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Van Eyck

Evan Holloway Scry if you want to

Evan Holloway Scry if you want to
Selected works Installation views

Evan Holloway’s latest exhibition Scry if you want to presents three approaches to visionary practice: Enochian Tablets, ‘direct metal sculptures’ and Automatic Drawings. These are so diverse in terms of style and technique that one could easily mistake them, at first glance, as being by three different artists. Yet the varied forms share a conceptual intent. Each investigates the art object as a latent vehicle for transcendent experience. Five original music videos featuring songs by Holloway accompany the new works. Even with the pun in its title, the exhibition invites non-ironic engagement with the artworks as potential portals to the extraordinary.

Holloway’s colourful wall-mounted bas-relief sculptures, called Enochian Tablets, initially seem to relate to the tradition of system-based abstraction, as exemplified by the paintings of Piet Mondrian or Alfred Jensen. This is because the appearance of each tablet is governed by a set of pre-determined principles. Yet Holloway does not follow rules of his own invention. He subscribes, instead, to a set of instructions that originated in late sixteenth-century England. They were received (today we might say ‘channelled’) by Elizabeth I’s astrologer, the notable mathematician, astronomer and spy John Dee (1527-1608/9), and his associate, the alchemist and scryer Edward Kelley (1555-1597). Through their many communications with spirits, seen in a crystal ball or on a flat obsidian ‘shew-stone’, they were instructed to make a grid of 12 × 13 squares and told to place letters (later replaced by a unique alphabet) within these spaces in a particular order. This formed an interlocking array of spirit names.

The Automatic Drawings, on the other hand, represent an attempt to bypass the artist’s consciousness, which links them to modernist works such as the cadavre exquis experiments of the Surrealists or even Jackson Pollock’s so-called ‘drip-paintings’. Holloway works and reworks his drawings over countless hours, using various methods to deter and prevent him from looking at the paper. This also limits his conscious control over the final outcome. As part of the process, large sheets of paper are folded and placed on a turntable. This mechanical device not only ensures a randomness in the mark-making but also allows the artist to work across a larger surface area. The folding and vigorous pen-work results in visceral rips in the paper which are repaired, and the drawings are worked again. This intensive process creates swirling compositions of densely-layered fine lines. Upon closer inspection, tiny, mesmerizing fields and complicated intersections can be discovered amidst the array of intricate marks. For the artist, these open a new arena for scrying and intuitive gazing.

Holloway is primarily known as a sculptor. In this exhibition, he presents a series of what he calls ‘direct metal sculptures’. These are improvised, welded works that highlight his continuing interest in formalist sculpture as a site for real-life engagement with objects-in-space. As Holloway states in one of the exhibition’s explanatory songs: “You can feel with your body, you can sense with your mass”. As with nearly all his sculptural work, Holloway insists that the visceral experience of sculpture in relation to the viewer’s body is the most fundamental aspect of the medium. The artist works intuitively with space while making these sculptures but is also being led (and limited) by the potential of the objects he has found. Historically, the direct metal assemblages can be seen in the context of ‘junk sculpture’, a term coined by Lawrence Alloway in 1961 to describe work made exclusively from obsolete materials. The art critic traced its evolution back to Futurism, Dada, Surrealism, and even the Bauhaus.

Evan Holloway is particularly interested in how, despite the huge technological advances of our age, certain fundamental aspects of life continue unabated. Car parts and wheelbarrow frames, as seen in the exhibition, are manufactured in much the same way today as they were a century ago, for example. The experience Holloway seeks to create is an intensely analogue one that revolves around our perception of the physical-material world and the new, often poetic relationships that arise between the disparate parts. While the work pays homage to previous iterations of ‘junk sculpture’, they remain resolutely contemporary. As with the other works in the show, these sculptures play with time, history, and the potential for an individual viewer to engage in sensory exploration.

Publication

Evan Holloway
Scry if you want to

12-inch vinyl record and double sided poster, includes an interview with Julia Friedman, published by Xavier Hufkens, Brussels, 2023, English

Order — 25€

Evan Holloway (b. 1967, Whittier, CA) lives and works in Los Angeles. His works feature in many public collections, including the Whitney Museum of Contemporary Art, New York; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; LACMA, Los Angeles; MCA, Chicago; MOCA, Los Angeles and the Smithsonian Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC.

