A N D N O W
MAXIMILIAN SCHUBERT

OCT.21.2016 - NOV.12.2016


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 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW

 alt=Maximilian Schubert - AND NOW





ANDNOW is pleased to announce Stations, an exhibition of new paintings and sculptures by Maximilian Schubert.

In his new series of sculptures, Maximilian Schubert has arranged propane tanks of various siz-es in the gallery, treating them as fuel source and pedestal for the crudely bent lengths of metal tubing attached by way of various valves and fittings. The tubing — commonly used as a arma-ture for conventional clay sculpture — is in this case left exposed, serving instead as a support for the small flames that flicker along its lengths. These works, titled Stations, divorce the banal backyard mechanics from their mundane utility, transforming them into makeshift candelabras of tiny points of light in space, a vigil to the works’ own expended energy.

Surrounding the sculptures are Schubert’s ongoing series of Untitled paintings, works that utilize a millennia-old process akin to lost wax casting as a means to fundamentally alter the nature of the painterly object. Unlike in a conventional painting, Schubert’s brushwork is incisive rather than additive; the gouges and distortions of the picture plane result in tense overlays of high and low relief that blur distinctions between surface, support and gesture. Cast in archival polyure-thane and fiberglass and finished with trompe l’oeil brushwork, these paintings are a kind of fu-gitive from sculpture that reimagine the painting-as-object.