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Carrie Mae Weems : Remember to Dream

Installation View: Carrie Mae Weems: Remember to Dream Hessel Museum of Art Bard College Annandale-on-Hudson NY 12504-5000 June 22 – December 1, 2024 Photography courtesy the Hessel Museum of Art

ANNANDALE-ON-HUDSON, NY Remember to Dream opened on June 22 at the Center for Curatorial Studies at Bard College’s (CCS Bard) Hessel Museum of Art, Remember to Dream revisits the range and breadth of Carrie Mae Weems’ prolific career through seldom displayed and lesser-known works that demonstrate the evolution of her pioneering, politically engaged practice. Moving beyond iconic projects, Remember to Dream seeks to rebalance understanding of Weems’ artistic development over the past 30 years while locating her work in the context of her own lived experiences and commitment to activism. Ranging from large-scale installations to serial bodies of photography, the works in the exhibition provide a through-line from the Civil Rights Movement to Black Lives Matter, tracing significant moments of racial reckoning through Weems’ own lens. Carrie Mae Weems: Remember to Dream is on view through December 1, 2024.

 

Family Pictures and Stories: Welcome Home, 1978-1984 © Carrie Mae Weems. Courtesy of the artist and Barbara Gladstone, New York

 

“Throughout her career, Carrie Mae Weems has created work that serves as both a witness to and a catalyst for change,” said Tom Eccles, Executive Director of CCS Bard. “CCS Bard has long provided a platform for artists whose practice brings defining issues of our time into greater focus. It is in this tradition that we present Remember to Dream, which showcases the powerful, emotional resonance of Carrie’s artmaking across photography, film, and installation from the late 1970s through today.”

 

 

CARRIE MAE WEEMS The Edge of Time - Ancient Rome Digital C-print Unframed: 73 x 61 in. (185.4 x 154.9 cm) Marieluise Hessel Collection, Hessel Museum of Art, Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York Location: Hessel Museum, Gallery 09

Throughout the exhibition, Weems’ practice and personal history, which intersects with the political history of the U.S., sheds light on what Black American poet and scholar Amiri Baraka has called “the changing same,” referencing the continuity of racism and sexism—the ways in which certain patterns of violence and oppression are perpetuated from one generation to the next, even as the specific conditions of everyday life continue to change.

 

The exhibition is sequenced over nine rooms, each representing a body or bodies of work. Beginning with Painting the Town (2021), Weems addresses the protests that erupted in May 2020 in over 2,000 cities and towns across the United States in response to the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis Police. In Weems’ hometown of Portland, Oregon, the protests continued through September 2020, escalating to points of violent confrontation between police, protestors, and counter-protestors. Weems returned to Portland to photograph many of the businesses that boarded their storefront windows to protect against potential looting and vandalism. In an adjacent room, Weems displays an array of intimate portraits entitled Family Pictures and Stories (1978-1984), an earlier series from Portland of black-and-white photographs recording the joys and agonies of family life.

 

 

Remember to Dream contextualizes the present within a centuries-long struggle. An especially poignant and compelling representation of the brutal legacy of racism is Leave, Leave Now! (2022), a recent video installation resembling an old theater in which the artist and her sister tell the story of their grandfather Frank, a sharecropper who was a member of the Southern Tenant Farmers' Union and worked on land in Arkansas. After being beaten and left for dead in Earle, Arkansas, in 1936, Frank escapes North to Chicago on foot out of the Jim Crow South, losing his land and for a time, his family. In the video, Weems powerfully calls for reparations for all he and his family lost over generations.

 

CARRIE MAE WEEMS Blues and Pinks 5, 2020 Three archival inkjet prints Edition: 2 of 3 + 2AP 2 Prints: 36 1/4 x 18 1/4 x 1 3/8 in. (92.1 x 46.4 x 3.5 cm) framed, each 1 Print: 36 1/4 x 36 1/4 x 1 3/8 in. (92.1 x 92.1 x 3.5 cm) framed © Carrie Mae Weems. Courtesy of the artist and Gladstone Gallery. Location: Hessel Museum, Gallery 12/13

 

The exhibition continues with Blues and Pinks (1992-93), in which Weems draws upon images from the “Children’s Crusade” that began on May 2, 1963, when over one thousand children left school in Birmingham, Alabama to march downtown and speak to the mayor about segregation in their city. The children were stopped by police and hundreds were arrested. They reconvened the next day to march again, and the head of police directed law enforcement to use force on the children.



