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Cammie Staros: What Will Have Being

Past exhibition
16 January - 6 March 2021
  • Overview
  • Works
  • Installation Views
  • Press
  • Videos

Cammie Staros: What Will Have Being

Past exhibition
16 January - 6 March 2021
  • Overview
  • Works
  • Installation Views
  • Press
  • Videos
Overview
Cammie Staros, What Will Have Being

Shulamit Nazarian is pleased to present ​What Will Have Being​, a series of new sculptures by Los Angeles-based artist Cammie Staros. This will be the artist’s second solo exhibition with the gallery.

 

The artworks in ​What Will Have Being ​draw the relics of fallen empires into discourse  with contemporary political and environmental instabilities, considering the legacy of our species on this planet. Creating a throughline between ancient past and possible future, the works suggest a museological exhibition of antiquities that has been forgotten and reclaimed by nature. Through twists on Greco-Roman works in ceramic and stone, and gestures that upend traditional display tactics – such as melting light fixtures, architectural interventions, and submerged vessels – the artist asks us to consider how we understand both the objects and ourselves along an unfixed or perhaps unmoored timeline.

 

Central to the exhibition is a series of vitrines that function as life-supporting aquariums. These self-illuminated display cases reference those found in the Greek wings of the Met and the British Museum. Inside, immersed in an environment of fish and plants, sit ceramic sculptures reminiscent of Greek vases and wine cups. The submerged ceramic forms appear distorted or conjoined, their zoomorphic shapes adapting to their watery habitats, as if sinking back to an organic state. The use of water contrasts the precious materials of art with those of life, and summons the existential threats of flood and drought. The drowned museological display flattens historical time, simultaneously referencing the ancient past, later underwater discoveries, and an impending ecological and environmental reckoning.

 

A new series of ceramic pot sculptures are transformed through the act of cutting, splitting, and twisting. Here, Staros pushes the boundaries of the material until the vessels become shell-like – undoing the object. For these intimate and vulnerable forms, and throughout the exhibition, the artist classifies her works using a poetic Latin taxonomy, as if identifying rare specimens in an eccentric natural history museum. Staros addresses the fragility of human power by making a cross species analogy of things we creatures leave behind.

 

A pair of stone wall works evoke classical ruins through the contrast of highly polished arches and rough, natural edges. Veins and cavities in earthy green onyx lend a sense of dissolution to otherwise architectural forms. Stone, a material parallel to ceramic in the legacy of the Greco-Roman world, is also formed by nature and shaped by humankind; it is the material of the planet and of ancient ruins; it is a fossil of both past geologic forces and past societies. In addition, the artist will present a group of new neon pieces installed directly into the gallery’s light grid. Fitted specially for fluorescent ballasts, these neon artworks glow in otherworldly colors and droop out of their fixtures, evoking unknown forces on a space left behind.

 

Over the past decade, Staros has investigated the ways in which classical antiquities have come to represent an origin story of Western art history. While continuing to address the historical narrative surrounding these objects, the body of work in What Will Have Being focuses more on the prescience of ancient artifacts – how their treatment might foretell a possible future of today’s objects. Relics and ruins, which outlast the societies that made them, emphasize both the achievements and the hubris of humanity. But by shifting our contextual understanding of these objects, by considering how meaning is made, we can begin to understand an alternative narrative. The works in What Will Have Being not only question our understanding of contemporary political and environmental instabilities, they also poignantly consider how our current moment will be remembered, and what kind of world it will produce for tomorrow.

 


 

 

Cammie Staros (b. 1983, Nashville, TN) received her BA from Brown, Providence, in 2006 and her MFA from California Institute of the Arts, Los Angeles, in 2011. Staros has had solo exhibitions at Shulamit Nazarian, Los Angeles, Lefebvre & Fils, Paris, and Ghebaly Gallery, Los Angeles. The artist was included in the Craft Contemporary’s second clay biennial in Los Angeles. Staros’ work is featured in 100 Sculptors of Tomorrow, a survey of contemporary sculpture, authored by Kurt Beers and published by Thames & Hudson. Staros was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship award in 2020.

