STEPHEN DEAN
Dates: October 27 – November 30, 2001
Opening Reception: Saturday October 27, 5–7 pm


Marcel Sitcoske Gallery is proud to present our second solo exhibition of work by French-born, Brooklyn-based artist Stephen Dean. With this exhibition Dean broadens the scope of his transformations of the mundane into the exquisite.


Working with objects of everyday life, Dean decontextualizes them, thereby forcing us to look at them anew. His book totems titled Accounts are columns of striated color, books stacked with their spines against the wall, so only the colored edges of the pages can be seen. That they are books at all is only apparent after concentrated looking, however, after we are drawn in by the brightly hued bands given sculptural form. Only after our engagement with the work do we come to realize how Dean has favored the visual and physical properties of the books over their linguistic properties, thus giving them new meaning. "His work," writes Olivier Kaeppelin, "is the story of an appropriation of statements and measuring systems of reality (words, lexicons, graphics, abacuses, books) by an act that dispossesses them of their powers, to employ them for other ends."


Similarly Dean presents us with color swatch books emptied of any functional purpose, existing simply for our visual pleasure. He has fanned each book out into a circle and pinned it to a board with colored pins, setting up a subtle relationship between the pins and the color swatches. Instead of codifying and isolating colors as the books were originally intended, each work exists as a whole, the interaction between colors taking precedence over their categorization.


Dean heightens this distinction between form and function in his photographic/sculptural work Off Hand. A digitally printed image of a climbing wall covers one entire wall of the gallery, while actual climbing keys hand painted by Dean jut out from this two-dimensional surface. Separated from their original context by their bright colors and the fact that they are objects against a flat image, the keys take on a life of their own as they begin to resemble pieces of organic sculpture. The play between the flat wall and the three-dimensional objects causes us to question the reality of what we are seeing. Which has more artifice: the two-dimensional representation of the wall, or the "real" climbing holds that cannot be climbed, the complete picture or the disconnected objects?


Also on display is Pulse, a video that Dean shot in India during the festival of Holi, which celebrates the arrival of spring. For Dean, Holi, "an orgy of chromatic pleasure in which the celebrants douse one another with colored powders," serves as a point of departure for his further exploration of color. Stills from the video capturing pigment-saturated participants will also be shown. Through his work, Stephen Dean affects a transformation; the familiar becomes strange, the ordinary, fantastic, and for a moment, the world becomes a much richer place.