CARRIE MAE WEEMS Down Here Below, 2019 Five framed prints with convex glass glazing Edition: 2 of 5 + 2AP 116 1/2 x 37 x 2 1/2 in. (295.9 x 94 x 6.4 cm) overall © Carrie Mae Weems. Courtesy of the artist and Gladstone Gallery. Location: Hessel Museum, Gallery 11

Weems appropriates the photography of white Southern journalist Charles Moore, tinting the images with blue and pink tones, and juxtaposing scenes that resurrect the terror of the day. In a further work entitled Land of Broken Dreams: A Case Study (2021) Weems recalls the Black Panthers as a force for self-defense.

 

Installation View: Carrie Mae Weems: Remember to Dream Hessel Museum of Art Bard College Annandale-on-Hudson NY 12504-5000 June 22 – December 1, 2024 Photography courtesy the Hessel Museum of Art

Remember to Dream continues an ongoing dialogue between Weems and CCS Bard Executive Director Tom Eccles, following their collaboration on The Shape of Things at the Park Avenue Armory in New York City (2021) and Luma Arles in Arles, France (2023), with support from CCS Bard alumnus, Marina Caron (Class of 2023).

 

About Carrie Mae Weems

 

Carrie Mae Weems (b. 1953, Portland, Oregon) is an American artist whose work gives voice to people whose stories have been silenced or ignored. Investigating history, identity, and power, Weems finds connections between personal experience and the larger structures and institutions that shape our lives. Over the course of 40 years, she has built an acclaimed body of work using photographs, text, fabric, audio, digital images, installation, performance, and video.

 

 

Recent exhibitions include Reflections for Now at Barbican Art Gallery in London, and The Evidence of Things Not Seen, organized by Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart (WKV) and on view at Kunstmuseum Basel through July 4, 2024. Other recent highlights include Dawoud Bey & Carrie Mae Weems: In Dialogue, organized by the Grand Rapids Art Museum in Michigan. In the spring of 2023, Weems served as the inaugural Agnes Gund Professor of the Practice of Arts and Social Justice at Brown University, a residency that culminated in the campus-wide activation collectively titled Varying Shades of Brown.

 

 

Weems has received numerous awards, grants, and fellowships, including a Hasselblad Award, a Bernd and Hilla Becher Prize, a MacArthur “Genius” grant, the U.S. State Department’s Medal ofArts, the Joseph Hazen Rome Prize Fellowship from the American Academy in Rome, NEA grants, the Louis Comfort Tiffany Award, and the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s Lifetime Achievement Award, among others. Her work is in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; and The Tate Modern, London, among others.

 

Exhibition Organization and Credits

Exhibitions at CCS Bard and the Hessel Museum of Art are made possible with generous support from Lonti Ebers, the Marieluise Hessel Foundation, the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation, the Board of Governors of the Center for Curatorial Studies, and the Center’s Patrons, Supporters, and Friends.

 

 

About the Hessel Museum of Art

 

CCS Bard’s Hessel Museum of Art advances experimentation and innovation in contemporary art through its dynamic exhibitions and programs. Located on the campus of Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, the Hessel organizes and presents group exhibitions and thematic surveys, monographic presentations, traveling exhibitions, as well as student-curated shows that are free and open to the public. The museum’s program draws inspiration from its unparalleled collection of contemporary art, which features the Marieluise Hessel Collection at its core and comprises more than 3,000 objects collected contemporaneously from the 1960s through the present day.

 

 

The Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College

The Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College (CCS Bard) is the leading institution dedicated to curatorial studies, a field exploring the conditions that inform contemporary exhibition-making and artistic practice. Through its Graduate Program, Library and Archives, and the Hessel Museum of Art, CCS Bard serves as an incubator for interdisciplinary practices, advances new and underrepresented perspectives in contemporary art, and cultivates a student body from diverse backgrounds in a broad effort to transform the curatorial field. CCS Bard’s dynamic and multifaceted program includes exhibitions, symposia, publications, and public events, which explore the critical potential of the practice of exhibition-making.

