Lethe-wards, William Corwin

October 16 - December 18, 2022

Geary is excited to announce sculptor William Corwin’s fourth exhibition Lethe-Wards with the gallery and his first at their location in Millerton, New York.

Corwin will exhibit a series of cast iron and plaster boats inspired by ancient burial boats used in Egyptian, Anglo-Saxon, and Mapuche societies. The works in this exhibition follows thematically on a series of boats he created for the exhibition Roots Anchors at the Newhouse Center for Contemporary Art (a four person show which also included Shervone Neckles, Katie Holten, and Xaviera Simmons). Many cultures see boats as mystical transports to the hereafter, and Corwin’s hand-shaped objects, created in what art-critic Saul Ostrow identifies as an “Art-Brut” sensibility, are meant to evoke vessels, both seaworthy, as much as smaller ritual objects to be used as bowls or containers. Corwin has been working with the Rivers of Steel workshop at The Carrie Furnaces in Pittsburgh, where he has used a process of hand-shaping sand molds which are then cast in iron. This has allowed him to make singular iron objects that both capture the shape of the artist’s fingers and presence, as well as textures of fabric and wood that are imprinted into the mold.

Corwin is intrigued by very basic symbols that appear repeatedly in mythology and scripture: ladders, wheels, and boats, as well as traditional formal poses of the human figure used to denote symbolic actions. Writer Darryl Pinckney has said of the artist’s works that “they answer the unasked for question about mortality.” Indeed, Corwin looked to the burial ship of Sutton Hoo, itself a form literally cast in sand over 1200 years, as a model for his current sculptures: the natural process of wood decay and ossification inspired the spontaneous process of carving, incising, and imprinting the ships timbers into resin-impregnated sand. The small-scale of the boats also references the literalness of the toy-like boats manufactured for ancient Egyptian tombs. The emotion of the objects is playful: while the philosophical references are heavy, the means of representation can be playful; as in the liliputian Egyptian boats found in the galleries of the Metropolitan Museum. Even after the heareafter, life continues on as normal, indefinitely.

William Corwin is a sculptor and writer who has shown his work widely in New York City and in Europe.

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William Corwin

A graduate of Princeton University, where he studied architecture, Will has exhibited  his work at LaMama Galleria, Zurcher Gallery, Geary Contemporary and The George and Jorgen Gallery in London.  Residencies include: the State Department Artist Residency at the Taipei Artist’s Village (2007), The Clocktower Gallery (2010), The Hamburg City Guest Artist Residency (2010), Art Omi (2014), Lower Manhattan Workspace Residency on Governors Island (2014).  Museum shows include Roots/Anchors in at The Newhouse Center for Contemporary Art at Snug Harbor, a four person show featuring the work of Shervone Neckles, Katie Holten, and Xaviera Simmons, with exhibition catalog essay by Lucy Lippard.

In 2019 he curated Postwar Women at The Art Students League, an exhibition of forty-four of the institution’s alumnae active between 1945 and 1965, featuring artists such as Lee Krasner, Lenita Manrey, Mavis Pusey, Perle Fine, Elizabeth Catlett, and Dorothy Dehner. He has also curated a series of exhibitions centering on the midcentury French painters Marguerite Louppe and Maurice Brianchon, at Lafayette College, Albright College, and Seton Hall University, and most recently this past spring and summer at Rosenberg & Co. He is the author of the book &Model, published by Leeds Metropolitan University, and is the editor of the upcoming book: Formal Concerns: Collected essays of Saul Ostrow, to be published by Elective Affinity Press in 2023. He was most recently included in three of Phong Bui’s exhibitions, Singing in Unison, in the summer of 2022.

News

Link to William Corwin: Lethe-Wards news page

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William Corwin: Lethe-Wards

The Brooklyn Rail | December 2022

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Link to William Corwin at Geary Contemporary (Millerton, New York) news page

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William Corwin at Geary Contemporary (Millerton, New York)

White Hot Magazine | November 2022

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Link to William Corwin news page

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William Corwin

Sculpture Magazine | December 13, 2022

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