
Stevenson is pleased to present Garage-ism, an exhibition of new paintings by Zander Blom.
The artist describes this chapter of experiments in his pictorial language as narrowing the gap between mind and hand. Blom abandons his previous conceptual frameworks and rhetorical interests, instead following recurrent curiosities and childhood fascinations.
Compositions are rendered with oil bars, painterly brushwork and watercolour-like washes on fragments of primed, raw and coloured canvas. The distinction between abstraction and figuration that was previously a preoccupation of his repertoire is dissolved. Removed from the conventions of frames, stretchers, art-historical references and easily digestible aesthetic elements the artist terms ‘tricks’ of cohesion, the works exist both as autonomous expressions and a floor-to-ceiling immersive installation.
In the manifesto accompanying this body of work, the artist writes:
Garage-ism is an approach to painting in which the aim is to make works that look like they could have emerged from a garage; works that appear to have lived and spent time behind boxes and stacks of old furniture. It’s not faux garage, it’s not about sticking cobwebs or dust onto canvas, and it’s not about nostalgia. Nor is it about paintings being made in a garage. It’s about working in a mental space where the desired destination for your efforts is neither the trash heap nor the museum. It’s about cultivating paintings that seem to have no desire to grace a pristine gallery wall, or even reside above a couch in a lounge. It’s about aiming to make work that is only really fit to live in that nether space: the garage. In this sense Garage-ism is a way of tricking yourself into giving up on superficial ambition in painting without descending into depression and apathy. The aim is to strip away the layers of external motivators, to reject the clamour of hollow voices in your head and move towards your own essential nature. In a way it is about not aiming at anything at all, but since that is an unproductive proposition, Garage-ism is useful as a kind of proxy for the void. It functions as an anchor with a very slack tether—a simple idea that allows you to move around freely, without drifting off and getting lost in space.Manifestos are usually a trite business of pompous declaration associated with the 20th century. An obsession with progress and the claiming of the new is practically written into its DNA. This is not that. This is a whisper of permission, a 21st-century self-help, self-acceptance guide. Garage-ism proposes that your own unique set of shortcomings may actually be the most interesting thing about you. This strategy is also an exercise in self-deceit, because in truth nobody wants their work to end up forgotten in a garage. However, this ruse is intended to take you somewhere inside yourself, where you can be free, and without judgment or limitation. Garage-ism should allow you, even if just for a second, to forget about trends, theories, expectations, current discourse, the norm, the new, the blue-chip, the polished, the accomplished, the big-budget, the art world, the market, the critics, the gatekeepers—so that you can start making something, anything, today. This is a manifesto against creative paralysis in a very confusing world.
Stevenson opened in 2003 in Cape Town’s Green Point district, after a visit to documenta 11, curated by Okwui Enwezor, by founding directors Michael Stevenson and Andrew da Conceicao. Moved by Enwezor’s ethos, they decided to create a new platform for contemporary art in South Africa, which was short on dedicated spaces at the time. Since its inception, Stevenson has connected local artists to the global art world, and introduced international practitioners to South African audiences.

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