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RY ROCKLEN

Sand Box Living

Night Gallery is pleased to announce Sand Box Living, an exhibition of new sculptures by Ry Rocklen. This is the artist’s first presentation with the gallery. It is organized in conjunction with  neighboring Wilding Cran Gallery, whose related presentation with Rocklen, titled Shelf Life, is on view from March 16 — May 4 at 1700 Santa Fe Ave. Unit 460.

Installation view of Ry Rocklen's exhibition "Sand Box Living" at Night Gallery

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

A ceramic shoe box sized replica of a house with decal photographic glaze and slip cast porcelain sneakers inside.

Ry Rocklen, White Zebra, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

A large aluminum cast Club cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen, Sam, 2024

In the Mojave’s tan expanses, sanctity is constantly in view. Resilience strategies for enduring the daily news are embedded in real weather’s wear and tear. Art that observes and addresses this is political poetry. Ry Rocklen’s indexical sculptures remind me that shacks, sneakers, and snack crackers—like fossils embossed with geological strata—are occult clues that point to shelter from overexposure. Whether his symbolic lexicon is apocryphal or sage is up for debate. These artworks, like the desert they celebrate, properly disorient viewers before any conceptual quest can begin.

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

 A large aluminum cast gold fish cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen, Goldfish, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

The clay sculptures throughout Sand Box Living were inspired by photographic “templates” Rocklen takes of the dilapidated jackrabbit homesteads erected during the Small Tract Era’s legacy of land theft. United States citizens who erected 400-square-foot cabins on five-acre parcels claimed land ownership, illegally overriding tribal rights. While many are now refurbished, some lots languish as disintegrated souvenirs of property dispute. As mid-century ruins, their wood and concrete skeletons are irresistibly haunted, so Rocklen has transformed his architectural fascination into shoebox-like, tabletop miniatures featuring hallucinatory scale shifts and subversive trompe l’oeil that elicit formal questions about perspective and space.

A large aluminum cast saltine cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen, Sandy, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

A ceramic shoe box sized replica of a house with decal photographic glaze and slip cast porcelain sneakers inside.

Ry Rocklen, Jade House, 2024

Installation view of Ry Rocklen's exhibition "Sand Box Living" at Night Gallery

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

A ceramic shoe box sized replica of a house with decal photographic glaze and slip cast porcelain sneakers inside.

Ry Rocklen, Green Door, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Green Door, detail, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Green Door, detail, 2024

Eavesdropping through the teeny windows as one does through their desert cinderblock counterparts, treasures appear: Instead of woodrat middens, graffiti, snakes, shot-up rusty cans, and disintegrated curtains flapping in wind, we find Reebok replicas ensconced in découpage. These cast and carved trainers are super cozy and honorifically housed in art-adorned domiciles, but they’re also paradoxically morbid, recalling reliquary and cult fetish. While the hand-built, clay-slab boxes that contain the shoes are compositionally packed, they encapsulate and deliver into the gallery the same vast solitude that desert fans love: There’s an ironic slippage between the compact homestead cabin structures and the vast lands they failed to claim. This incongruity breeds an uncanny loneliness that can be charming and dollhouse-like. But just when these sculptures lean towards model or diorama, they steer viewers back towards eternity through earthy, neutrally colored clay bodies and topography reminiscent of the Mojave’s rocky outcroppings.

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

A large aluminum cast cheezit cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen, Cheezit, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Cheezit, detail, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Cheezit, detail, 2024

A large aluminum cast ritz cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen, Luna, 2024

This body of work furthers Rocklen’s longstanding preoccupations with how American culture selects and produces iconography. How and why are some objects elevated to elite status? Who decides, and are their shapes and forms fixed? Are fabricated duplicates as precious as originals? Rocklen is a minimalist Sherlock Holmes of sorts, sniffing out the elusive champion-status inherent to plastic trophies, bathroom tiles, school lockers, and paper towels. His interests are wide-ranging, spanning high kitsch to humble, functional tools. But these sculptures are the first, he says, in which his desert home landscapes have permeated his aesthetics. For example, that these sculptures are emblazoned with decals made from 3D photo-printing ceramic glaze is a stark reminder that our perceptions about sublimity’s simplicity are erroneous. Just as wilderness evidences weather’s complex technical achievements, Rocklen’s homestead series makes deceptive light of highly skilled craft moves and dexterous material construction.

 

—Trinie Dalton

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

A ceramic shoe box sized replica of a house with decal photographic glaze and slip cast porcelain sneakers inside.

