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Guðmundur Thoroddsen

Hobby and Work

October 24 – December 21, 2013

collage by Gudmundur Thoroddsen

Ptarmigan Hunt II, 2013

Water-color, graphite, ink and collage on paper

18” x 24”

collage by Gudmundur Thoroddsen

Basketball Practice V, 2013

Water-color, graphite, ink and collage on paper

22” x 30”

collage by Gudmundur Thoroddsen

Hunting in the Highlands, 2013

Water-color, graphite, ink and collage on paper

30” x 22”

collage by Gudmundur Thoroddsen

Ptarmigan Hunt IV, 2013

Water-color, graphite, ink and collage on paper

22” x 30”

collage by Gudmundur Thoroddsen

High in the Highlands, Hunting is Near, 2013

Water-color, graphite, ink and collage on paper

42” x 29”

collage by Gudmundur Thoroddsen

Brewsession, 2013

Water-color, graphite, ink and collage on paper

42” x 29”

sculpture by Gudmundur Thoroddsen

Best October of 2013 II, 2013

Glazed earthenware

13.5” x 8” x 3.5”

sculpture by Gudmundur Thoroddsen

The Snifter Trophy for Best Imperial IPA, 2013

Glazed earthenware

5.75” x 6” x 4.5"

sculpture by Gudmundur Thoroddsen

Best and Worst moments of Basketball II, 2013

Glazed earthenware

9.5” x 5” x 3”

sculpture by Gudmundur Thoroddsen

Trophy of Beards II, 2013

Glazed earthenware

4.5” x 4” x 2.5”

sculpture by Gudmundur Thoroddsen

Basketball Gnome, 2013

Wood

21” x 11” x 12”

sculpture by Gudmundur Thoroddsen

Brewing Gnome Bratwurst Nose, 2013

Wood

21” x 11” x 12”

Press Release

For Gudmundur Thoroddsen’s second exhibition with Asya Geisberg Gallery, the artist continues his exploration into the tropes of modern masculinity. In “Hobby and Work”, Thoroddsen merges the antiquity-laced bearded busts of male gods with activities such as basketball, hunting, and brewing beer. In his group scenes in gouache, pencil, collage, and ink on paper, men are organized as if in a Byzantine painting, without Renaissance perspective, but rather a staggered organization. Employing an often cartoonish style, Thoroddsen sometimes veers into boyish naughtiness, like dirty doodles carved into a school desk. Thoroddsen charts a circle of manly aspiration: winning a trophy, competing for points, length of beard, or number of birds killed. With a pallid color scheme of vaguely Eastern European or 1930s colors, Thoroddsen’s drawings exist in a timeless haze. The whiff of nostalgia for days of clear gender roles and adherence to expectations of masculinity is undermined by his often sketchy style and blatant blasphemy: the recurrent defecating “gods”, the silly or awkward figuration, the smiling phallus that acts as ultimate emasculation.

Along with the works on paper, Thoroddsen continues his carved wood heads with a rougher style and blended identity. The exhibition includes a collection of ceramic trophies, glazed in soft pastels, pointing out the sadness of constant and meaningless one-ups-man-ship, tiny awards with steadily diminishing power. The deliberately clumsy and crude handling of both the drawings and sculptures undercuts the quest for perfection and achievement, or perhaps is a reflection of the ethic of “just getting it done” and the fear of “prettying“ it up.

In “Hobby and Work”, Thoroddsen starts with the seemingly banal and finds potency in each activity he tries, whether hobby or work, which in his case, solipsistically, is making art. He points to a particularly male fascination with being engulfed by hobbies- mastering a new skill, learning a vast repository of obscure facts, and seeking escape from normal life by shutting oneself within a separate world. Bushy beards connect a contemporary trend with stereotypes of Vikings, ancient gods, and lumberjacks, and yet an artist can feel inadequate compared to explorers and physical doers. As such, the male in Thoroddsen’s exhibition becomes a tragicomic exemplar of the artist, desperately and naively hoping to accumulate manliness but always falling short.