Pratt in Venice alumna Michele Rushfeldt (PiV ‘18) has opened a one-woman show, Rakish Exhibition(ist), at Cathouse Proper in Brooklyn.
In Rakish Exhibition(ist), Michele Rushfeldt installs seven recent works in conjunction with Robert Mapplethorpe’s photograph, Tulips, from 1988.
Similar to Mapplethorpe’s coded flower investigations, Rushfeldt’s sculptures take liberties with form, punning on abstractions that rhyme with the human body. When installed along with this photograph, the sculptures inhabit the room like an erotic party, replete with instruments and tools, executed in a wide variety of materials from hard steel to pliant latex and bondage tape. Many of the sculptures are bedazzled with rhinestones, lending a glint of camp to their otherwise earnest endeavors.
Rushfeldt’s kink is wholesome community with a full range of expressed characters all affecting a proclivity for pose. The work is exuberant and active while remaining minimal and elegant; however, most importantly, and radically, there is a break with day-to-day verticality as Rushfeldt’s sculptures bend and groan (and sometimes crawl) to the power of the artist’s tensile imagination.
The room is alive with these performing objects that pay homage by submitting to the black and white tone of Mapplethorpe’s bouquet of bowed flowers, sleek in raking light and emitting severe shadows, a give and take animated by the master’s voyeuristic uber-lens. Arranged before his Tulips, with consent, the presented sculptures go many ways, sometimes deceptive, often sharp, yet, always rakish, even under the utmost artistic pressure to behave.
Michele Rushfeldt is a visual artist living and working in Brooklyn, NY. Her three-dimensional work focuses on sexuality and kink, representing over-performative bodies, and depicting a variety of elegant, glittering, dripping, and twisting sculptures and panels - characters in the midst of their sexual ‘acts.’ Materials take on a dominant role. Latex, rope, harnesses, steel, fabrics, and paints create dimensional forms that feel and look like the materials they employ: Stretchy, tense, balancing, caked with glitter, bulging, and translucent. Her works embrace the humorous and peculiar aspects of exhibitionism, suggesting skin, bodily fluids, and voyeurism. Each piece or grouping encapsulates a tense balance, with harder materials hanging on softer ones and a dependence on the architecture for submissive support. Originally from Minneapolis, MN, Rushfeldt obtained her BFA in painting from the Academy of Art University in San Francisco in 2012, then her MFA from Pratt Institute in 2019. Her work has been exhibited nationally, including galleries in California, Washington, D.C., and New York. She is currently a resident artist at Art Cake in Brooklyn.
Robert Mapplethorpe is one of America's preeminent twentieth century photographers. He lived from 1946 to 1989.
Cathouse Proper at 524 Projects Contemporary Art Gallery
524 Court St
Brooklyn, NY 11231
(enter Huntington St, 2nd fl.)
Thursday-Sunday, 12–6pm
Due to Covid-19 regulations, six people are permitted in the gallery at a time, a face mask must be worn to enter, hand sanitizer is provided, and no appointment required.