Maskull Lasserre & Lucas Simões

Theory of Prose

Jan 28 – Mar 20, 2021
Lucas Simões, Abismo no. 50, 2017, concrete, metal, paper, 10.6 x 9.45 x 5.9 in Courtesy of the artist and PATRON Gallery (Chicago)

Lucas Simões, Abismo no. 50, 2017, concrete, metal, paper, 10.6 x 9.45 x 5.9 in Courtesy of the artist and PATRON Gallery (Chicago)

Arsenal Contemporary Art New York is pleased to present Theory of Prose, a two-person exhibition with the Canadian artist Maskull Lasserre and the Brazilian artist Lucas Simões.

Lucas Simões’s sculptural work combines sturdy materials like steel and concrete with more delicate ones, such as paper and copper. The artist’s thoughtful juxtapositions of materials emphasize the tension between built form and unstable matter to achieve a gentle balance via the elusive force of gravity. In this way, his work draws attention to the invisible phenomena that affect the material world. Trained as an architect, Simões’s practice as an artist is driven by the impetus to ‘make strange.’ His artistic practice is grounded in the aesthetic heritage of the Russian avant-garde, particularly that of the Soviet Formalist writer Viktor Shklovsky who is best known for developing the literary concept of defamiliarization or ‘estrangement’. For Shklovsky, art acted as a tool that allowed artists to turn something ubiquitous into something peculiar that could conjure new perspectives on the part of the beholder.

This conceptual framework is equally helpful when considering the work of Maskull Lasserre. Having travelled to Afghanistan as an artist with the Canadian Forces, Lasserre has developed a body of work that plays with the ontology of objecthood. The artist engineered functioning musical devices drawing from the realms of military weaponry and traditional symphony orchestra. The visual form and the designed function of these objects is balanced between the divergent theatres of music and war. This body of work adopts objects of discipline, training and allegiance that belong to disparate discourses and contexts and brings them together into a singular and functioning form, thus yielding a dialogue between two otherwise dissociate fields. Through his artistic process, Lasserre explores how cultural mechanisms of harmony and violence can be coopted, conflated and spun.

For Lasserre, like for Simões, art making is a process of transformation that can act as an archetype for an idea or a thought process. Their respective practices not only share a kinship with other disciplines but also the fundamental desire to disengage from the artworld’s didactic pervasiveness to exercise art’s capacity to alter perception and action.

Please note that you are required to book an appointment to visit Arsenal Contemporary Art New York.

 Share