Meet the Artist August 26 4:00-7:00p.m

August 26 - September, 2023


Galleri Urbane is pleased to announce On Edge, an exhibition of artwork by collector favorite Jessica Drenk. The gallery has exhibited Jessica’s work since 2013, This represents the fifth solo exhibition by the artist.


 

Installed Images:

 

 

A first look never sounds the depths of an oeuvre by Drenk. The artist is fed by her fascination with natural patterns. During hikes—at times to the same canyon in the American Southwest—she lets nature imprint upon her its myriad shapes and systems of order. The result is a delicate and encyclopedic attention to the vast possibilities of form as meticulously created and perceived.

 
 

Aggregate Strata 2, 2023

Junk mail

58h x 86w x 2.5d inches

 

 

Watch:

video tour of ‘On Edge’

 
 
 

 
My work is an inquiry into materiality: what makes up the objects that surround us as well as the composition of the natural world. I am interested in how parts combine to create a whole and the intricacies of shape and texture found in the world at every scale. In treating everyday objects as raw material to sculpt, I practice a form of conceptual alchemy: through physically manipulating these objects their meanings become transmuted. Each piece is a direct response to material—a subversion of the meanings associated with it, and a reference to the life cycle of objects through time.”
— Jessica Drenk
 

Watch:

Jessica Drenk checks in from her studio to answer a few questions about ‘On Edge’

 
 
 

Aggregate Stone 1, 2023
Quick View
Aggregate Stone 1, 2023

Junk mail

20h x 41w x 4d inches.

 

Detail: Aggregate Stone 2

 

Detail: Aggregate Stone 1

 
Aggregate Stone 2, 2023

Junk mail

20h x 32w x 4d inches.

 
 

Each found and repurposed material is a cipher that highlights its physical properties while transmuting them. In this show, based around the line and the edge, Drenk continues her work with book pages in Sheaf. Drenk lays out clumps of pages, nails them together, saws them, and nails them together again in an iterative process of separating and gathering again. Wax liberates fresh translucencies, like water over stones. “I also love the idea of these words, thoughts, and stories being completely disrupted and reshaped into something that is now read aesthetically,” she says. Compressed and rhythmic, expansive in scale, her work is an exercise in shapeshifting.

 
 
Lacunae, 2023

Archival Book Binding Tape

36h x 84w inches.

 
 

Side view: Lacunae

 

 
 

With the new Aggregate series, strata shot through with the colors of junk mail, the viewer is brought into rapport with geological time and its opposite (“the momentary glimpse versus eons”), but also the time of human labor—the layering of time in her own craftsmanship, like the rocks and ridges forged in the crucible of the earth. Meanwhile, “Color is the indicator that you should get closer,” she says. Instinct suggests the surface is not what it seems. Opposites and extremes, the macro and the micro, naturing and denaturing come into play.

Sheaf 1, 2023

Books, wax.

74h x 138w x 4d inches.

 
 

 

Aggregate Stone 3, 2023
Quick View
Aggregate Stone 3, 2023

Junk mail

37w x 37h x 4d inches.

Detail: Aggregate 3

 

Sheaf 2, 2023
Quick View
Sheaf 2, 2023

Books, wax.

56h x 45w x3.5d inches.

 

While Drenk often returns to materials time and again, her practice allows for both depth and breadth in material investigation. Her 2020 show brought Q-tip cotton swabs to new levels (this installation was recently featured at the NADA x Foreland fair in New York) and this exhibition brings a new material: tape. As with all of her work, “Some things end up looking like a magnified version of something else,” Drenk says. But mimicry or verisimilitude are only incidental. The point is to invite the viewer to reconsider. “My goal is to take a material as far away from itself as possible while still retaining the ability to tell what it is,” she says. The viewer is left with a visual (even ontological) quandary that invites closer looking. Drenk activates human curiosity as an aesthetic tool for liberation: she wants us to simply see—and see anew.


Detail of Sheaf

 

Jessica Drenk’s work can be found in private collections throughout the world and galleries across the United States.  Her work is a part of several corporate collections, such as that of Fidelity Investments, Frost Bank, and The Macallan distillery in Scotland, as well as the Yale University Art Gallery and Huntington Museum of Art.  Drenk has been the recipient of several awards, including International Sculpture Center’s Outstanding Student Achievement in Contemporary Sculpture Award, and her work has been pictured in Sculpture and Interior Design magazines, as well as The Workshop Guide to Ceramics.