"Elad Lassry: Untitled (Presence)"
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Paula Cort
Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence), 2012
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Paula Cort
Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence), 2012
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Paula Cort
Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence), 2012
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Paula Cort
Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence), 2012
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Paula Cort
Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence), 2012
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Paula Cort
Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence), 2012
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Paula Cort
Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence), 2012
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Paula Cort
Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence), 2012
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Jason Mandella
Instllation view of "Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence)" at The Kitchen
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Jason Mandella
Instllation view of "Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence)" at The Kitchen
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Jason Mandella
Instllation view of "Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence)" at The Kitchen
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Jason Mandella
Instllation view of "Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence)" at The Kitchen
-
Jason Mandella
Instllation view of "Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence)" at The Kitchen
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Jason Mandella
Instllation view of "Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence)" at The Kitchen
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Jason Mandella
Instllation view of "Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence)" at The Kitchen
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Paula Cort
Elad Lassry, Untitled (Presence), 2012
Time Out rating:
<strong>Rating: </strong>4/5
Time Out says
Mon Oct 8 2012
Two handsome young men meet our gaze with half smiles in one of Elad Lassry’s latest photos, and questions abound. Are they lovers? Brothers? Friends? Sci-fi automatons in their weird matching uniforms? As it turns out, they are dancers, who, along with other professionals from American Ballet Theatre and New York City Ballet, took part in a three-night-only event at the Kitchen orchestrated by Lassry last month. The point of the performance, however, wasn’t movement per se; rather, it was how representational conventions differ between still and moving images. The results, seductive if somewhat ambiguous, echo through the exhibition here.
Lassry has carefully arranged the work in the gallery within a series of framed viewpoints, starting with a small archway at the entrance, and concluding with a wall topped by wavelike forms that allow glimpses of the photographs beyond. The effect suggests a combination of installation and theater. A film featuring jittery, dancing wooden eggs evokes dancers, hopping en pointe. Two photos with mats shaped like quotation marks emphasize that images are, at best, partial fragments of reality. Old headshots of actors (a sympathetic clown, an overenthusiastic starlet) as well as photos of flowery porcelain are interesting enough, but they lack the tension between the real and represented that gives the portraits of performers their charge.
Lassry’s dance consisted of carefully choreographed moments that seemed too fleeting to fully contemplate, despite repeated gestures meant to slow the pace down. And while his newfound embrace of choreography is certainly fascinating, his photos remain more rewarding.—Merrily Kerr
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Date
Time
Price information
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Wed Oct 17 2012
12:00pm
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