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First Draft
Caslon Bevington, Dylan Reitz, Sei Smith
January 6, 2021 - February 14, 2021

Ki Smith Gallery is pleased to announce First Draft, a three part exhibition featuring Caslon Bevington, Dylan Reitz, and Sei Smith as both artists and curators. 

 

Initially assembled for the gallery’s would-be presentation at Art Toronto, Bevington, Reitz and Smith have been in conversation about the similarities and differences between their practices since February of 2020. The coronavirus arrived in March, rendering art fairs, galleries and exhibition spaces temporarily obsolete. Rather than abandon the deepening conversation around their work, the artists dug deeper, experimenting with the meaning of solitary creation for the benefit of a collaborative showcase. The result is a dream-like, textured body of work that communicates with sidelong glances, not direct stares. 

The three young, New York City-based artists make works of art in the language of painting, using a dazzling  range of nontraditional materials. Bevington employs found and collected photographs to create collaged compositions, Smith manipulates light through iridescent film and textured acrylic paint, and Reitz favors sculptural constructions of recycled paper that he enlivens through analog animation. The synchronicity lies not in the aesthetics of the art objects, but in the artists’ treatment of material as subject to create subversive “paintings” that embody  the inescapable harmony of minimalism. 

 

In December of 2020 the three artists met to present their collections to one another, nearly one year after they  agreed to show together at Art Toronto. To mitigate the risk of weighing the work down with a forced curatorial  narrative, Ki Smith Gallery turned to an unlikely inspiration: fantasy sports. Each artist selected works in a snake  draft, trading Polaroids of each other’s pieces until they felt their draft selections amounted to a well-rounded and  compelling two week curatorial event. Without theory or institution to guide the artists’ choices, they relied on  deceptively simple ideas: taste, instinct, and a respect for their collaborators. 

When artists curate each other’s work, is the exhibition itself a work of art? Through their assemblage each artist offers a unique roadmap for navigating the body of work as a whole. The viewer may draw a different set of  conclusions from Bevington’s curation than Smith’s, or Reitz’s, though the pieces were selected from the same  congregation of works. First Draft embraces the diversity of perception and reaction inherent to any viewing experience, asking its audience to consider and reconsider the work on view in three valuable curatorial variations.

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