LOOKING FORWARD THROUGH THE PAST

LOOKING FORWARD THROUGH THE PAST

34-36 Irakli Abashidze Street, Vake Tbilisi, 0179, Georgia Tuesday, January 25, 2022–Thursday, March 31, 2022

Looking Forward through the Past

solo show with Scott Troxel

30 love by scott troxel

Scott Troxel

30 Love, 2021

4,500 USD

atlas by scott troxel

Scott Troxel

Atlas, 2019

3,900 USD

blue copper by scott troxel

Scott Troxel

Blue Copper, 2019

2,600 USD

tiki iii by scott troxel

Scott Troxel

Tiki III, 2019

2,600 USD

zephyr by scott troxel

Scott Troxel

Zephyr, 2019

2,400 USD

transponder by scott troxel

Scott Troxel

Transponder, 2019

2,400 USD

mint by scott troxel

Scott Troxel

Mint, 2020

3,400 USD

convergence gold by scott troxel

Scott Troxel

Convergence Gold, 2019

3,850 USD

ssb3 by scott troxel

Scott Troxel

SSB3, 2020

Sold

solarus by scott troxel

Scott Troxel

Solarus, 2019

Sold

freshie by scott troxel

Scott Troxel

Freshie, 2019

Sold

achtung vi by scott troxel

Scott Troxel

Achtung VI, 2020

Sold

Scott Troxel draws on the aesthetics of bygone technology and the forward-looking designs of the Atomic Age and mid-century modernism to make dynamic, retrofuturist wooden wall sculptures that evoke nostalgia for the past as much as they look to the future. Fascinated by the way pieces of technology, culture, and design reveal their age, Scott aims to make works that cannot be pinned to a specific era. Scott is inspired by design and technology throughout the twentieth century, such as mid-century modernism, the Atomic Age, and art deco. He tends to expand upon Frank Stella’s famous quote “What you see is what you see.” While the viewer tends to bring his or her experiences to Scott’s work and “find” something familiar in it, his goal is to create art that features strong composition, balance, color, form and movement. His work relies heavily on these pillars. He then incorporates themes of aging, organic versus man-made, and new versus old in the sense of how we engage with technology, design, and aesthetics across generations. Specifically, he uses the example of midcentury modern design. According to Scott “It has the rare ability to be timeless yet dated, modern but retro, organic and grounded but still futurist and otherworldly. I find this concept fascinating, and it is the foundation of what I try to achieve in my work. I want it to feel both modern and bold but perhaps from another era—when it was cutting edge, before time passed it by and changed the definition of “new or modern.” An example of his work that demonstrates this idea would be “Achtung VI.” The piece is bold, graphic and nods to both hard-edge abstraction and post-painterly abstraction. But it’s also modern and slightly distressed and grungy. The color palette was taken from a 1950’s book cover that has amazing design and color in the golden age of graphic design and color theory. Scott’s work has been shown at The Other Art Fair, SCOPE Miami, Art Wynwood, Texas Contemporary, and SOFA Chicago. Scott’s work is in private and corporate collections worldwide including: The Shard Building-London, The Hotel Del Coronado, Westin Hotels, Wyndham Hotels, Embassy Suites, Hotels, Marriot Hotels Hilton Hotels, The View II at Temple University Purdue University, Four Seasons Hotel Group, Capitol One Corporate Headquarters, Price Waterhouse Cooper Headquarters in Manhattan, NY & The Hadle, Philadelphia, PA