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Sean Kelly is delighted to present Staring at the Moon, Brian Rochefort’s first exhibition at Sean Kelly, Los Angeles. Rochefort will present new sculptures in an installation that will reconfigure the architecture of the gallery. Rochefort’s mixed-media sculptures incorporate a variety of different textures, surfaces and colors to create rich, otherworldly forms. Referencing his travels to some of the most remote parts of the planet, such as the Amazon Rainforest, the Galápagos Islands, and the Ngorongoro Crater, in Tanzania, Rochefort internalizes and translates his experiences in these secluded, ancient landscapes into potent sculptural forms. There will be an opening reception on Saturday, September 14, from 5pm to 7pm. The artist will be present.

Rochefort’s sculptures are built up in a unique process of layering, wherein the initial form undergoes multiple firings. Between each firing, Rochefort airbrushes the works and applies glazes, many of which he has developed himself through extensive experimentation. This process pushes the technical limits of ceramics in pursuit of evocative, otherworldly new forms. As Rochefort states, “Some of the most successful pieces that I’ve done in the past have been works that I’ve built up too fast… but somehow I’ve managed to save the form, and it turns into a different monster.” Rochefort works intuitively to build a composition, not unlike an abstract painter, and cites artists such as Albert Oehlen, Joan Mitchell, Franz West, and even photographer Aaron Siskind as influences for their daring deployment of color and texture. Rochefort’s virtuosic control of his medium is tempered by the element of chance inherent to the process of firing the sculpture. In this way, the completed works are the result of a dynamic interplay between Rochefort’s highly developed technique, the distinctive character of each sculpture, and ultimately chance.

Rochefort is equally inspired by his travels to remote and untouched ecosystems, such as barrier reefs and rainforests. A vital form of inspiration for Rochefort, the rare and vibrant natural forms found in such locations are apparent in the works. As Rochefort describes, “It’s as if the piece came from outer space, was born that way, or it came from the depths of the ocean.” Rochefort’s intent, however, is not to directly represent the landscapes that he visits, a task he describes as “nearly impossible to do.” Instead, Rochefort’s sculptures take on the formal qualities of the landscapes through an almost volcanic layering of form upon form, color upon color, and texture upon texture, ultimately blooming into vivid, texturally sumptuous works. His larger freestanding works, which he refers to as Craters, evoke the fundamental quality of Rochefort’s sculptures: a powerful moment of contact with something deeply elemental and otherworldly.

Brian Rochefort holds a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design, 2007 and he participated in the Lillian Fellowship Residency at the Archie Bray Foundation, 2009. Rochefort’s first solo museum exhibition, Absorption by the Sun, was exhibited at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, CA, 2019. His work has been featured in museum exhibitions Artifices InssablesStories of Ceramics at Nouveau Musée National de Monaco, Monte Carlo, Monaco; Cool Clay at Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA; Regarding George Ohr at Boca Raton Museum of Art, FL; and From Funk to Punk at Everson Museum of Art, NY. He lives and works in Los Angeles, California.

For media inquiries, please email Adair Lentini at Adair@skny.com 

For all other inquiries, please email Thomas Kelly at Thomas@seankellyla.com