 

 

For more information about this exhibition and others at the Hessel Museum of Art, please visit their site here; the museum can also be found on Facebook and Instagram. For more information about Bard, please visit their site here.

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YUSSEF AGBO-OLA : 7 RIVERS IN BONE ASH

Installation View : 7 RIVERS IN BONE ASH, 2024, KÖNIG TELEGRAPHENAMT, Photo Roman März, Courtesy of the artist & KÖNIG GALERIE

KÖNIG TELEGRAPHENAMT is pleased to present the solo exhibition 7 RIVERS IN BONE ASH by Yussef Agbo-Ola. The artist creates an immersive environment featuring sculpture, installation, artifacts, and sound. Yussef Agbo-Ola, an artist and architect, splits his time between London, Ibadan in Nigeria, and the Amazon Forest. Born in rural Virginia to a family with Nigerian, African-American, and Cherokee heritage, his work explores hybrid identities and relationships with diverse landscapes, ecologies, and cultural rituals.

 

7 RIVERS IN BONE ASH showcases objects that reference ancestral artifacts traditionally used to honor connections to the non-human world. In Yoruba culture, every form of matter possesses a living spirit, and this exhibition serves as a sacred space, holding vessels for unseen environmental entities and inviting viewers to reflect on the invisible aspects of the natural world. With this in mind each work acts as a poetic expression in making the small, fragile and forgotten, large, crystalised, and remembered.

The focal point of the exhibition is a womblike wooden structure, draped with knitted red fabric. SAKO: 12 SEED ALTAR serves as a space for introspection, allowing reflection on the unseen nutrient exchanges between seeds and soil. The design draws inspiration from the internal forms of various medicinal seeds from the Amazon Forest, while symbolically representing the fertilization process that occurs underground. The altar features an open middle layer where knitted fabrics interconnect in a web resembling the ribosome networks found beneath the forest floor. From a side view, the altar illustrates the three layers of earth, forming a womb-like structure where a seed undergoes transformation before resurfacing. The work honors the farming rituals of the Yoruba culture and reflects on harvest ceremonies.

 

Installation View : 7 RIVERS IN BONE ASH, 2024, KÖNIG TELEGRAPHENAMT, Photo Roman März, Courtesy of the artist & KÖNIG GALERIE

Agbo-Ola aims to reopen our eyes to the natural surroundings, sharpening our senses to what is invisible yet constantly evolving, transforming, dying, or growing. Many of his works are inspired by organisms on the brink of extinction, with the exhibition holding space for the living, the dead, the seen, and the unseen ancestors that connect us to the natural world.

The series MEDICINAL SKIN SPECIES merges the symbolic textile traditions of the Yoruba and Cherokee with inspiration drawn from biology, phytology, and ritual practices of environmental consecration. Each piece is hand-knitted, evoking the form of animal skins. The patterns and motifs are inspired by diverse cultural cosmologies, microscopic organisms, animals, and insect skins – some of which are endangered or already extinct. Through reflection on the unseen within various ecosystems, these skins commemorate different species by symbolically extending their lives and presence. A group of works on paper is similarly inspired, representing reimagined, fossilized plant organs encased in Arctic ice. These pieces are painted with watercolors and Indian ink mixed with raw pigments.

Installation View: 7 RIVERS IN BONE ASH, 2024, KÖNIG TELEGRAPHENAMT, Photo Roman März, Courtesy of the artist & KÖNIG GALERIE

Belief systems and religions across the world often assign significant roles to environmental elements. Agbo-Ola questions the origins of these beliefs, practices, and values, and the degree to which they influence our relationships and interactions with our surroundings. In one culture, a river might be viewed as an economic resource, while in another it is seen as a living entity. What is at stake when environmental elements are valued only for their physical properties, and not for their interconnected, unseen roles in larger systems, such as a tree converting CO2 into oxygen for most species to breathe? For Agbo-Ola, the BONE TOTEMS SERIES seeks to reveal the unseen relationships between environmental elements and cultural cosmologies. Each piece is carved from Amazonian Angelique wood that has been washed in river water. The smaller wooden works represent cosmological spirits of the land, inhabiting various environmental elements such as stones, trees, and flowers.

