SAATCHI GALLERY
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SELECTED WORKS BY Sterling Ruby



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Sterling Ruby

Kiss Trap Kismet (and 4 details)

2008
PVC pipe, urethane, wood, expanding foam, aluminium, spray paint.

300 x 384 x 122 cm

Sterling Ruby’s three dimensional structures engage with traditional considerations of sculpture being inherently relative to the human body: things which occupy real space (rather than painting’s illusionary space) are experienced physically. Measured against minimalism’s hallowed purity of the object, where form is asserted on a conceptual level, Ruby’s Kiss Trap Kismet is a radical convergence of the sublime and abject. Presented as a towering arch, Kiss Trap Kismet poses object as organism – primal, totemic, exuding a raw, animal power in its visceral aesthetic. Mounted on a graffitied plinth, Ruby’s sculpture teeters between instinctive revulsion and stounding beauty, drawing reference to contemporary ritual, aggression, and urban experience.


Sterling Ruby

Recondite (and 2 details)

2007
PVC pipe, plastic urethane, wood, aluminum, spray paint

13 parts Overall dimensions: 464.8 x 853.4 x 426.7 cm


Sterling Ruby

Cop, Cop, Cry, Cry (front view, back view and 2 details)

2008
Formica

243.8 x 243.8 x 122 cm


Sterling Ruby

Monument Stalagmite/Headbanger (and 2 details)

2008
PVC pipe, formica, urethane, spray paint and wood

497.8 x 101 x 122 cm


Sterling Ruby

Headless Dick / Deth Till (and 2 details)

2008
Formica, wood, glue, spray paint, nails

460 x 122 x 381 cm


Sterling Ruby

SP58

2008
Acrylic and spray paint on canvas

317.5 x 469.9 cm

Ruby’s paintings draw from a similar concept of form and materiality as his sculptures to develop abstract fields that are simultaneously ‘tarnished’ and elegant. SP58 is a monumental sized canvas that employs the processes of graffiti mural-making. The colourful acrylic surface creates a geometric field or illusionary architecture over which spray paint is applied to create a sullied texture, infiltrating the image like a contaminent; the soft aerosol effect creates an uneasy perception of space, literally masking or censoring areas rather than creating a field of depth, giving a sense of hallucination or mirage.



ARTIST INFORMATION




ARTICLES



Art in Review; STERLING RUBY
Published: March 21, 2008

By Roberta Smith

Sterling Ruby is one of the most interesting artists to emerge in this century. That�s only eight years, of course, but the claim may stick. He makes obstreperous, richly glazed ceramic vessels that suggest charred remains; totemic sculptures webbed with mucousy, macram�like drips of resin; large, dark collages dotted with constellations of tiny images of artifacts; and drawings, photographs and short videos.
Further sending up his famous targets, Yoder represents miraculous appearances by the subjects in three watercolours on paper, each head round roughly 12 inches high. Martha of the Leaf locates Stewart's face in insect-gnawed trails on an aspen-shaped leaf attached to a branch against a yellow ground. Yoder finds Walton among the stars of Sam Nebula and portrays Trump in a slice of bread for Donald of the Toast.

Mr. Ruby draws from ancient art, graffiti, sports, science fiction and the persistence of primitivism on all fronts. Minimalism and other forms of authority are frequent targets. Most important, he situates all this in a continuum of material, process, history and emotion.

Mr. Ruby, who lives in Los Angeles, stormed New York last spring with an inchoate two-gallery show at Metro Pictures and Foxy Production. �Superoverpass,� a big white Formica arch � la Tony Smith � expertly finished but grimy and incised with graffiti � turned Foxy into an eerie mausoleum. Metro displayed the drawings, several increasingly phallic totems and a large ceramic mortar with pestles swimming in glaze. It all fulfilled the battle cry of his most widely quoted anti-poster: �Finish Architecture. Kill Minimalism. Long Live the Amorphous Law.�

Now Mr. Ruby is back with a pair of slightly quieter, clarifying exhibitions. The Metro show is his first devoted entirely to ceramics, a medium he took up about 10 years ago, evolving an innovative, violent variation of �hand built� that suggests post-Schnabel Peter Voulkos. The 14 works straddle the line between decoration and tragedy. Some suggest votive objects adorned with misshapen amphora handles. Several contain small bowls, as if you were supposed to scoop up their bright, slurred glazes. �Bread Basket,� splattered with shiny oranges, black and blues and a crusty white, resembles a child�s car seat or a football helmet after some cataclysm.

Read entire article here
Source: nytimes.com



Kirsten Stoltman and Sterling Ruby
By Charles LaBelle

There's no money shot. No gymnastic contortions. No splayed labia or engorged male members or close-ups of actual penetration. No moans, grunts or heavy panting. And unlike the Paris Hilton tape, which is mostly devoted to images of mutual oral pleasuring, there�s not even any foreplay. For a video depicting two people fucking, Behind the Pedestal (2003) shows very little. In fact the whole thing, shot in a single wide take, ends a bit prematurely and is rather anti-climactic. Four and a half minutes from start to finish, the actual copulation clocks in at just under 30 seconds. The two people, male and female, crawling into frame from opposite sides, are back-lit by a starburst of coloured lights emanating from behind the rectangular silhouette of a pedestal at the centre of the image. When they meet and orientate their bodies in the missionary position, their pelvic sections are strategically covered by the pedestal. Our view thus bifurcated, we watch as their heads bob on the left while their entwined legs move independently on the right, hers occasionally treading the air like a crushed daddy-long-legs. Unnervingly mechanical, the sex occurs with all the drama of brushing one�s teeth. The couple�s disengagement provides the most interesting moment, their awkward fumblings rupturing the somewhat sanctimonious atmosphere before they crawl off in opposite directions.

So why is this video so fascinating to watch? By turns funny and annoying, clever and just plain dumb, tender and boring, beautiful and self-indulgent, loaded with irony yet perfectly sincere, Behind the Pedestal refuses to conform to expectations or settle into one genre, one idea. Second by second it mutates under our gaze and gets under our skin. Part science fiction, part underground movie, the video channels 1960s psychedelia into our 21st-century obsession with �reality� via a slanted lo-fi Futurism. Embracing the very mechanism of sublimation that characterizes most art, real-life couple Stoltman and Ruby suggest that artists can have beauty and their pleasure too. Shunning the hardcore, bad-boy shenanigans of the Koons/Cicciolina collaboration, the single-take/unmoving camera is closer in spirit to the films of Andy Warhol. Yet Behind the Pedestal keeps us at a safe, very un-Warholian distance. Resolutely apolitical, the sex in the video is neither transgressive nor abject. It is not intended to subvert power structures or represent marginalized subjectivities. It steers clear of sticky gender issues and skirts the discourse of male transcendence versus female immanence.

Comfortably straight and white, Stoltman and Ruby instead give us a meditation on broader notions of absence and presence, our desire for connection and a glimpse into our origins. The strong vertical silhouette of the pedestal at the centre of the image shifts between solidity and disappearance. It becomes a phallus that stands in for Ruby�s hidden one. But it is also a void that calls to mind notions of the hidden female interior, Stoltman�s womb. Strangely egalitarian, this phallus/void simultaneously penetrates and engulfs both partners. Passing through this portal and each other, they emerge on the other side not transformed but re-formed, reconstituted in their individual identities, their original roles, and separate once again. Thus, while the pedestal may reference the monolith in 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), it is not a vehicle for transcendence or evolution. Or is it?

Read the entire article here
Source: frieze.com
 
 

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