eyewash@Jack The Pelican Gallery
presents
David Shapiro
Consumed

an installation of 2 years of boxes, bags, bottles, + cans.
curated by Larry Walczak


DATES: Oct 17th ­ Nov 16th, 2003
OPENING: Friday, Oct 17th, 7 - 9 p.m.
HOURS: Friday - Monday, 12 - 6 p.m. and by appointment
LOCATION: eyewash@ Jack The Pelican Gallery
487 Driggs Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11211


David Shapiro
For two years, acclaimed filmmaker, artist and native son of the early Williamsburg scene, David Shapiro has been saving every package, bag, bottle or jar that once contained his food or drink. He fills the space at Jack the Pelican Presents gallery to the brim with this bodega-sized collection of garbage. At first glance, one sees a food store, complete with aisles and signs. Contents are neatly arranged on pristine commercial display shelves. But all the packages are empty. The food has been eaten. The remnant traces of food, washed away. The selection evidences the unique dietary habits and desires of unique consumer David Shapiro. It is a self-portrait, which he completes with an ambient soundtrack detailing the skewed logic of his brand loyalties. But if, in some ways, he appears idiosyncratic and quirky, in others, he registers as a typical byproduct of American superabundance and marketing. -The scale of his consumption is monstrous. The trajectory of Shapiro's preoccupation with food can be traced to his lifelike heads cast in tofu, shown at Liebman Magnan in 1999. Parallel diaristic concerns are evident in such earlier works as Nickel Bags (Lavanderia Fundacio, Barcelona, 2000), an ongoing visual diary of small found objects.

David Shapiro

The year before he stopped throwing out his garbage, David Shapiro garnered international attention with Keep the River On Your Right: A Modern Cannibal Tale, an award winning documentary he co-directed and produced with his sister, Laurie Gwen Shapiro, about the painter and writer Tobias Schneebaum. David Shapiro is a widely exhibited artist, award-winning documentarian, presently working on two feature-length films. Selected venues include MOMA, Liebman Magnan, Exit Art, The University of Illinois, Herron Test-Site and Wake Forest University. Selected publications include ArtNews, The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Village Voice, World Art, Time Out, Esquire, The Daily News, Spin Magazine and Entertainment Weekly.

Artist, Educator and Curator LARRY WALCZAK started eyewash in June 1987 on the 3rd Floor of a turn-of-the-century residential building in Williamsburg. Since January 2002, it has been a "migratory gallery," either collaborating with other galleries, or producing shows in borrowed or otherwise temporarily acquired spaces. It specializes in showcasing emerging and mid-career artists from Brooklyn.
The production of this exhibition is a collaboration between eyewash and Jack the Pelican Presents.

F O R F U R T H E R I N F O R M A T I O N
Please contact LARRY WALCZAK at 718 387 2714