Wednesday, November 19, 2008






Wrapping, draping and tailoring architecture, Rachel Hayes uses environmental light, shadow, egress and access to define, color and alter our perception of interior and exterior space. For many of her site-specific works, this Brooklyn, New York-based artist chooses unabashedly synthetic materials for their ability to pop and glow with unnatural color, texture and sheen.

Within her latest installation, however, Hayes bears down upon these surfaces with a surprisingly natural found object: rocks pulled from her parent's local property. In a deft gesture, Hayes makes these unwieldy objects yield to her repertoire of materials by painting them and thus transforming them into abstract and weighty dark matter. The translucent and shiny vinyl and plastic, pulled taught and caught beneath objects foreign to her plastic world, moves her installation into a tantalizing and exciting new direction.
-Marcus Cain, curator Epsten Gallery, a project of the KC Jewish Museum Foundation, 2008

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Review of Eric's show @ Acuna-Hansen


LOS ANGELES
Eric Sall: “High and Wide”
at Acuna-Hansen
Eric Sall’s first solo show in Los Angeles puts just three
of his large-format abstract oil paintings on display, but
since one is a masterpiece, the choice to exhibit quality
rather than quantity is a winning decision. Thick, house-
paint sized horizontal swaths ofcolor—from marine
blue at the bottom of the canvas, rising into grey, black,
then grey again and red at the top—form the back-
ground of Fair and Balanced.It is a color scheme that
brings Yves Tanguy’s fantastical landscapes to mind, es-
pecially the black in the middle, which functions as an
amorphous horizon line. The foreground is completely
centered on a contraption of vaguely military con-
trivance. This represented object, both fanciful and me-
chanical, appears like one of Tanguy’s polymorphous
blobs, but enlarged and more machine-like, like a Jean
Tinguely sculpture in two dimensional oils.
Adding another layer of depth to the picture as a whole
is the red, white and blue smears of bunting that form a
sort of hull, holding the parts in place. To use Fox News’
notoriously misleading slogan as a title for an ostensibly
abstract painting while we’re all in the middle of the po-
litical season could be construed as providing shorthand
for the grasping of meaning in front of the work. But it
actually opens up the art historical references and aes-
thetic experiences available when in front of the workto
include the more quotidian, rational mind. Has the con-
traption been attacked, or is it in the process of shooting
things out and attacking something else? The pinks and
purples used to create the lines and designs within the
thing contribute to a subtle statement about the colors
that go into red, white and blue when they are bleeding
into each other: primary colors politicized as masculine
and patriotic confront shades typically gendered as femi-
nine and assailable. Fair and Balancedexcites thought
while providing visual pleasure.
While Paul Klee described his artistic process as “taking
a line for a walk,”in Stockpile, Sall takes his lines for
short, jaunty excursions and layers them on top of each
other. Jagged zigzags march beneath soft curves and
inchworm silhouettes traverse stunted branchings and
pliable fishhooks. Bloody Ridgeblends his enchantment
with the line into roaring dissonances of unexpected
colors that clash on either side of each highlighted
edge. With Sall’s considerable skills manipulating paint,
the maturation of his ideas should be
keenly anticipated.

—ANDREW CHOATE

“Fair and Balanced,” 2007
Eric Sall
Oil on canvas, 78" x 96"
Photo: courtesy of acuna-hansen gallery
www.artltdmag.com Copyright ©2008 Lifescapes Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved.

Evermore @ KC Jewish Museum

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Eric in group show @ ATM

Sweet Return, oil on canvas, 72" x 96"


East Moves West
ATM Gallery is moving one door down, to 621 West 27th Street. We will open our space on October 17th with a show comprised of art works by Huma Bhabha, Yayoi Deki, Anne Eastman, Alison Fox, Tomoo Gokita, Yoko Kawamoto, Min Kim, Tamami Kubota, Mike Pare, Noam Rappaport, Miguel Ângelo Rocha, Eric Sall, Saeko Takagi and Gordon Terry.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Rachel Hayes @ ADA Gallery


RACHEL HAYES - RE-Reverie

ADA Gallery
project space

October & November

1829 main street
Richmond, VA

Here is a link to a Flickr account where I just uploaded pictures from the exhibit. They’re in a set called "Rachel Hayes @ ADA Gallery

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Interview with Eric

The three paintings from Eric's current show in LA were made in Richmond, VA, right before we moved to New York. It is the first time these painting have been shown together.
Bloody Ridge
Fair and Balanced
Stockpile



Thursday, June 5, 2008

organizing




I am re - organizing my studio, here are a few pieces I have finished and am packing up from the past year to look at while I gear up.

Friday, May 2, 2008


05.09.08 - 05.30.08
The Duality of Light Without Violence
by
Rachel Hayes
Opening Reception - Saturday May 10th from 6-8pm
Inside and Outside, Homespun and Haute, Reflections and Shadows, Sacred and Secular, Revealing and Concealing, Lithe and Dense...
"The Duality of Light Without Violence" will be an unattainable environment to the passing viewers, leaving the installation to be a 'color shelter' enclosed within the gallery.

THE LAB (for installation + performance art) is a New York based, converted storefront turned fishbowl producing 20+ fast paced performance art and installation exhibitions annually. Aimed at the furious midtown foot traffic, THE LAB's programming is designed to confront modern relationships between art and audience and seeks to force interaction between high energy, "outrospective" exhibitions and nearly 25,000 daily passersby. For more information, call 212-339-2092, or email rogersmitharts@rogersmith.com.


THE GALLERY IS LOCATED ON THE CORNER OF 47TH STREET AND LEXINGTON AVENUE
ALL EXHIBITIONS ARE ON VIEW 24/7.



therogersmithhotel

501 Lexington Avenue
New York, NY. 10017
212.755.1400
www.rogersmitharts.com

p.s.
NEWS FLASH
Read Eric's review in the Village Voice

Thursday, April 24, 2008

1 more week @ Sculpture Space






packing up...
taking a load of work back to Brooklyn, one of two trips. I will also stop by Eric's open studio at
Lower Manhattan Cultural Council
We had an open studio at the Sculpture Space a couple of days ago. I am slowly documenting all the work I have made here to post....