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Thursday, March 6, 2025

When Our Containers Cannot Maintain Us

ArtsWhen Our Containers Cannot Maintain Us

A handful of small isopods and springtails stay in Kay Kasparhauser’s gritty Entrance gallery exhibition, New Decay, however, unusually for bio artwork, these creatures aren’t the celebs of the present. What stands out as an alternative are the makeshift habitats the artist has fabricated for them. One terrarium is embedded in a precarious foam tower (“Bonkio,” all works 2025). One other is wedged inside an orange site visitors barrier, whose different openings comprise trash and stagnant water (“Every time i think I’m absolutely going to die I love you so much I love you so much”). Numerous foam assemblages, pocked with odd apertures, dangle from the basement gallery’s ceiling and partitions. These dilapidated sculptures evoke a subterranean metropolis constructed for critters.

From a small animal’s standpoint, that’s most likely how most human basements seem anyway. However from Kasparhauser’s perspective, the set up constitutes a fabric exploration of what she calls, in an artist’s assertion revealed late final yr on Substack, “the anxiety of inadequate containers.” The stakes are existential for all beings, however keenly felt by Kasparhauser, whose unspecified power sickness “affords [her] an intimate understanding of decay, rupture, and repair.” On her social media accounts, she unflinchingly paperwork points of her therapies, posting photos of her scarred abdomen and joking that her long run hospital stays are artist residencies. However you don’t even want that context to know New Decay’s argument that each one containers are in a roundabout way insufficient to the duty of preserving their contents from hurt.

Kay Kasparhauser, “Bonkio” (2025), foam, latex, plaster, burlap, increasing foam, silicone, plexiglass, bioactive substrate, leaf litter, cork wooden, zebra isopods, springtails, tradescantia, lighting machine (picture courtesy the artist and Entrance gallery)

Small particulars all through the present trace on the necessity and limitations of care. A vinyl strip door has been put in behind the wood entryway door, as if the gallery itself had been a container requiring an additional protecting layer from the surface world. The bricolage sculptures, riddled with nooks and crannies, and bearing the imprints of their fabrication, double as human decor and animal shelter. The isopods Kasparhauser cultivates inside these constructions may very well be mistaken for bugs however are literally crustaceans, whose exoskeletons protect their weak our bodies. The artist depicts these literal and metaphorical containers with coarse realism; they could not at all times present the consolation our species or others want, however they’re what’s obtainable, which is healthier than nothing.

Kasparhauser’s willingness to reckon with the world as it’s, fairly than pine for a way we would want it to be, takes on extra, allegorical that means given Entrance’s location and historical past. Gallerist Louis Shannon grew up close to the Decrease East Aspect and has operated Entrance’s basement area since he was a young person, initially internet hosting underground music reveals there earlier than finally changing it right into a gallery. Just like the artist and her isopods, creatives discover methods to persist regardless of opposed circumstances, typically by occupying interstitial city areas that no person else needs or is aware of about. New Decay comprises, however doesn’t fake to safe, that form of life for many who perceive its necessity.

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Set up view of Kay Kasparhauser, “Every time i think I’m absolutely going to die I love you so much I love you so much” (2025), site visitors barrier, plexiglass, bioactive substrate, cork bark, sphagnum moss, pothos, milkback isopods, spring-tails, lighting machine, assorted trash (picture Louis Bury/Hyperallergic)Entrance Kasparhauser 24

Drawings by Kay Kasparhauser (picture courtesy the artist and Entrance gallery)KK0002 A

Kay Kasparhauser, “Untitled (Container)” (2024), foam, latex, metal plaster, picture switch, increasing foam, cotton thread, orange powder isopod, plexiglassKK0005 A

Kay Kasparhauser, “Je suis belle” (2024), foam, latex, metal plaster, picture switch, increasing foam, cotton thread, orange powder isopod, plexiglass

Kay Kasparhauser: New Decay continues at Entrance Gallery (Storefront R, 48 Ludlow Avenue, Decrease East Aspect) by means of March 15. The exhibition was organized by the gallery.

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