Time Out Magazine
  Previous Reviews Next    
spDan Perjovschi, Do You Remember My Pin? At Lombard-Freid Projects for Time Out, Feb ‘08

Dario Robleto, “If We Fly Away, They’ll Fly Away,” 2006, courtesy of D’Amelio Terras GalleryDan Perjovschi, installation view, courtesy of Lombard-Freid Projects

Even if Dan Perjovschi’s doodle-like politically charged wall drawings seemed a little out of place in MOMA’s pristine atrium last year, the incongruity created a certain frisson.  His first New York gallery solo is just as arresting, despite being relegated to a much smaller space.  Using white chalk on grey walls, the artist turns the gallery into a giant chalkboard on which he has scrawled lively if uneven critiques on issues ranging from the environment to Iraq.
 
Perjovschi’s nervous line, and his tendency to overlap bold and faint images by erasing as he goes along give his work an energetic, experimental feel.  On the down side, drawings of a naked derriere surrounded by puckered lips and of a puppeteer making anonymous figures dance amount to little more than generic symbols.  Perjovschi’s spontaneous approach often misfires, as in his unnuanced drawing of a giant trashcan scrawled with ‘Big nation, big trash, big deficit.’
 
Most of the time, however, Perjovschi’s economy of means yields more trenchant results.  A sun labeled ‘rich’ on one side and ‘poor’ on the other emanates more rays on the poor side - a concise commentary on the inequity of global warming’s impact.  The clarity, punch and provocation of such pieces suggests that they’d be as at home outside as in a gallery – which would be just as well, given Chelsea’s recent profusion of mindless street art.
 
-Merrily Kerr