 

 

Installation View: 7 RIVERS IN BONE ASH, 2024, KÖNIG TELEGRAPHENAMT, Photo Roman März, Courtesy of the artist & KÖNIG GALERIE

Artist

 

 

Yussef Agbo-Ola (b. 1990 in Newport News, Virginia, United States ) is an artist and architect living between London, Lagos, and the Amazon Forest. Born in rural Virginia in a multi-heritage Nigerian, African-American, and Cherokee household, his work reflects hybrid identities and relationships to different landscapes, ecologies, and cultural rituals. Agbo-Ola’s multidisciplinary artistic practice is concerned with interpreting natural energy systems, through interactive experiments that explore the connections between an array of sensory environments, from the biological and anthropological to the perceptual and microscopic. His practice questions how art, architecture, and anthropological research can create experimental environments that challenge the way we experience geological conditions and living ecosystems. His works manifest as architectural temples, photographic journalism, material alchemy, interactive performance, experimental sound design, and conceptual writing.

Yussef holds a Masters in Fine Art from the University of the Arts London and a Masters in Architecture from the Royal College of Art. He has led art and architectural commissions for the United Nations, Institute of Contemporary Art (London), Serpentine Gallery London, Van Abbe Museum, TEDx East End, BBC Arts, Museum Folkwang, Venice Architectural Biennials, Palais de Tokyo, Tai Kwun Arts Center, Sharjah Architecture Triennial, and Lexus Automotive Innovation Centre Japan, among others. Agbo-Ola is an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Architecture at Columbia GSAPP where he directs an experimental design studio called the The Art of Poetic Environmental Architecture.

 

 

The exhibition opened on September 11th and will be on view until November 16th, 2024. An opening was held On September the 11th from 6 to 8 pm.

 

 

For more information about this exhibition and others, please visit the gallery’s site here. KÖNIG GALERIE can also be found on YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook. Yussef’s interview with the magazine can be found here.

 

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ARJEN : IDENTITIES

Installation View: IDENTITIES, 2024, Berlin, Photo by Roman März, Courtesy of the artist & KÖNIG GALERIE

KÖNIG GALERIE is pleased to present a solo exhibition by Dutch artist Arjen, his first with the gallery. The show is comprised of 8 paintings, drawings on paper, smaller format paintings, and bronze sculptures, which are completely new for the artist.

As a child, Arjen started making copies of the work of the Dutch Masters, such as Rembrandt and Jacob van Ruysdael. Later he discovered the work of earlier modern painters like Pablo Picasso and Salvador Dalí, as well as ethnographic art, which became great inspirations to him. Arjen is fascinated by the fundamental principles of art. Through pictorial analysis, he tries to isolate these principles to then use them in his own works. Though he has an urge to visualize a wide range of figures and feelings, he simultaneously wants his works to be simple and as minimalistic as possible. This desire for simplicity is inspired by the artistic development of Piet Mondrian.

Arjen, The Kiss, 2024, Courtesy of the arist & KÖNIG GALERIE


The process usually starts with a sketch, inspired by everyday life or a sudden idea, in which he lets his intuition run freely. Arjen tries to go beyond the concept of deformation. With familiar elements of the human body, geometrically reshaped and sometimes combined with cheerful or sensual elements, he tries to create new entities with their own intrinsic logical structure. In his approach, he leaves behind the normal anatomical structures in order to find new figures without limitations of any kind. Arjen is drawn to modes of pictorial figuration in which an internal, compositional balance is achieved. This spatial equilibrium of forms is an important contrast to the surrealistic figures portrayed, which are anything but immediately recognizable. Arjen reconnects distinguishable parts into unfamiliar combinations, taking what is immediately known or recognizable and making it less so. For example, in NEW PERSPECTIVES, 2024, single eyes protrude like telescopes from the mouths of what looks to be a father and son portrait.

