John Miller: The End of History
313 N. Fairfax Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90036
Saturday, April 28 at 6:00 PM 8:00 PM
Ends Jun 9, 2018
Meliksetian | Briggs is pleased to present The End of History, new paintings by New York and Berlin-based John Miller. The works reflect some of the key concerns in Miller’s practice including the relationship of the public space (in this case, the televisual space) to exchange value and social relations, and within it the orchestration of public behavior, in particular its relationship to the commodity. While an integral part of Miller’s practice since his early career in the 1980s, painting is the genre Miller has consistently challenged, particularly its inherent associations and its reception. Whether ironically quoting painting styles like regionalist painting or social realism, or using generic imagery from postcards, comic books or reality TV as subject matter - “pictures of pictures” - or making abstract works in a “surrogate” style, intending to evoke a layman’s idea of artistry, Miller is acutely aware of the implicit culturally-loaded, regressive nature of painting, hence, his strategies to subvert and destabilize the genre. The five new paintings in the exhibition are part of the artist’s ongoing Game Show series begun in 1998. The works in this series are unapologetically machine-made, typified by the removal of the artist’s hand, de-skilling, and de-privileging technique: an anti-aurist, materialist critique. They follow a lineage of artists’ struggles with the challenge of “painting” by way of devising a machine-driven painting strategy, from Rodchenko through Warhol and beyond. Where the earlier work in the Game Show series in the late ‘90s had a rawness in deliberately off-register printing that pointed to the course-grained imagery of cathode-ray tubes or that were over-painted in a deliberately crude manner, the latest examples are digitally printed, high definition, high resolution, immaculate surfaces on machine-made fabric.