emilie Louise Gossiaux, Ficus Interfaith, Laurie Kang, Devin Kenny and Andrea Solstad, K.R.M. Mooney, sidony o’neal, Mariana Silva, Jordan Strafer, and Andrew Norman Wilson

In Practice: Total Disbelief considers artistic engagements with dimensions of doubt as they contribute to the formation of social life. Across media, the works in the exhibition engage formal tools that uphold belief and produce what we consider to be true – narrative and cinematic tropes, photographic technologies, empiricism, and others – and use them to make any number of other truth claims. A position of disbelief may see these aesthetic conventions as valid, but still delimited by external forces, as if they are suggesting something, but not the right thing, or not saying all they can or could say.


While characterized on one hand by the clean slate of a baseline lack of faith, an active engagement with disbelief also means taking stock of astonishment, navigating defense mechanisms, and pitting skepticism against a real desire to be convinced and to know. In Practice: Total Disbelief posits that artworks are the products and by-products of these dynamics, appearing as objects, images, and activities that sustain uncertainty, not in the least about the capacities of the art object itself.


The exhibition features newly commissioned works by: Qais Assali, Andrew Cannon, Jesse Chun, Hadi Fallahpisheh, Ficus Interfaith, Emilie Louise Gossiaux, Laurie Kang, Devin Kenny and Andrea Solstad, K.R.M. Mooney, sidony o’neal, Mariana Silva, Jordan Strafer, and Andrew Norman Wilson and is curated by Kyle Dancewicz, SculptureCenter’s Director of Exhibitions and Programs.


Hull
Flex-C track, steel studs, silicone, Haraboji’s crushed pastels, photographs, unfixed photographic paper, darkroom chemicals and films (continually sensitive), aluminum cast dried anchovies, magnets.
Installation view, In Practice: Total Disbelief, SculptureCenter, New York, 2020. 
Photo: Kyle Knodell

Bodied, burgeon

Stainless steel steamer, pigmented silicone, dried lotus root, polymer clay, fruit mesh bags

Installation view, In Practice: Total Disbelief, SculptureCenter, New York, 2020. 

Photo: Kyle Knodell

In Practice: Total Disbelief, SculptureCenter

Jan 16 - Mar 23, 2020

Catalogue

Qais Assali, Andrew Cannon, Jesse Chun, Hadi Fallahpisheh, Emilie Louise Gossiaux, Ficus Interfaith, Laurie Kang, Devin Kenny and Andrea Solstad, K.R.M. Mooney, sidony o’neal, Mariana Silva, Jordan Strafer, and Andrew Norman Wilson

In Practice: Total Disbelief considers artistic engagements with dimensions of doubt as they contribute to the formation of social life. Across media, the works in the exhibition engage formal tools that uphold belief and produce what we consider to be true – narrative and cinematic tropes, photographic technologies, empiricism, and others – and use them to make any number of other truth claims. A position of disbelief may see these aesthetic conventions as valid, but still delimited by external forces, as if they are suggesting something, but not the right thing, or not saying all they can or could say.


While characterized on one hand by the clean slate of a baseline lack of faith, an active engagement with disbelief also means taking stock of astonishment, navigating defense mechanisms, and pitting skepticism against a real desire to be convinced and to know. In Practice: Total Disbelief posits that artworks are the products and by-products of these dynamics, appearing as objects, images, and activities that sustain uncertainty, not in the least about the capacities of the art object itself.


The exhibition features newly commissioned works by: Qais Assali, Andrew Cannon, Jesse Chun, Hadi Fallahpisheh, Ficus Interfaith, Emilie Louise Gossiaux, Laurie Kang, Devin Kenny and Andrea Solstad, K.R.M. Mooney, sidony o’neal, Mariana Silva, Jordan Strafer, and Andrew Norman Wilson and is curated by Kyle Dancewicz, SculptureCenter’s Director of Exhibitions and Programs.


Hull
Flex-C track, steel studs, silicone, Haraboji’s crushed pastels, photographs, unfixed photographic paper, darkroom chemicals and films (continually sensitive), aluminum cast dried anchovies, magnets.
Installation view, In Practice: Total Disbelief, SculptureCenter, New York, 2020. 
Photo: Kyle Knodell

Bodied, burgeon

Stainless steel steamer, pigmented silicone, dried lotus root, polymer clay, fruit mesh bags

Installation view, In Practice: Total Disbelief, SculptureCenter, New York, 2020. 

Photo: Kyle Knodell