•  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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  •  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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  •  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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  •  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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  •  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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Current Exhibition
Current Exhibition
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SELECTED WORKS BY Ivan Navarro

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Ivan Navarro
Homeless Lamp, the Juice Sucker

2005

Flourescent light bulbs, fixtures, wheels, street outlet and electric energy

Echoing the minimalist works of Dan Flavin, Ivan Navarro’s light sculptures subvert the cool detachment of florescent bulbs with their arrangement into recognisable objects. In Homeless Lamp, the Juice Sucker Navarro builds a grocery cart from electric tubing. Featured in a video of a 5 hour performance, Navarro has activated the sculpture on the streets of New York’s Chelsea District. In the video, two men break into a municipal power outlet, hi-jacking city energy to feed the power-sucking shopping trolley. Edited to 4 minutes, the action is set to a Mexican revolutionary song from 1905 titled Juan The Landless. As an icon of both consumerism and vagrancy, Homeless Lamp, the Juice Sucker sets a stage where the dichotomies between wealth and poverty convene as a literal and allegorical emblem of power, waste, transience, and opportunistic survival. Basking in an artificial glow, Navarro’s Homeless Lamp, the Juice Sucker exudes a religious aura based in consumption, corruption, and errancy.
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Ivan Navarro
Electric Chair

2005

Fluorescent light bulbs, fixtures and electric energy

AP
Ivan Navarro views his work as building upon the unresolved aspects of minimalism, striving to engage viewer interaction and highlight the social and political factors that inherently lie within formal composition. Utilising the aesthetic purity of florescent light bulbs, Ivan Navarro’s White Electric Chair reveals a chilling menace in its sensitivity as a design object. Modelled as fashionable furniture, Navarro’s sculpture poses as desirable commodity; its fragility and high-voltage threat undermining the assuring and authoritative qualities of itsergnomic construction.
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Ivan Navarro
Red Holeway

2005

Neon lights, aluminium door, mirrors and glass 1/3 200 x 80 cm

2005 Neon lights, aluminium door, mirrors and glass 1/3 200 x 80 cm
Using Dan Flavin’s Marfa Project – a hallway blockaded by illuminated bars – as a departure point, Ivan Navarro’s Red Holeway re-interprets the optical illusion of perceiving depth of space through light. Condensed for a contemporary age, Red Holeway appears as an elongated corridor flanked by lights, although it is only 4.25 inches thick. Mounted on an aluminium door, Navarro’s holographic effect is achieved through elementary materials: glass, mirror, and light bulbs, creating believable mirage with stringent economy.

ARTICLES

Ivan Navarro

Articles about Ivan Navarro

Roebling Hall presents “Monuments” for D. Flavin by Iván Navarro.
Appropriating the signature materials associated with Dan Flavin, Navarro builds visually dynamic, radiant structures such as tables and chairs with fluorescent lights. In a nod to his precursor, Navarro titles this exhibition “Monuments” for D. Flavin, after the late artist’s seminal “Monuments” to V. Tatlin (1964-1990), itself an homage to another precursor. In contrast to Flavin, Navarro’s interests reach beyond the minimalist tenets of formal and material concerns, engaging the perception of the viewer and revealing social and political content behind the misleadingly neutral veneer of formalism.
As Navarro states in his remarks on the “Monuments,” also a modified appropriation of remarks by Flavin made in 1965:
Thus far, I have made a considered attempt to poise hot and silent electric light in crucial concert point to point, line by line and otherwise in the box that is a room within the viewers that interact with it. This dramatic decoration has been founded in the young tradition of a plastic revolution which gripped American art only forty years ago. My joy is to try to build from that incomplete experience. Read the entire article here Source : www.brooklynart.com