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Daytime artists’ reception: Saturday, March 24th,
5-8pm
Exhibition Dates: March 24 – April 29, 2007
Smack Mellon presents the work of two women artists in simultaneous
one-person exhibitions. Letitia Quesenberry’s barely visible
graphite figures emerge from vast disorienting landscapes contrasting
with Ledelle Moe’s massive, grounding concrete heads that
create the illusion of permanence. Both artists shift the scale
of the human form to create very different statements and opposing
experiences. Moe’s four monumentally sized sculptures fill
the 3500 square foot main gallery space; in the project space,
emerging artist Quesenberry’s human forms dissolve and
disappear into fields of color, forcing the viewer to come closer.

Ledelle Moe, Collapse V, 2007
concrete and steel, dimensions variable. Photo by Etienne Frossard
Ledelle Moe
Collapse V
My sense of identity as a South African is understood through the continued
reinterpretation of past experiences via memory and imagination. Within the
particular cultural and historical circumstances in South Africa, the tensions
between power and powerlessness make this process fraught with contradictions.
For me, the means by which I explore the emotional complexity of my experiences
and my identity as a South African artist is through the language of the
human form.
Permanence and impermanence, strength and vulnerability are constant themes
in my work. The fall of a number of monuments in the last decade added particular
relevance to the ideas I was exploring. I was thinking about how monuments
are built with notions of permanence and how these very notions are contradicted.
As a new nation South Africa has sought to reconcile the past with the
future. Questions arise as to the appropriateness of preserving and contextualizing
old monuments associated with the promotion of the Afrikaner identity, and
the erection of new ones commemorating leaders of the anti-apartheid struggle
and celebrating the new government.
Fallen monuments mark those historic junctures where power shifts occur
and speak to the changeable nature of these power structures. South Africa’s
political flux and change resulted for me in a serious shift in my own understanding
of heroes and hierarchies, both political and personal.
Most recently I have been exploring monumental scale and fragmented human
form trough a series of portraits. I visualized a grouping of large heads
positioned to create narrow passageways. I wished to explore the relationship
of landscape and figure, here by configuring the heads so that each might
read at once as natural boulder and fallen monument.
Ledelle Moe was born in Durban, South Africa in 1971. She studied sculpture
there at Technikon Natal and graduated in 1993. Active in the local art community,
Moe was one of the founding members of the FLAT Gallery, an artist initiative
and alternative space in Durban. A travel grant in 1994 brought her to the
United States where she embarked on a period of study at the Virginia Commonwealth
University (VCU) Sculpture Department Master’s program. She completed
her Master’s Degree there in 1996 and soon after accepted an adjunct
position in the Sculpture Department at the Maryland Institute College of Art
(MICA) in Baltimore, Maryland. Later she taught at the Corcoran College of
Art in Washington, DC, Virginia Commonwealth University and St.Mary’s
College of Maryland. Moe has exhibited in a number of venues including the
Kulturhuset (Stockholm, Sweden) the NSA Gallery (Durban, South Africa), the
International Sculpture Center (Washington, DC), The Washington Project for
the Arts (Washington, DC) and Maryland Art Place (Baltimore). Though Moe remains
strongly connected to South Africa, returning to visit annually, she has continued
to live and work in the United States. Based presently far from home, the perspective
particular to her roots as a South African artist remains central to her work.
In 2002 Moe was the recipient of a Joan Mitchell Award which has allowed her
time to work on new sculptures and travel back to South Africa where she has
made and exhibited work. Recent projects include large-scale concrete installations
at Axis Gallery in New York City, and G Fine Arts in Washington, DC. Moe is
currently featured on the cover of Sculpture Magazine.

Letitia Quesenberry, installation view. Photo by Etienne Frossard
Letitia Quesenberry
until
The work in ‘until’ conjoins transience and
stillness, an effort to seize the fugitive nature of perception.
Using thin layers of muted plaster to embed and then expose
graphite within the surface, small figures emerge from vast
disorienting landscapes. Definition of form emanates without
outline: shadows and highlights merge. Representation and
scale are simultaneously emphasized and understated, relying
upon the viewer’s ability to infer. This lag in perceptible
information mirrors liminal experience, the transitory struggle
to comprehend the unknown. Success hinges upon the subtleties
of surface, a minute exchange between material and process.
The intention is to investigate and refine this exchange,
giving license to the obscure in order to reconstruct representation.
Letitia Quesenberry graduated in 1993 with a bachelors degree
in fine art from the University of Cincinnati. Upon graduation,
she traveled extensively in Mexico and Europe. She has exhibited
work at the Kunsthalle in Mainz, Germany and in numerous group
shows including "Images of the World" at the Speed
Art Museum and the "2007 DePauw Biennial" at DePauw
University. She has received grants from the Kentucky Foundation
for Women and the Pace Trust, as well as an Al Smith Fellowship
from the Kentucky Arts Council. She recently participated in
a collaborative film project entitled MULTIPLY, which was shown
at the 2006 Edinburgh Fringe Festival. Her work has been published
in NEW AMERICAN PAINTINGS and PITCH MAGAZINE. She was born
in 1971 in Louisville, Kentucky, where she lives and works.
This exhibition is made possible with public
funds from the City of New York Department of Cultural Affairs
and the New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency,
and with generous support from Smack Mellon’s Members,
The Greenwall Foundation, Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro,
Jerome Foundation, Richard Massey, Judith and Donald Rechler
Foundation Inc., and Eve Sussman. Smack Mellon also receives
generous support from the National Endowment for the Arts,
Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz, City Council
Member David Yassky and the New York City Council, The Andy
Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, The Greenwich Collection
Ltd., Independence Community Foundation, Jean and Louis Dreyfus
Foundation, Inc., Lily Auchincloss Foundation Inc., Milton
and Sally Avery Arts Foundation Inc., New York Community
Trust, Robert Sterling Clark Foundation, Inc., The Starry
Night Fund of Tides Foundation, and The Roy and Niuta Titus
Foundation, Inc.
Space for Smack Mellon’s programs is generously provided
by the Walentas Family and Two Trees Management.
Public Transportation to Smack Mellon: F train to York
Street, A/C train to High Street, B61 Bus
to York and Gold.
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