Marlo Pascual
— The Arts Club, London

Installation View: Marlo Pascual, The Arts Club

Marlo Pascual, Untitled, 2009

Marlo Pascual, Untitled, 2009, Digital C-print, 77.5 x 61 cm

Marlo Pascual, Untitled, 2010

Marlo Pascual, Untitled, 2010, Digital C-print, brass candle sconces, white candles, 105.4 x 86.4 cm

Marlo Pascual, Untitled, 2011

Marlo Pascual, Untitled, 2011

Installation View: Marlo Pascual & Brendan Fowler, The Arts Club

Installation View: Marlo Pascual & Brendan Fowler, The Arts Club

Installation View: Marlo Pascual, The Arts Club

Installation View: Marlo Pascual, The Arts Club

Installation View: Marlo Pascual, The Arts Club

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Installation View: Marlo Pascual, The Arts Club

Using found photographs and film as a point of departure in her work, Marlo Pascual blows up, crops, rotates, re-stages and adds what she calls ‘props’ – such as Flavin-esque fluorescent tubes, rocks or anvils – to her images to create photo-based sculptures and installations. Her work variously brings to mind art movements such as Conceptual Art, Minimalism, Surrealism, Arte Povera, but brought together in her singular style with a wholly contemporary re-examination of how photographs interact with their viewers. Pascual exposes the overt constructions of her selected images by playing with the relationship between work, space and audience, turning stylised vintage photos into conceptual sites of engagement.

Pascual culls her vintage pictures from eBay and thrift stores. Some come out of an amateur photography club where the photographers strive to take ‘artistic’ photos and shots of would-be Hollywood starlets. They are of historical genres; still lifes, interiors and furniture, portraits, headshots, nudes, and pin-ups. When they arrive, the images are small, handheld, fetish-like objects. In an interplay with the photograph’s own physicality as an object, Pascual filters the images through her imagination, physically manipulating and often obscuring them with wry visual tricks and contrasting materials, removing the subjects from their previous contexts and recasting them in new roles. 

The Arts Club exhibition features, over the fireplace, an image of a young woman, significantly blown up, flipped upside down and torn in half – the kind of violence done to a photo after a break-up to rid the owner of its memory.  Rather than becoming lost to anonymity, however, in Pascual’s hands the eyes take on a new, somewhat unsettling existence. Likewise, over the course of the exhibition the candles that obscure the eyes of the male portrait will slowly stream down the cheeks of the subject, forever altering its once stagnant appearance in its new guise as an artwork. Pascual has said of her appropriation and transformation of existing images, “I’m not destroying them. I like to think I’m giving them a new life.”

Born in 1972 in Tennessee, Marlo Pascual lives and works in New York City. She has had solo shows at the Aspen Art Museum in Colorado and the Swiss Institute in New York, and has featured in group shows at museums such as the Henry Art Gallery in Seattle and the Garage Center for Contemporary Art, Moscow.

The exhibition is curated by Amelie von Wedel and Pernilla Holmes. Both the Arts Club and curators are extremely grateful to Casey Kaplan Gallery in New York for their invaluable support in making the exhibition happen, and to Marlo Pascual for making this incredible work.

We would especially like to thank all of the visionary collectors who acquired Marlo Pascual’s work and agreed to lend to this show, including: Anette Bollag-Rothschild, Michele Faissola, Filiep and Mimi Libeert, Susanne von Meiss, Steve and Chiara Rosenblum and Per Setterberg.