Wanda Koop
Standing Withstanding
May 1 - July 1, 2018
Opening
May 1, 6 - 8 p.m.
Arsenal Contemporary is pleased to present Standing Withstanding, the first major solo exhibition in New York of one of Canada’s most distinguished painters, Wanda Koop. Koop has left an indelible mark on the canonical genre of landscape painting, ushering themes of globalization and technology into this tradition. Through blooms of color and quivering fluorescents, the artist offers sightlines of the world, all the while underscoring how one’s view remains contingent on one’s position.
Composed of a series of new paintings, Standing Withstanding looks to the primordial sign of fire as it occurs through time, positing a relationship to history that is expansive and non-static. Towering flames are indexes of energy concealed below the surfaces of water and land where oil is covertly transported. These flames also mark the place where the artist is born and from, Winnipeg, and the communal gathering of indigenous peoples at bonfires across its Red River. The resulting confluence of meanings below one sign yields the complex reality of the artist’s 40 year career.
The current exhibition is a continuation of Koop’s investigation into the contemporary understanding of landscape, in particular this genre as a vehicle for addressing cultural encroachment upon and destruction of the so-called natural world. With a concentration on the interrelationship between nature and human perception, canvases capture the minimal silhouette of various skylines, abstracted through positive and negative space, as a softly optical re-visitation of these sites through the estrangement of memory.
Wanda Koop (b. 1951, Vancouver) lives and works in Winnipeg, Canada. She has been awarded Canada’s most esteemed honors including the Order of Canada in 2006 and the Governor’s General Award in 2016. Koop founded Art City, a non-for-profit community art center dedicated to its diverse community in Winnipeg in 1996. In 2011, the National Gallery of Canada, together with the Winnipeg Art Gallery, organized a comprehensive survey of her work. She has exhibited at the Arsenale, Venice (Italy); The Shanghai Art Museum (China); Musée des Beaux Arts de Montréal (Canada); and The Fries Museum (Netherlands).
Press
Garage, by Meg Whiteford
Jun 29, 2018
The hybrid screening and performance by these two artists of native ancestry—Ortman is White Mountain Apache and Latimer is Algonquin/Métis—was a closing ceremony of sorts for Canadian artist Wanda Koop’s solo exhibition, “Standing Withstanding,” which is on view through July 1.
Eyes Towards the Dove, by Katy Diamond Hamer
Jun 2, 2018
Artist Wanda Koop paints in a very lyrical way. She let’s the paint dictate the painting, not completely dissimilar from The Composition Series by Kandinsky. Using acrylic in a watered-down format, Koop has been making work for forty years. In that time, she has inherently studied the medium, how it responds to various surfaces, and how to work in a way that is freeing and uninhibited.
Whitehot Magazine, by WM Staff
May, 2018
A preeminent figure in contemporary Canadian art, Wanda Koop has been making waves stateside recently for her au courant paintings of silhouetted skylines that comment on the intersection between urbanism and the natural world.
Office Magazine, by Evan Nicole Brown
May 21, 2018
Walking through the space, an intimate and cool respite from the busyness of Bowery just outside, I couldn’t help but think about the impact of color, both in painting and in cultural conversations. Koop, a Winnipeg, Canada native, explains her relationship to cultural color early on: as a young girl, her family lived in close proximity to the Indigenous peoples of Winnipeg, and embraced one Native woman in particular as family.
Blake Gopnik on Art
May 7, 2018
THE WEEKLY PIC: For a couple of decades, Wanda Koop has been one of Canada’s most respected painters, but she’s only now getting a solo show in New York, at Arsenal gallery on The Bowery.
Artnet news
May 1, 2018
Canadian painter Wanda Koop gets her first major New York solo exhibition, showcasing her unique take on landscape painting, informed by globalization and the technological age, as well as the tradition of communal bonfires maintained by the indigenous people of her native Winnipeg