VICIOUS FRAMES
CLAUDIA BITRAN, LAUREN CARLY SHAW, & GRACELEE LAWRENCE
February 1 – March 7, 2020
VICIOUS FRAMES curated by Lauren Powell features NY-based multimedia artists Claudia Bitran,
Lauren Carly Shaw, and Gracelee Lawrence. The show will be on view at Postmasters Gallery from
February 1, 2020 to March 7, 2020, with an opening reception taking place from 6-8pm on
Saturday, February 1st.
The works in this exhibition take a deep dive into media addiction: one that explores, celebrates and
denounces the voracious consuming of others; another that examines and stages the notion of the
construction of self; and one that reflects upon the isolation produced by our online existence.
Bitran's three stop motion animations (one claymation, one drawing animation and one painting
animation) are inspired by viral videos of epic fails and chaotic humiliations. Two of them depict
anonymous female teenagers in euphoric states of inebriation, while a third one presents animals and
babies falling in slow motion. The rendering, pacing, and gestures of the various materialities
emphasize the instability of the characters as they lose control over their vomiting, falling bodies.
Bitran proposes a nuanced, deeper and expressive perspective of these over-shared videos, by
exploring trauma, humor and cruelty.
Shaw's I, Me, Mine exhibits a female version of Narcissus that is lounging in a surreal hand-crafted
diorama while pointing at herself. The subtly animated character can only be seen by the viewer
through the screen of an iPad, presenting two simultaneous realities that investigate prevalent social
obsessions with vanity: one tangible, one virtual. In both instances, she is surrounded by a number of
humanoid objects and busts that gaze eternally at themselves and at their doppelgängers.
Lawrence's sculptures, relying equally on digital fabrication and hand augmentation, examine the
relationship between food, the body, and technology at an exaggerated scale. A physical origin
point is isolated and translated to digital space, often influenced by what is found in our ever more
real and familiar internet world. As the barriers between digital and physical spaces dissolve, our
perception of reality also shifts, and the compartmentalization encouraged in digital space leads to a
new world less and less concerned with the human touch, yet Lawrence's work dips into both
territories with equal aplomb.