Installation view, Mönchehaus Museum, 2011. Courtesy of the gallery.

Installation view, Mönchehaus Museum, 2011. Courtesy of the gallery.

Untitled, 2010, Garden hose, plastic, 21 ¼ x 9 x 1 ¼ inches. Courtesy of the gallery.

Untitled, 2010, Garden hose, plastic, 21 ¼ x 9 x 1 ¼ inches. Courtesy of the gallery.

 

Upcoming at Clifton Benevento Gallery, New York is a solo exhibition of new works by Michael E Smith.  The exhibition opens November 2nd, 2013 and runs through December 21st.  Below is a press release written by Chris Sharp giving you an insiders perspective into Smith’s practice, interests, and inspirations. Read press release below:

 

“Typically mysterious, the prompt I receive, entitled ‘Inspiration’ to write the press release for Michael E. Smith’s second show at Clifton Benevento gallery is puzzling to say the least. The terse content of the email is: “skull chips and laptops”, which either illustrates or is illustrated by an iPhone quality image of a couple of classic Mac laptops mouse pads with round holes drilled into the mouse pad and white-bone looking objects, ostensibly the size of poker chips, inserted into the holes. The topography of the white bone like objects is uneven, landscape-like, one of which is reminiscent of a stalagmite. Although I’m no stranger to Michael E. Smith’s work, the possibility that I am actually looking at “chips” fashioned out of human skull and conjoined with defunct and mutilated lap tops terrifies me as much as it makes me laugh. This image is accompanied by an iPhone video of an early 2000′s center console from a mini van, which is placed on top of a short rod and engineered with a ball bearing unit, which allows the console to rotate. The video features the object animistically spinning in the penumbra of what I picture to be Smith’s studio. As for the rest, I am told by the artist, it is impossible to say, as a lot will change and happen in the gallery space itself– space being a crucial element to Smith’s sculptural interventions. If I have come to expect anything from Michael E. Smith’s work, it is, along with a risibly morbid penchant for reconfiguring urban flotsam and jetsam in spatially dramatic ways, that I am never quite sure what to expect. Indeed, for all anyone knows, the two works described in this press release might not even end up in the show.”  –Chris Sharp

 

For more information on Michael E Smith‘s solo exhibition visit Clifton Benevento Gallery, New York.