Evan Holloway in conversation with Julia Friedman

Related exhibitions

Selected works

  • Air Tablet / Empress Scale - Large, 2022

  • Air Tablet / Emperor Scale - Large, 2022

  • Water Tablet / Queen Scale - Large, 2022

  • Fire Tablet / Emperor Scale - Large, 2022

  • Air Tablet / Queen Scale - Large, 2022

  • Air Tablet / King Scale, 2022

  • Automatic Drawing #3, 2020

  • Automatic Drawing March 2022, 2022

  • Automatic Drawing April 2022, 2022

  • Automatic Drawing June 2022, 2022

  • Automatic Drawing Late June 2022, 2022

  • Automatic Drawing July 2022, 2022

  • Automatic Drawing August 2022, 2022

  • Automatic Drawing September 2022, 2022

  • Automatic Drawing #15, 2021

  • Tunnel Arrangement, 2022

  • Animal Impression, 2022

  • Shells, 2022

  • Actor, 2022

  • Verse Fragment, 2022

  • Circle About, 2022

  • Air Test, 2022

  • Work Form, 2022

Related artworks

    Evan Holloway

    Air Tablet / Empress Scale - Large, 2022

    wood, flashe, acrylic, glass beads
    94 x 85.1 x 10.2 cm, 37 x 33 1/2 x 4 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Air Tablet / Emperor Scale - Large, 2022

    wood, flashe, acrylic, glass beads
    94 x 85.1 x 10.2 cm, 37 x 33 1/2 x 4 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Water Tablet / Queen Scale - Large, 2022

    wood, flashe, acrylic, glass beads
    94 x 85.1 x 10.2 cm, 37 x 33 1/2 x 4 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Fire Tablet / Emperor Scale - Large, 2022

    wood, flashe, acrylic, glass beads
    94 x 85.1 x 10.2 cm, 37 x 33 1/2 x 4 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Air Tablet / Queen Scale - Large, 2022

    wood, flashe, acrylic, glass beads
    94 x 85.1 x 10.2 cm, 37 x 33 1/2 x 4 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Air Tablet / King Scale, 2022

    wood, aqua-resin, flashe, acrylic
    40.6 x 36.8 x 6.3 cm, 16 x 14 1/2 x 2 1/2 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Automatic Drawing #3, 2020

    ink on paper
    101 x 66.5 cm, 39 3/4 x 26 1/8 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Automatic Drawing March 2022, 2022

    ink on paper
    126.5 x 96.5 cm, 49 3/4 x 38 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Automatic Drawing April 2022, 2022

    ink on paper
    130 x 101 cm, 51 1/8 x 39 3/4 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Automatic Drawing June 2022, 2022

    ink on paper
    191.5 x 127 cm, 75 3/8 x 50 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Automatic Drawing Late June 2022, 2022

    ink on paper
    101.6 x 195.6 cm, 40 x 77 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Automatic Drawing July 2022, 2022

    ink on paper
    126.5 x 190.5 cm, 49 3/4 x 75 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Automatic Drawing August 2022, 2022

    ink on paper
    127 x 191 cm, 50 x 75 1/4 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Automatic Drawing September 2022, 2022

    ink on paper
    127 x 192 cm, 50 x 75 5/8 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Automatic Drawing #15, 2021

    ink on paper
    60.8 x 45.5 cm, 24 x 17 7/8 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Tunnel Arrangement, 2022

    steel
    68.6 x 43.2 x 35.6 cm, 27 x 17 x 14 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Animal Impression, 2022

    steel, rubber, aluminium
    48.3 x 53.3 x 20.3 cm, 19 x 21 x 8 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Shells, 2022

    steel, plastic
    53.3 x 53.3 x 25.4 cm, 21 x 21 x 10 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Actor, 2022

    steel, aluminium, rubber
    43.2 x 53.3 x 48.3 cm, 17 x 21 x 19 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Verse Fragment, 2022

    steel, aluminium, plastic
    53.3 x 48.3 x 17.8 cm, 21 x 19 x 7 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Circle About, 2022

    steel, plastic, mirror, rubber
    236.2 x 114.3 x 86.4 cm, 93 x 45 x 34 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Air Test, 2022

    steel
    281.9 x 139.7 x 101.6 cm, 111 x 55 x 40 in.

    Evan Holloway

    Work Form, 2022

    steel, wood, rubber, plastic
    121.9 x 182.9 x 111.8 cm, 48 x 72 x 44 in.

Installation views