Adam Helms
Working almost exclusively on paper, using graphite, gouache, and ink, Adam Helms makes drawings which often address a certain sort of rebel, criminal, or outlaw iconography. Over the past several years he has compiled a sort of dossier documenting the movements of a fictitious paramilitary group, the New Frontier Army. (Some of the NFA drawings were shown as part of Ballroom Marfa’s “You Are Here” exhibition in 2005.) Members of the NFA wear fatigues, tote vintage pistols, and sport horned buffalo masks on their heads. In a number of drawings they seem to be sitting for formal portraits, an impression heightened by Helms’ finely detailed, meticulous technique. Other drawings depict the NFA coat-of-arms and the fortifications being built on NFA territory. For all Helms’ exacting draftsmanship, the precise nature of the NFA remains deliberately unclear. Rebel group? Militia? The distinction is blurred. A temporal blur seems to be operating as well: the NFA’s uniforms and weapons evoke different eras of American history, and the buffalo-head soldiers pose for their portraits with the stiff dignity of nineteenth-century daguerrotypes.
At the Locker Plant Helms exhibited a number of works in progress, including three nine-by-six-foot drawings. Created with charcoal, the drawings depict western or Alaskan landscapes. Vast, serene, uninhabited, the landscapes recall the blockbuster sublime of Albert Bierstadt. At the same time, Helms’s approach and technique, as in the portraits, push the images toward abstraction. The drawings read as landscape—and as the idea of landscape. A visual lineage is evoked, the symbolism of American myth. These might be the landscapes the NFA inhabit — or fantasize about inhabiting.
Adam Helms lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. He has a B.F.A. from the Rhode Island School of Design and a M.F.A. from Yale. His work was shown as part of the Greater New York exhibition at PS1 in 2005, and he has participated in many group shows in galleries and museums across the U.S, including a three-person show at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis in 2006.