
Detail:
Nocturne #1, 9-14-06, Polaroid Montage, 22 x 10"
John
O'Reilly : Nocturnes
Sept. 7 - Oct. 2, 2007
Opening Reception SATURDAY: Sept. 15th 5- 7pm
For
Immediate Release
In
a musical composition a nocturne is intended to evoke the unsettling
beauty of the night and is often closely associated with a serenade.
But while a serenade is a love song, nocturnes are always conflicted.
They are elusive and ambivalent, at once happy and sad, passionate
and restrained. In his upcoming exhibition Nocturnes at Howard
Yezerski Gallery John O'Reilly will feature fourteen photomontages
that were made using found photographs from a World War II photo
album. The montages in this exhibition suggest a dark cosmos that
is both terrible and beautiful. They are a kind of Bruegelian
parable addressing aging, war, and our current world.
The arrangement of montages in this exhibition portrays the dead
as indiscriminate fragments in a larger mosaic of life being lived.
Imagery of soldiers and combat zones seamlessly combine with youths
of an earlier era as evocations of the past that relieve the dreaded
finality of extinction. Each narrative travels your gaze through
idyllic scenery that is intertwined with death, and war. Sweet
innocence is met with the harsh reality of death leaving a bit
more of a sting than a sweet serenade.
O'Reilly's
work has been included in the 1995 Whitney Biennial as well as
exhibitions in San Francisco, Chicago, and New York. His photographs
can be found in the collections of the Addison Gallery of American
Art; Bowdoin College, the DeCordova Museum; Museum of Fine Arts,
Boston; Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Rose Art Museum, and
the Worcester Art Museum.d.
For further information please contact Alexis Dunfee at Howard
Yezerski Gallery 617.262.0550 Tuesday - Saturday 10-5:30pm