Artwork Checklist
More Exhibitions at Louche Ops
Similar Exhibitions
Guestbook
Press Release
The split between a neurotic and a pervert is, in a nutshell, that the pervert has the capacity to enjoy the outward expression of their symptom while the neurotic prefers its retention. In different ways, this exhibit contends with a modern realization that an object cannot provide its own context nor can a context be defined without a subject.
A granular, almost forensic, attunement to traditions that focus on the semiotic imperatives of framing, may abstract intersubjective discourse to the brink of sadomasochism (as an extraction of consent) between artist and viewer. But even in the act of chewing a thought into spit, an egg arrives, conducted by compulsion and bearing odd codings.
Bits of shell that partially defy the conceits of language slip out between the speaker’s teeth. Like a performance of Zeno’s paradox, the neurotic describes the details that proclaim an impossibility of movement. One cannot cross the room because they must first cross half of it, and b…
MoreExhibition Space

Press Release
The split between a neurotic and a pervert is, in a nutshell, that the pervert has the capacity to enjoy the outward expression of their symptom while the neurotic prefers its retention. In different ways, this exhibit contends with a modern realization that an object cannot provide its own context nor can a context be defined without a subject.
A granular, almost forensic, attunement to traditions that focus on the semiotic imperatives of framing, may abstract intersubjective discourse to the brink of sadomasochism (as an extraction of consent) between artist and viewer. But even in the act of chewing a thought into spit, an egg arrives, conducted by compulsion and bearing odd codings.
Bits of shell that partially defy the conceits of language slip out between the speaker’s teeth. Like a performance of Zeno’s paradox, the neurotic describes the details that proclaim an impossibility of movement. One cannot cross the room because they must first cross half of it, and b…
More
















