Working closely with the Noack Foundry in Berlin, Arjen brought his ingenuity of combinatory form into three dimensions, creating a series of kneeling, headless figures, whose smooth surfaces and rich patina carry the internal contrasts presented elsewhere in the paintings. Finally, Arjen has included drawings on paper and, for the first time, smaller format paintings. These works are standalone but are also preparatory steps for bigger paintings and give the viewers a glimpse into the wide range of his creative process. 

 

Installation View: IDENTITIES, 2024, Berlin, Photo by Roman März, Courtesy of the artist & KÖNIG GALERIE

The exhibition opened on September 11th and will be on view until October 27, 2024. There was an opening held on September the 11th from 6 to 8 pm.

For more information about this exhibition and others, please visit the gallery’s site here. KÖNIG GALERIE can also be found on YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook.

 

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Pérez Art Museum Miami Presents Xican-A.O.X. Body

Xican-a.o.x. Body. Installation view: Pérez Art Museum Miami, 2024. Photo: Lazaro Llanes

Survey Of Contemporary American Latino Art Features Over 150 Works by 7 Multigenerational Artists and Collectives

 

(MIAMI, FL – TK, 2024) — Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) is pleased to present Xican-A.O.X. Body. The exhibition opened on  June 13, 2024. Organized by the American Federation of Art and co-curated by Cecilia Fajardo-Hill with Marissa Del T oro and PAMM Chief Curator Gilbert Vicario, the exhibition includes over 150 works by 70 artists and collectives. Ranging in diverse media from painting, photography, works on paper, sculpture, and moving images, Xican-A.O.X. Body foregrounds the body as a site to explore political agency and imagination, artistic investigation, decolonization, and alternative forms of affectivity and community as linked to Chicano experiences. The exhibition serves as the first group exhibition to celebrate Xicanx artists working conceptually, experimentally, and or with a performative focus. The term, Xicanx, is inclusive of the Indigenous and colonized people of Mexican descent as well as the people who may originate from Central and South American nations.

 

 

Xican-a.o.x. Body. Installation view: Pérez Art Museum Miami, 2024. Photo: Lazaro Llanes

Xican-A.O.X. Body contextualizes and celebrates an intergenerational community of artists whose lived experiences go as far back as the Civil Rights Movement. While Xicanx artists have long suffered from underrepresentation within the cultural and social fabric of contemporary American art, exhibitions such as Xican-A.O.X. Body fundamentally contribute to larger national conversations about US Latino culture at this moment.
— PAMM Chief Curator Gilbert Vicario.




Xican-a.o.x. Body. Installation view: Pérez Art Museum Miami, 2024. Photo: Lazaro Llanes

 

 

Xican-A.O.X. Body features multidisciplinary works from the late 1960s to the present, convoluting the common understanding of Xicanx art and culture and highlighting the complex nature of varying visual practices. The exhibition emerges at the intersection of experimental artistic practices and the notion of the Brown body as articulated in the context of Xicanisma: —a vital and inclusive concept developed in the 1990s that calls for self-determination of ethnic, political, and cultural identities through greater acknowledgment of Indigenous roots, intersectional identities, and feminism. While the multiplicity inherent in this term is central to the project’s organizing concept, the exhibition proudly includes the work of artists who identify in myriad ways—including Mexican American, Chicana/o, Xicanx, Indigenous, Latinx, Black, and Brown.

 

 

Xican-A.O.X. Body fits with the mission and vision of PAMM as the premiere venue for presenting the work of Latin American and American Latino artists in the country. We are excited and proud to present this important show by three experts of Latin American and Latino art, including our own Chief Curator, Gilbert Vicario.
— PAMM Director Franklin Sirmans.





 

The exhibition is organized into eight sections; Political Pop, Brown Commons, Networks, Nepantla, Radical Violence, Resilience, Disrupting Social Space, and Disidentify & Reimagine.

 

Xican-a.o.x. Body. Installation view: Pérez Art Museum Miami, 2024. Photo: Lazaro Llanes

At the nucleus of the exhibition is Brown Commons, which highlights artists who raise questions of belonging and feelings of invisibility; interrogating the stereotypes and role of race in relation to the Xicanx body and identity, while also highlighting the intrinsic beauty and soulful presence of Xicanx existence.

