Artist Marc Horowitz has photographed each page of an  art catalogue by Phillips, the famous auction house in New York,  having placed on the pages the residues of junk food: an irreverent  work staging the encounter between art and consumption (artist's  book).
	This artist's book maintains the title, number of  pages and orientation of the Phillips catalogue, and its cover, back  and coast also coincide with the original. The yellow background on  which the catalogue is posed creates a distance, even in time,  between the action of the artist (put food on the catalogue and shoot  a photograph) and the reader's perception of the differing levels in  the artwork.
The gap between representation and the real object is  made even more evident in the photographic reproduction of the  artist's book (created for the NERO online catalogue) where the  embossed cheeseburger on the cover leads the reader to wonder on  which level of representation the real sandwich is actually placed.
With a prescient instinct for the untapped cultural  potential of populist mediums, notably Internet culture, commercial  advertising and the entertainment industry, Horowitz looks to  establish a social connection and reciprocity between viewer and  artist. As in the book, the artist's sculptures and paintings on view  at Depart Foundation are playfully corrupted with the inclusion of  junky everyday objects and images.
	Published on the occasion of Marc Horowitz's solo  exhibition “Interior, Day (A Door Opens)” at Depart Foundation,  Los Angeles, from October 8, 2015 to January 30, 2016.
		Marc Horowitz (born 1976 in   Westerville, Ohio) is a Los Angeles-based artist working in  photography, painting, performance, video, sculpture and social  practice. Horowitz holds a master's degree in art from the University  of Southern California, and bachelor's degrees in art and marketing  from San Francisco Art Institute, and Indiana University Kelley  School of Business. In a practice that combines traditional  drawing, commercial photography, and new media, Horowitz turns  American culture on its head to explore the idiosyncrasies of  entertainment, class, commerce, failure, success, and personal  meaning. Using visual puns, large-scale participatory projects, and  viral social pranks, Horowitz creates environments of high  energy that lift the most mundane to the status of grand event  in complex interplays between subject, viewer, and participant.  Horowitz has exhibited both nationally and internationally; notable  solo exhibitions include: “Moving”, Aran Cravey, Los Angeles  (2013), “The Advice of Strangers”, funded by Creative Time,  curated by Nato Thompson, web-based (2011), “The Me & You  Show”, The Hayward Gallery, London, UK (2007), “The Center  for Improved Living”, Galerie Analix Forever, Geneva, CH (2007),  “More Better”, AMT Gallery, Lake Como IT (2007), “TCFIL”,  Galerie Nuke, Paris FR (2007). His work has been featured  extensively on local and national television including ABC News, NPR  Weekend Edition, CBS Inside Edition CBS, CNN American Morning,  and on NBC's The Today Show. He has taught at the University of  Southern California and lectured at The Hammer Museum in Los Angeles,  California Institute of the Arts, Stanford University, and Yale  University. Horowitz teaches a course in new media art at Otis  College with his partner, 
Petra Cortright.