Dysfunctional Chairs
Trevor Mahovsky and Rhonda Weppler
The Searchers
May 15 to September 26, 2010
Artists Trevor Mahovsky and Rhonda Weppler have been working
collaboratively since 2004 –
almost a decade after their days in graduate art school at UBC. For their
commission in our Dysfunctional Chairs series, they proposed that their
chairs are dysfunctional because they are absent. Instead, the
architecture of the
Kelowna Art Gallery itself substitutes as seating for a series of sculptures. At press time,
the work exists in a model form only, in which five individuals appear to
perch on the edge of the roof of the courtyard, with their legs dangling
into the space. While they may call to mind teens loitering at a mall, the
artists also have a more high-culture reference in mind: that of angels or
cherubs frolicking on the European Baroque ceiling paintings in churches
or palaces.
The notion of absence has been a constant thread in
their collaborative sculptural work since the two artists began their
joint practice several years ago. The human figure, however, is a new
element, introduced for the first time in their Flatlands piece from
earlier this year, which was exhibited at the Pari Nadimi Gallery in
Toronto. Since the year 2000, the collaborative work of Trevor Mahovsky and
Rhonda Weppler has been the focus of many solo shows. It has also been
included in group shows at public galleries across
Canada and, more recently, internationally. Their work is represented by the Pari
Nadimi Gallery in
Toronto.