Ry Rocklen, Checkered Yellow, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Checkered Yellow, detail, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Checkered Yellow, detail, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

Ry Rocklen, Sand Box Living, installation view, 2024

Ry Rocklen (b. Los Angeles, CA, 1978) is an American sculptor and installation artist. His sculptures, born out of an array of found and readymade objects, reflect his pursuit of the sublime in the things we take for granted.  Rocklen resurrects discarded items, granting them a second life as sculpture. Through the use of ceramic as a primary index of time and devotion, Rocklen elevates found objects, unveiling the overlooked artistries of everyday life. He has exhibited solo projects at Team Gallery, New York, NY; Feuer/Mesler, New York, NY; Honor Fraser, Los Angeles, CA; Lazy Eye Gallery, Yucca Valley, CA, and other galleries and institutions. His work belongs to the collections of Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA; Mohn Family Foundation, Santa Monica, CA; MoCA Library, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, CA; Parrish Art Museum, Water Mill, NY; Rubell Family Collection, Miami, FL; Thomas J. Watson Library, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY; and Beth Rudin DeWoody Collection, West Palm Beach, FL. The artist lives and works in Joshua Tree, CA.

A ceramic shoe box sized replica of a house with decal photographic glaze and slip cast porcelain sneakers inside.

Ry Rocklen

White Zebra, 2024

ceramic, glaze, glaze decal

16 x 7 x 10 in (40.6 x 17.8 x 25.4 cm)

Inquire
A large aluminum cast club cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen

Sam, 2024

aluminum, hardware

30 1/2 x 17 x 2 in (77.5 x 43.2 x 5.1 cm)

Inquire
A large aluminum cast gold fish cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen

Goldie, 2024

aluminum, hardware

8 x 12 x 2 1/8 in (20.3 x 30.5 x 5.4 cm)

Inquire
A ceramic shoe box sized replica of a house with decal photographic glaze and slip cast porcelain sneakers inside.

Ry Rocklen

Jade House, 2024

ceramic, glaze, glaze decal

17 x 5 1/2 x 11 in (43.2 x 14 x 27.9 cm)

Inquire
A large aluminum cast saltine cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen

Sandy, 2024

aluminum, hardware

24 x 23 1/2 x 3 in (61 x 59.7 x 7.6 cm)

Inquire
A ceramic shoe box sized replica of a house with decal photographic glaze and slip cast porcelain sneakers inside.

Ry Rocklen

Green Door, 2024

ceramic, glaze, glaze decal

16 x 5 x 5 1/2 in (40.6 x 12.7 x 14 cm)

Inquire
A large aluminum cast Cheezit cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen

Cheezit, 2024

aluminum, hardware

12 x 12 x 2 in (30.5 x 30.5 x 5.1 cm)

Inquire
A large aluminum cast Ritz cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen

Luna, 2024

aluminum, hardware

23 x 24 x 2 1/2 in (58.4 x 61 x 6.3 cm)

Inquire
A ceramic shoe box sized replica of a house with decal photographic glaze and slip cast porcelain sneakers inside.

Ry Rocklen

Checkered Yellow, 2024

ceramic, glaze, glaze decal

15 3/8 x 7 x 11 in (39.1 x 17.8 x 27.9 cm)

Inquire
A ceramic shoe box sized replica of a house with decal photographic glaze and slip cast porcelain sneakers inside.

Ry Rocklen

White Zebra, 2024

ceramic, glaze, glaze decal

16 x 7 x 10 in (40.6 x 17.8 x 25.4 cm)

A large aluminum cast club cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen

Sam, 2024

aluminum, hardware

30 1/2 x 17 x 2 in (77.5 x 43.2 x 5.1 cm)

A large aluminum cast gold fish cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen

Goldie, 2024

aluminum, hardware

8 x 12 x 2 1/8 in (20.3 x 30.5 x 5.4 cm)

A ceramic shoe box sized replica of a house with decal photographic glaze and slip cast porcelain sneakers inside.

Ry Rocklen

Jade House, 2024

ceramic, glaze, glaze decal

17 x 5 1/2 x 11 in (43.2 x 14 x 27.9 cm)

A large aluminum cast saltine cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen

Sandy, 2024

aluminum, hardware

24 x 23 1/2 x 3 in (61 x 59.7 x 7.6 cm)

A ceramic shoe box sized replica of a house with decal photographic glaze and slip cast porcelain sneakers inside.

Ry Rocklen

Green Door, 2024

ceramic, glaze, glaze decal

16 x 5 x 5 1/2 in (40.6 x 12.7 x 14 cm)

A large aluminum cast Cheezit cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen

Cheezit, 2024

aluminum, hardware

12 x 12 x 2 in (30.5 x 30.5 x 5.1 cm)

A large aluminum cast Ritz cracker mounted to the wall

Ry Rocklen

Luna, 2024

aluminum, hardware

23 x 24 x 2 1/2 in (58.4 x 61 x 6.3 cm)

A ceramic shoe box sized replica of a house with decal photographic glaze and slip cast porcelain sneakers inside.

Ry Rocklen

Checkered Yellow, 2024

ceramic, glaze, glaze decal

15 3/8 x 7 x 11 in (39.1 x 17.8 x 27.9 cm)