Elsa Tomkowiak & Mary Sue
Making Things Happen: Young Artists in Dialogue II

Elsa Tomkowiak & Mary Sue
Making Things Happen: Young Artists in Dialogue II

The Merchant House

Left: Elsa Tomkowiak, work in progress. Right: Mary Sue, Thinking About the Show at TMH. Courtesy of the artists and The Merchant House.
November 20, 2017

Elsa Tomkowiak & Mary Sue
Making Things Happen: Young Artists in Dialogue II

November 24, 2017–January 28, 2018

Opening: Friday, November 24, 5–9pm, 
during Amsterdam Art Weekend

The Merchant House
Herengracht 254
1016 BV Amsterdam
The Netherlands
Hours: Friday 12–7:30pm

info [​at​] merchanthouse.nl

www.merchanthouse.nl
Facebook / Instagram 

Special events
Amsterdam Art Weekend: November 23–26
Carolee Schneemann’s Films: Sunday, November 26, 12–2pm
Events RSVP

Elsa Tomkowiak & Mary Sue in the cycle of Making Things Happen
In celebration of Amsterdam Art Weekend 2017, The Merchant House has asked Elsa Tomkowiak and Mary Sue to interpret the gallery’s building, rich with Golden Age symbolism, as a contemporary public sphere. Using both spoofing techniques and serious art, they—Tomkowiak in painting and Mary Sue in video, sculpture, and photography—join forces to give the interior topography a provoking and provocative face-lift. In so doing, the artists also address individually, and emphatically with respect to their art, the underlying theme of TMH’s Making Things Happen: Young Artists in Dialogue cycle: How does a young artist inscribe herself in the history of an art medium? In the case of Mary Sue and Tomkowiak, the question refers to performance and a performative gesture in art making.

With a chance to exploit her adopted identity to the full, Mary Sue decks herself out as a trim housemaid to burnish the canonical fixtures of the Amsterdam bourgeois residence. Bent on a dramatic entry and transgressing the cannons of working with paint, Tomkowiak opens the space up to the spirit of liberty and munificence. French artists of the same generation and artistic formation, Tomkowiak and Mary Sue have featured in solo and group shows as well as festival commissions. They are on a mission to experiment:

About Elsa Tomkowiak
Elsa Tomkowiak (1981, France) has been in search of the most radical painting tools beginning with her art studies at ENSA of Dijon. Reflecting her predilection for an open gesture and the day-glow colors of a personal gradient, her earliest color interventions were made in the snow and on large vinyl surfaces suspended above industrial waste. Wielding broom-like brushes, she adopted a method of applying layers of multicolored paint to translucent or solid bands of plastic sheeting, or to massive spheres that can be positioned to redirect light and restructure the space. Her recent commissions and residencies include a swimming pool (Mönchengladbach), an opera house (Nantes), an abbey (Angers), two bridges (Saint-Gervais, Quebec), the glasshouse of a spa (Pougues-les-eaux), as well as landscaping during major urban events (Offenbach am Main, Amiens, Verdun).

About Mary Sue
Mary Sue states that otherness starts within oneself, that she was born between 1979 and sometime now, and that her gender identity might be female or science (also relating to her top performance in physics) fictional. Under this sobriquet, she has pursued a relentless career (not by-passing ENSA of Dijon for art studies) performing in her own videos, making costumes and decor, posters and books, but also sculptures, installation objects, and photographs—all fabricated to perfection by hand and surrounding the exploits of the brilliant, fictive Mary Sue. According to co-curator Hubert Besacier, we find her in situations—be it in a gallery show or on display at a Nike store—that are “totally desperate, and therefore hilarious.” Mary Sue’s crafted take on childhood and loss, Le Flotte, was seen this summer desperately afloat on the river in Amiens, France, for the Art, villes et paysage festival.

Sweeping through TMH’s walls, floors, windows, ceilings, and terraces with the exigency of their craft, both artists construct a probing play of color as a cultural value. With confident proficiency in their medium, they are able to create a unique artistic exchange that invites viewers to join in and enjoy. The relational and artistic aspects of their dialogue are, however, both real and illusory, intimating telling slippages in modern day sociability and bonding. 

Curators and catalogue contributors
Marsha Plotnitsky
, founding artistic director, and art writer Hubert Besacier

About The Merchant House
A self-supporting art space, TMH presents and sells contemporary art. Established by Marsha Plotnitsky, Artistic Director, in 2012 as a modern take on the Amsterdam tradition of a merchant, it promotes a cultural dialogue in the city. It has organized thematic exhibitions for international and Dutch innovators, such as Henk Peeters, Jan Schoonhoven, André de Jong, Chuck Close, Carolee Schneemann, Hilarius Hofstede, Craigie Horsfield, Judit Reigl, and Pino Pinelli. Each exhibition is accompanied by related cultural and research events.

To attend our events, please RSVP: invitations [​at​] merchanthouse.nl 
Entry to exhibitions and events at TMH is free

Advertisement
RSVP
RSVP for Elsa Tomkowiak & Mary SueMaking Things Happen: Young…
The Merchant House
November 20, 2017

Thank you for your RSVP.

The Merchant House will be in touch.

Subscribe

e-flux announcements are emailed press releases for art exhibitions from all over the world.

Agenda delivers news from galleries, art spaces, and publications, while Criticism publishes reviews of exhibitions and books.

Architecture announcements cover current architecture and design projects, symposia, exhibitions, and publications from all over the world.

Film announcements are newsletters about screenings, film festivals, and exhibitions of moving image.

Education announces academic employment opportunities, calls for applications, symposia, publications, exhibitions, and educational programs.

Sign up to receive information about events organized by e-flux at e-flux Screening Room, Bar Laika, or elsewhere.

I have read e-flux’s privacy policy and agree that e-flux may send me announcements to the email address entered above and that my data will be processed for this purpose in accordance with e-flux’s privacy policy*

Thank you for your interest in e-flux. Check your inbox to confirm your subscription.