Jun 11 - Aug 15, 2015
Toronto, Canada

Ask the Frog

Curated by
Rui Mateus Amaral
Projects Shown

More information on works displayed in this show:

Reviews
Review, Sky Gooden Momus
Review, Richard Rhodes Canadian Art
Review, Murray Whyte Toronto Star

Ask The Frog

Daniel Faria Gallery, Toronto, Canada, June 11 – August 15th, 2015

In German-born, Toronto-based artist Iris Haeussler’s new solo exhibition Ask the Frog, the domestic becomes physically suspended in space and time, and overlooked elements shift between everyday life and poetic forms. Rather than weaving a narrative or becoming the vessel for artists such as Joseph Wagenbach, Ellen Stanley or Mary O’Shea (some of Haeussler’s most well-known heteronyms), Haeussler’s recently completed objects are a reflection of her conceptual experimentation with wax, prosaic remnants and space. This new body of work is abstract, yet familiar.

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In Haeussler’s’ previous exhibition with the gallery, articles of women’s clothing, both cherished or abandoned, were encased in wax slabs that were framed and placed on the wall. The artist’s new wax sculptures combine curtains, bed sheets and blankets that Haeussler has collected over the last thirty years. They bear the traces of the many lives that have inhabited them. Set into wax slabs, these mundane surfaces lose their utilitarian function, but gain a lyrical dimension, becoming useful as metaphors for assurance, withdrawal and protection. Haeussler heightens the feeling of domesticity and memory in the way that the fabrics, unlike the previous works, slip out and drape over the wax slabs, as if the viewer is encountering an unmade bed, or a washing machine that is spilling its load. These new sculptures are messy and lived in, as disorderly as they are graceful.

Haeussler pushes the possibility of her wax forms by setting them off the wall, allowing them to fully inhabit the gallery space and be observed from various viewpoints. A few of Haeussler’s wax objects are dominated by the collected materials. Haeussler extends these superfluous materials to the gallery’s rafters where the sculptures become suspended and outstretched. For the most part, the wax in these suspended works hovers just above the ground. Placed throughout the gallery, the sculptures simulate architectural columns, forming an abstract path within the space. Viewers are invited to meander and to pause.

Receiving the viewer to the exhibition is Haeussler’s sculpture of a white male frog—an oracle-like figure that provides only hints and warnings in response to our questions about life. Haeussler’s frog resembles those charms and divine figures that pervade our homes. Much like her collected materials, the sculpture projects impressions of safekeeping, comfort and affirmation. The viewer is invited to inquire with the frog, shuffle his deck of cards and choose one as a response. Both front and back of the cards offer viewers an answer, one that may be meaningful in that moment or reveal its meaning over time. Spanning numerous cards, the replies range from precise to ambiguous and from humorous to burdening, echoing the uncertainty of our lives.

It is this notion of questioning, but never fully knowing, that interests Haeussler – the ambiguities of life reflected in the way the wax holds and lets go of form and informat, while the frog provides us with no definitive answers.

(Rui Amaral)