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The Green Zone
Solo Show featuring Guerra de la Paz
Curator Lynn del Sol

Run Dates: February 15th- March 22nd 2008
Opening Reception: Thursday February 14th, 6-8pm

Location:
Daneyal Mahmood Gallery
Directions: 511 West 25th St. New York, NY. 10001



For additional information, a price list, hi-rez images, and/or an artist press kit, please contact us.
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The Green Zone - the International Zone in Iraq - is a heavily guarded diplomatic area of closed-off streets in central Baghdad where US personnel live and work. It is completely surrounded by high concrete blast walls and barbed wire. Access is only available through a handful of entry points, all of which are controlled by armed guards. It is the American military's heavily fortified and painstakingly Americanized home –The Green Zone residents eat standard American food, almost all of it brought in from abroad. They have an elaborate gym, satellite TV, computers, DVD's, and telephones with U.S. area codes, as well as a bar known as the “Country Club” - the place to go for Cuban cigars, fresh cuts of beef and a decent wine. The Green Zone is a little America in the middle of a war zone embedded in the heart of Baghdad. Contrary to popular belief, the Green Zone is lush and tropical - It’s a perfect Middle Eastern paradise.

It is a famous paradox that walls that protect you also hem you in. In the hands of the artist duo Guerra de la Paz, this absurd unreality serves as a catalyst for the discussion of the sociopolitical effects that such fictitious fortresses create in society. Through the use of the discarded abundance of the American lifestyle, these artists compose a grand fabric interpretation of an idealized landscape.

The idyllic scenery is fashioned out of discarded garments, hand picked from mountainous piles of clothing designated to over flowing landfills created by our disposable culture. The artists’ interest in the recycled object as an art medium examines the western concepts of cultural ownership and fictitious ideologies. Tree trunks made of tons of clothing weigh heavy on the ground, brown pants, sweaters, and jackets are industriously twisted into life like roots lolling around the gallery floor. Overhead a canopy forms where green garments hang gently down and sways in the breeze.

No strangers to large provocative installations, Guerra de la Paz in these works as in others: Oasis (2006); Pieta (2005); Eden (2003) and Overflow (2002), pricks at America's cultural conflicts -seeking to define struggle, victory, and failure - while taking society's belongings and parading them about is as if to say, "No really, the emperor has no clothes." Though presented as a sheltered oasis of a sort, the forest beckons the viewers forward leading them towards a distant red light where the artists' presentation of the sculpture Martyr - a lone camouflage-clad crucified figure hangs ominously on a pristine white wall. This sculpture stands as a personification of the ideals of universal sacrifice, which is freely sequestered from all its citizens lost to endless political plots for control and domination. A symbol of defiance and faith, whether a pawn of government or a true devote, here the artists are able to draw parallels between the two images that incarnate dialogue, questioning and defying authority

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Installation View: Daneyal Mahmood Gallery, New York, NY. 2008
Images courtesy of {CTS} creative thriftshop, New York
Sound design by Diego del Sol. Photo Credit Ward Yoshimoto

about the artist: Guerra de la Paz is the composite name that represents the creative team efforts of Cuban born artists, Alain Guerra and Neraldo de la Paz. What began as an idea for two individual artists to share a working studio in Miami's Little Haiti, has become an ongoing collaboration that has evolved into constant experimentation, manifesting into a body of work that spans over eleven years in a variety of formats. The recipient of the 2008 SCOPE Foundation Grant for artist project “Under the Banyan Tree,” they are are represented in the Satchi Collection (London), 21C Museum Foundation (Louisville, KY), Frost Art Museum (Miami, FL), Miami Art Museum (Miami, FL), and The Cintas Fellows Collection.

about the curator: Lynn del Sol was born and raised in New York. She is the director and founder of {CTS} creative thriftshop. Actively organizing over twenty nomadic exhibitions and events a year. She was co-curator of the Lebanese Pavillion at the Venice Biennale in 2005 and has volunteered in the education department at the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA). She held directorship at Jack the Pelican Presents (Brooklyn, NY.) and at Xanadu* (New York, NY). She was recently invited to become a board member of the Williamsburg Gallery Association (WGA).

about the gallery: Daneyal Mahmood Gallery founded 2006. The intent of the gallery's program is to define the normative as much as police it's deviations - while addressing religion, sexuality, politics, marketing and science - the social subtext to the program being as important as the aesthetic. At the same time, there's an attention to form and craftsmanship. Mediums include drawing, painting, photography and multi-media installation. There is a commitment to visual exuberance and a love of spectacle throughout the gallery's program.

Work on View:

Guerra de la Paz
The Green Zone, 2008, mix media installation with assorted clothing,
144 x 360 x 264in (366 x 914 x 671cm)

Guerra de la Paz
Martyr, 2007, mix media sculpture with assorted clothing,
120 x 96 x 14in (305 x 244 x 36cm)


Installation View: Daneyal Mahmood Gallery, New York, NY. 2008
Images courtesy of {CTS} creative thriftshop, New York
Sound design by Diego del Sol. Photo Credit Ward Yoshimoto

Installation View: Daneyal Mahmood Gallery, New York, NY. 2008
Images courtesy of {CTS} creative thriftshop, New York
Sound design by Diego del Sol. Photo Credit Ward Yoshimoto

Installation View: Daneyal Mahmood Gallery, New York, NY. 2008
Images courtesy of {CTS} creative thriftshop, New York
Sound design by Diego del Sol. Photo Credit Ward Yoshimoto