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William Buchina

American, b. 1978
Assembling For Some Reason, 2016
Assembling For Some Reason, 2016

The panoply of references contained within William Buchina’s acrylic and ink paintings serve both to reveal and to obscure their own complex meanings.

The panoply of references contained within William Buchina’s acrylic and ink paintings serve both to reveal and to obscure their own complex meanings. The works share visual similarities with Victorian etchings or even contemporary graphic novels, but close observation of their details reveal Buchina’s Surrealist leanings. He creates dystopian narrative scenes, culling imagery from innumerable sources, building satirical mash-ups. The process of finding the disparate source material is as significant to Buchina’s art making as actually applying materials to canvas. At the intersection of his collection of found objects, old and new, Buchina builds layered compositions that challenge both the mind and the eye.

The panoply of references contained within William Buchina’s acrylic and ink paintings serve both to reveal and to obscure their own complex meanings. The works share visual similarities with Victorian etchings or even contemporary graphic novels, but close observation of their details reveal Buchina’s Surrealist leanings. He creates dystopian narrative scenes, culling imagery from innumerable sources, building satirical mash-ups. The process of finding the disparate source material is as significant to Buchina’s art making as actually applying materials to canvas. At the intersection of his collection of found objects, old and new, Buchina builds layered compositions that challenge both the mind and the eye.

 

Buchina’s new work depicts assemblies and crowds seemingly gathered for religious, political, or marshal purposes. His cramped compositions convey the hectic and slightly unreal quality of the assembled mob. These figures have been culled from various print media and historical sources, chosen from the artist’s vast archive of visual source material. Buchina collectively transforms his sources through drawing and his signature stark black and white acrylic. Many of the faces in the crowd are obscured by masks, signs, or abstract forms, heightening the sense of mystery. Buchina draws inspiration from the rituals of religious ceremony and fraternal orders, adapting their gestures and symbols to his own surreal scenes. Though the diverse imagery coheres into a formally powerful and intriguing whole, no strict narrative is formed within Buchina’s compositions; he leaves enough ambiguity for the viewer to infuse the work with their own meaning.

 

William Buchina has been featured in solo gallery exhibitions in New York and Brooklyn, as well as Upstate New York and abroad, and has been the subject of profiles in Interview and The New York Times MagazineHe lives and works in Brooklyn.

News

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William Buchina, "Attempts to Retain Significance #2" (2019), acrylic on canvas, 54 x 44 inches (image courtesy the artist and Hollis Taggart Gallery, New York)

The Bioweapons of Culture War

The hope now is not for this to end well, but simply for it to end.
November 28, 2020
The Smithsonian National Museum of African Art in Washington, DC (photo by Lynn Allen via Flickr)

Week in Review: Senior SFMOMA Curator Resigns; Smithsonian Workers Cite Racism at National Museum of African Art

This Week in the Art World
July 17, 2020
Christina Nicodema, Primate Temple (2019). Courtesy of Hollis Taggart.

Here Are 6 Artists You Might Not Know, But Should—With Shows You Can See This February

We've got shows from Hong Kong to Düsseldorf.
February 5, 2020
80 minutes installation opera in one act. A woman in search of an unattainable ideal in a world activated by her voice. August 29, 31, 2019 MGM Cotai theatre, Macau, China. Performed by Qian Yi, John Holiday, Joshua Dennis, Joo Won Kang, Ao Li. (courtesy

Week in Review

PAIN Sackler Protests in London, An Exhibition of Political Art Censored in China
November 22, 2019
Installation view of “Barbara Kruger: Belief + Doubt” (2012–ongoing) at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, DC. Photo: Cathy Carver © Barbara Kruger. Courtesy of Sprüth Magers and David Zwirner.

Eva Presenhuber to open second Zurich Gallery, David Zwirner to represent Barbara Kruger, and more

November 22, 2019
'Highlight: Chelsea' at Hollis Taggart, New York

'Highlight: Chelsea' at Hollis Taggart, New York

October 12, 2018
7 Painters Somewhere Between 'Emerging' and 'Blue Chip', No two works are remotely similar in this summer group exhibition at...

7 Painters Somewhere Between "Emerging" and "Blue Chip"

No two works are remotely similar in this summer group exhibition at Hollis Taggart Galleries.
August 25, 2016
Artwell Guide Instagram Pick and Review - William Buchina

Artwell Guide Instagram Pick and Review

William Buchina
August 9, 2016
Picks - Highlight: Summer One at Hollis Taggart Galleries, New York

Picks

Highlight: Summer One at Hollis Taggart Galleries, New York
August 4, 2016
NYC Galleries Scene - Exhibition Openings Through August 7, 2016

NYC Galleries Scene

Exhibition Openings Through August 7, 2016
July 27, 2016
Editors’ Picks - 9 Art Events to See in New York This Week

Editors’ Picks

9 Art Events to See in New York This Week
July 25, 2016
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Artist William Buchina in conversation with Director Paul Efstathiou

Artist William Buchina discusses his paintings with Director Paul Efstathiou. William Buchina’s work is currently being shown in “Of Folly, Fortune, Glory, Ruin: William Buchina and Christina Nicodema” at Hollis Taggart Contemporary in New York. The exhibition runs through February 22, 2020.

Publications

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William Buchina: Low Information Settings Catalogue
William Buchina: Low Information Settings
$ 20.00
Highlight, Chelsea
Highlight: Chelsea
$ 20.00
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