Works
  • Cammie Staros, Mutatio naturalis, 2020
    Cammie Staros, Mutatio naturalis, 2020
  • Cammie Staros, Fictile ficticium, 2020
    Cammie Staros, Fictile ficticium, 2020
  • Cammie Staros Scaphium evolutum, 2020 Ceramic, Plexiglas 52 1/2 x 12 1/2 x 12 1/2 in 133.3 x 31.8 x 31.8 cm
    Cammie Staros
    Scaphium evolutum, 2020
    Ceramic, Plexiglas
    52 1/2 x 12 1/2 x 12 1/2 in
    133.3 x 31.8 x 31.8 cm
  • Cammie Staros Figlinum aquaticum, 2021 Ceramic, acrylic, wood, laminate, water, aquatic filtration system, programmed grow light, river rock (pebbles), Volcanic Rock, Honeycomb Rock, Zebra Stone 18 x 30 x 12 inches
    Cammie Staros
    Figlinum aquaticum, 2021
    Ceramic, acrylic, wood, laminate, water, aquatic filtration system, programmed grow light, river rock (pebbles), Volcanic Rock, Honeycomb Rock, Zebra Stone
    18 x 30 x 12 inches
  • Cammie Staros Futurum fluidum, 2021 Ceramic, acrylic, wood, laminate, powder-coated steel, water, aquatic filtration system, programmed grow light, river rock (pebbles), Volcanic Rock, Honeycomb Rock, Zebra Stone 77 x 25 x 25 inches
    Cammie Staros
    Futurum fluidum, 2021
    Ceramic, acrylic, wood, laminate, powder-coated steel, water, aquatic filtration system, programmed grow light, river rock (pebbles), Volcanic Rock, Honeycomb Rock, Zebra Stone
    77 x 25 x 25 inches
  • Cammie Staros Sculptura liquefacta , 2021 Ceramic, acrylic, wood, laminate, water, aquatic filtration system, programmed grow light, river rock (pebbles), Japanese ohko stone, Java Fern, moss, Bucephalandra, Mini Bolbitis Fern, Java Fern Windelov, Java Moss, Marimo Moss, Anubias Nana, Anubias Nana Golden 61 x 49 x 25 inches
    Cammie Staros
    Sculptura liquefacta , 2021
    Ceramic, acrylic, wood, laminate, water, aquatic filtration system, programmed grow light, river rock (pebbles), Japanese ohko stone, Java Fern, moss, Bucephalandra, Mini Bolbitis Fern, Java Fern Windelov, Java Moss, Marimo Moss, Anubias Nana, Anubias Nana Golden
    61 x 49 x 25 inches
  • Cammie Staros Onyx arcus, 2020 Onyx 16 x 16 x 4 inches
    Cammie Staros
    Onyx arcus, 2020
    Onyx
    16 x 16 x 4 inches
  • Cammie Staros, Amphora conchata, 2020
    Cammie Staros, Amphora conchata, 2020
  • Cammie Staros, Onyches fornices, 2020
    Cammie Staros, Onyches fornices, 2020
  • Cammie Staros Concha clavata, 2021 Earthenware and porcelain 27 x 26 x 32 ½ in 68.6 x 66 x 82.5 cm
    Cammie Staros
    Concha clavata, 2021
    Earthenware and porcelain
    27 x 26 x 32 ½ in
    68.6 x 66 x 82.5 cm
  • Cammie Staros Vas mutatum, 2020 Ceramic, Plexiglas 53 x 10 x 10 inches
    Cammie Staros
    Vas mutatum, 2020
    Ceramic, Plexiglas
    53 x 10 x 10 inches
Installation Views
Press
  • X–TRA: Relics from a Future

    Neha Choksi, X–TRA, April 5, 2021
  • so super sorry sir!, installation view, Shulamit Nazarian, Los Angeles, January 16–March 6, 2021. Courtesy of the artist and Shulamit Nazarian. Photo: Morgan Waltz.

    Art and Cake: Cammie Staros and Michael Stamm at Shulamit Nazarian

    Sydney Walters, Art and Cake, March 16, 2021
  • X-TRA: La vita nuova. the body, the object, the other

    Georgia Lassner, X-TRA Magazine, March 1, 2021
  • Contemporary Art Review Los Angeles: cammie staros at shulamit nazarian

    India Mandelkern, Contemporary Art Review Los Angeles, February 18, 2021
  • ArtnowLA: what will have being; bridges between past and present

    Jody Zellen, ArtNowLA, February 15, 2021
  • KCRW Art insider: neon aquariums that blend the ancient past with an apocalyptic future

    Lindsay Preston Zappas, KCRW Art Insider, February 2, 2021
  • Variable West: Editor's Pick

    Variable West, January 20, 2021
    This link opens in a new tab.
  • Hyperallergic: Your Concise Los Angeles Art Guide for January 2021

    Elisa Wouk Almino, Hyperallergic, January 13, 2021
Videos
  • Cammie Staros: What Will Have Being

    Cammie Staros: What Will Have Being

    In this video, Cammie Staros' provides insight into her current exhibition, What Will Have Being. These works draw the relics of fallen empires into discourse with contemporary political and environmental... Read more

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    Cammie Staros

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