Ramp Project: Ingrid CalameJanuary 21 - March 26, 2006The new ICA Ramp Project is a monumental wall painting by artist Ingrid Calame, based on graffiti taken from the cement embankments of the Los Angeles River. The eighth in a series of temporary works commissioned for the ramp, Calame's work can be seen January 21-March 26, 2006. Ingrid Calame traces contours of stains that she lifts from the streets and transposes onto white gallery walls into graphic, painterly compositions. Collected from sidewalks, parking lots, roads, and rampways in Los Angeles, New York, Las Vegas, and most recently Seoul, Korea, Calame has developed an extensive archive. Some stains are puddle-like; others bear the force of impact, defined by direction and speed; still others are simply small seepages, drops, natural drip and mechanical drizzles. There are actual paint stains, too: graffiti, the mark of human hands. Once traced, every stain is annotated with the place and date it was recorded, and then filed away for future use in her paintings. Abstract and representational at once, these layered works refer to cartography, forensics, and the gestures of Abstract Expressionism; at the same time they evoke abrasion, erosion, evaporation, erasure, and inscription.
For her installation at ICA, Calame responded to the steep pitch of the ramp space by turning to tracings she had made on the sharp embankment walls of the Los Angeles River. These included a turf war in spray paint between two local graffiti crews from the surrounding "Frog Town" neighborhood-each graffiting over the others" salvo of text. As Calame writes, "I traced the silhouette of the whole, so that words are sometimes visible but mostly are obliterated and changed into one conglomerate shape. It is like I found the constellation of stains that I usually combine in the studio." As rendered by Calame, this urban palimpsest is a microcosm of personal and political disputes in which one point of view wipes out the other thereby creating a new form. About Ingrid Calame
ICA Ramp Project Since 2000, ICA has commissioned artist installations for its 92-foot ramp, a transitional space that connects the first and second floor galleries. With its striking architecture and soaring windows overlooking 36th Street, the Ramp has been transformed into a dynamic programmed exhibition space, exposing the public to the contemporary art that is central to ICA's mission. ICA acknowledges the generous sponsorship of the William Penn Foundation for this project. Additional funding has been provided by The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, The Dietrich Foundation Inc., the Overseers Board for the Institute of Contemporary Art, friends and members of ICA, and the University of Pennsylvania. ICA is also grateful for in-kind support from Loews Philadelphia Hotel. (Information complete as of 11/28/05.) All programs subject to change. Top of page: Ingrid Calame in her studio with tracings for ICA Ramp Project, Los Angeles. Middle: Tracings for Ramp Project from Ingrid Calame's Los Angeles studio. Bottom: Bb-AAghch!
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now on view: Mike's World: Michael Smith & Joshua White (and other collaborators) Trenton Doyle Hancock: Wow That's Mean and Other Vegan Cuisine in this section: | ||||