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Martin Wilner | Making History: The Case Histories 2014

  • Hales Gallery 7 Bethnal Green Rd London, E1 United Kingdom (map)

Hales Gallery is pleased to announcean exhibition of pen, ink, and graphite works on paper by Martin Wilner. This is his second one-person exhibition with the gallery. Wilner is also an Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College. A unifying theme in both of his professional realms is the use of observation­–in art, for the creation of his work, and in clinical practice, as a means to facilitate dynamic change and conflict resolution in individuals seeking consultation.

Making History is a time-based project initiated in January of 2002 that utilizes the convention of the Roman calendar to telegraph the notion of the passage of time over the course of each month. Wilner selects a daily subject of interest to him from a variety of media sources and visualizes them each day as a drawing that would coalesce into a completed work by the end of each month. Elements of cartoon, cartography, text, micrography, and music have evolved into essential aspects of his creative vocabulary. On the verso of each drawing are descriptive texts or images that are integral to the work.

Upon completion of a decade of this project in 2012, Wilner elected to push the creative envelope of this parameter-based body of work by inviting individuals familiar with his work to correspond with him daily for a month-long period and send him messages describing what they found of compelling interest to them on each day of their assigned month. He would then visualize each correspondence daily to produce the composite work by month's end.

Aside from the exciting new challenges posed to his drawing practice, it introduced a relational situation of a defined intensive nature that has become the basis of this work. As such, the work has shifted from a subjective visual history into an unusual form of biographical portraiture over a discrete time period, a portrait of a state of mind in time. The process of producing each work, in addition to the conventions and rigors of drawing, thus entails an examination of the correspondence not simply by its manifest content, but also a consideration of latent meanings and relationships between the thoughts over the course of a period of time. Fundamental psychoanalytic principles must be applied to the task of processing the correspondence, including resistances, transference and countertransference. The drawing itself becomes an attempt to address and resolve these matters in a sublimated visual form for the purpose of art rather than therapeutic intervention. The monthly works are, in effect, case studies of a most unusual nature.

Dr. Robert Michels, one of the most prominent contemporary psychoanalysts and the subject of July 2014, described it well in his first correspondence to Wilner: “… My first observation is my awareness of the effect of knowing that I will be reporting to you–I am aware of seeking perceptions and experiences, and as a result the world seems different.”

In an effort to address Freud’s unanswered, politically incorrect famous question, “What does a woman want?”, Wilner selected an array of women as subjects for his 2013 Case Studies. He thought it only appropriate to follow that up with a year of men to address the corollary question, “What does a man want? The subjects ranged from a 9-year-old Mensa scholar to art curators, artists of different disciplines, art collectors, an antiquarian manuscript dealer, to a 92-year old venerated art gallerist.

For 2014, Wilner introduced the use of color into what were, until now, black and white works, feeling that the work was ready for the introduction of this new parameter. The works range from subtle trichomal approaches to unusual blendings of watercolor-based inks. This latest development brings an additional dimension of richness to these already highly complex works.

Also presented are recent works from Wilner’s other ongoing project, Journal of Evidence Weekly, an observational in vivo documentation of every trip he has made on the subways of New York since 1998. Itis the improvisational jazz that informs the more classically composed Making History.

Hales Gallery

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SURREAL ROOTS: FROM WILLIAM BLAKE TO ANDRÉ BRETON

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Anna-Bella Papp