ADAM SILVERMAN:
MARKS AND MARKERS

April 28, 2022 - May 21, 2022

Friedman Benda, New York, NY

Opening Reception: Thursday April 28th, 6 – 8pm. 

         Friedman Benda is pleased to present Los Angeles-based artist Adam Silverman’s third solo show with the gallery entitled Marks and Markers. The title of the show refers to not only the marks from Silverman’s process (the artist’s hands, the fire, the glaze and the compounding alchemy), but also referencing the “markers” that denote certain ceremonies, rituals, the passing of time and boundaries, or a signpost marking one’s physical and existential position. Tracing the evolution of Silverman’s career through two discrete bodies of work, this self-reflective exhibition refers back to the genesis of his ceramics practice while looking ambitiously to the future.

         The culmination of a three-year long investigation, Marks and Markers  premieres a series of large-scale sculptures up to 6 feet in height that challenge the physical limits of the material. Driven to communicate through form, scale and posture, Silverman was forced to come full circle in order to grapple with new processes, materials and through rigorous experimentation. To counteract the unpredictable alchemical process of working at this scale, he returned to more pure geometrical, closed silhouettes pervasive in his work before he slowly progressed into increasingly looser, improvisational forms that have come to define his approach. Drawing on his architectural background, Silverman relies on sketching the large forms in full-scale charcoal drawings that inspire and reflect the energy captured in the clay. Akin to construction drawings, he uses these as guides in the making of the ceramic works.  The installation will include these wall-hanging scrolls—bringing the studio process into the gallery space and offering the viewer a glimpse of each piece’s trajectory.

         Standing 1 to 3 feet in height, the second body of work presented will be more intimately scaled with each pushed to the point of failure while maintaining a glimpse of their original geometric purity. An interplay of arrested motion, contour, and space, these pots are an expression of their own making. Since he first began working with local materials in Mashiko Japan in 2006, Silverman has delved deeper into employing these raw materials in his practice as much for their cultural significance as their physical potential. Silverman has continued to pursue this direction by conceiving of bodies of work comprised of and in response to the specific locations of LACMA and the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, and his acclaimed Common Ground project, in which he brings together clay, water, and wood ash from each of the 56 states and territories of the US. For nearly a decade Silverman has pursued this direction in his practice while spending each summer working in rural, coastal Rhode Island. Marking a culmination of this investigation, a grouping highlighted in the show employ and explore materials from the Pacific and Atlantic oceans. Silverman combines beach clays, driftwood ash, seaweed and salt in celebration and acknowledgement of their biochemical beauty.

         The exhibition is accompanied by a catalouge with an essays contributed by Mayer Rus, Rosanne Somerson, Scott Barton, Tamotsu Yagi, and Bobbye Tigerman.

Watch Adam Silverman in conversation with Glenn Adamson:

ABOUT ADAM SILVERMAN

Known for his sculptural vessels and richly textured glazes, Adam Silverman is among the most dynamic practitioners dedicated to ceramics today. Silverman brings an architect’s sense of structure to his objects and utilizes personal and sophisticated techniques to glaze and fire his works.

Silverman was born in 1963 in New York, NY and received a Bachelor of Fine Art and a Bachelor of Architecture from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1987 and 1988. He served as the Los Angeles studio director of Heath Ceramics for five years between 2009 and 2014.

In 2008, he collaborated with architect Nader Tehrani and conceived Boolean Valley, an installation comprised of 400 clay objects with various versions at MOCA Pacific Design Center, Los Angeles, CA, Montalvo Arts Center, Saratoga, CA, Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas, TX, and San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose, CA.  In late 2019, the artist started Common Ground, an ongoing project in which he brings together clay, water, and wood ash from each of the 56 states and territories of the US. By mixing these materials together, he erases the arbitrary borders of statehood, to create a single new material which will be used to make the project. Common Ground reflects on the divisiveness of the current state of the country, while also celebrating the commonality and universality of the shared American experience.

Silverman’s work is included in the permanent collections of the Israel Museum, Jerusalem; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, CA; Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland, OR; Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas, TX; Palm Springs Art Museum, CA; Rhode Island School of Design Museum, Providence, RI; and the Yale Art Gallery, New Haven, CT. He lives and works in Los Angeles, CA.

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