Los Angeles
Elad Lassry at David Kordansky Gallery
Elad Lassry’s latest exhibition at David Kordansky commingles two groups of seemingly disparate works: highly wrought wooden sculptures, carved from single slabs of dark walnut, and dated commercial photographs, which have been intervened upon with materials such as acrylic paint, colored wires, and beads. The show attempts to bridge the gap between the two bodies of works by engaging the issue of pictorial representation as an abstraction of depicted objects—a far-reaching pursuit for compositions and techniques that seem fairly simple and straightforward on the surface.

Elad Lassry, 2015; installation view. Courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery. Photo: Fredrik Nilsen.
The black-and-white images found in Lassry’s series of sculptural photographs are taken from commercial photo shoots. The context of each photograph is deliberately withheld, with ranging subjects that include black fashion models, as depicted in Untitled (Woman B) (2015); a set of water glasses on a tray, and industrial parts, in Untitled (Engine 2) (2015), and scientific studies, as in Untitled (Rattlesnake A) (2015). The works center on a dual and seemingly contradictory assertion that “pictures do not exist until the information within them is framed, captured, and introduced into a new, separate system,” as the exhibition’s printed statement puts it—a claim to an image’s lack of an autonomous ability to convey meaning that Lassry’s addition of color and objects is oxymoronically meant to disrupt.




