 

 

Dis-identify and Re-imagine embraces queer theorist José Esteban Muñoz’s notion of “disidentification” —a process for which those outside the racial and sexual mainstream transform majority identity frameworks for their own purposes. This section includes artists offering points of cultural contradiction by displaying Brown, queer bodies as active agents in countering essentialist narratives, and as sites of social and political residence that challenge preconceived assumptions rooted in phobic logic of race, gender, and sexuality from within and outside Latinx communities.

Xican-a.o.x. Body. Installation view: Pérez Art Museum Miami, 2024. Photo: Lazaro Llanes

 

Nepantla: Growth and Creativity, explores Nepantla; a concept articulated by the feminist writer Gloria Anzaldúa as the symbolic space of in-betweenness, liminality, and transformation created in response to multiple forms of oppression and exclusion. Disrupting Social Space features work inspired by the protests and marches of the Civil Rights era in the United States, and the spiritual and conceptual relationship inspired by civil unrest and its visual inscription into cultural and societal imagination by individuals fighting for justice and equality. Generating Pop / Sharing Vernacular highlights the post-war period, assemblage art, and Pop Art, with an eye towards Native American, African American, Asian American, and Latinx American artists, who were often omitted from the mainstream retellings of the history of these art forms. Nexus and Networks features a range of work that speaks on affectivity, affection, solidarity, and shared feelings of belonging within decolonized communities. In Radical Violence, artists counter the glorification and banalization of violence into a form of spectacle with an exploration of how people of color have been targeted in the United States since colonial times. The Resilience/Resistance section focuses on symbolic and often less explicit—though not less harmful than—forms of violence, such as racism, classism, marginalization, exploitation of labor, and structural inequality.

 

 

Xican-a.o.x. Body. Installation view: Pérez Art Museum Miami, 2024. Photo: Lazaro Llanes

Xican-a.o.x. Body is organized by the American Federation of Arts. Major support for the exhibition and catalog is provided by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and the Terra Foundation for American Art. Generous support for the exhibition at PAMM is provided by Patricia and William Kleh.

 

 

 

PARTICIPATING ARTISTS

 

 

Laura Aguilar, Celia Alvarez Muñoz, Asco (Harry Gamboa Jr., Glugio Gronk Nicandro, Willie Herrón III, and Patssi Valdez), Mario Ayala, Judith F . Baca, Julia Barbosa Landois, Ariana Brown, Nao Bustamante, William Camargo, Barbara Carrasco, Charlie Cartwright (Good Time Charlie), Mel Casas, Isabel Castro, Reina D. Cervántez, Enrique Chagoya, Artemisa Clark, Liz Cohen, Adriana Corral, Camilo Cruz, Cyclona, Ms. Vaginal Davis, Natalie Diaz with Mohammed Hammad, Alex Donis, Frances Salomé España, Rafa Esparza, Justin Favela, Christina Fernandez, Diane Gamboa, Maria Gaspar, Jay Lynn Gomez, Ken Gonzales-Day, Alfonso Gonzalez Jr., Fabian Guerrero, Eser Hernandez, Sebastian Hernandez, Celia Herrera Rodríguez, Salomón Huerta, Luis Jiménez, Alma López, Yolanda López, Richard A. Lou, Jamse Luna, Narsiso Martinez, Patrick Martinez, Delilah Montoya, Malaquias Montoya, Chuço Moreno, Gabriela Muñoz, Marcos Raya, Sandy Prodiguez, Gabriela Ruiz, Sylvia Salazar Simpson, Shizu Saldamando, Teddy Sandoval, T amara Santibañez, The Q-Sides (Vero Majano, Amy Martinez, and Kari Orvik), Walter Thompson-Hernández, John Valadez, Patssi Valdez, Linda Vallejo, Ricardo Valverde, Kathy Vargas, José Villalobos

 

 

 

ABOUT AMERICAN FEDERATION FOR THE ARTS

 

 

The American Federation of Arts is the leader in traveling exhibitions internationally. A nonprofit organization founded in 1909, the AFA is dedicated to enriching the public’s experience and understanding of the visual arts through organizing and touring art exhibitions for presentation in museums around the world, publishing exhibition catalogs featuring important scholarly research, and developing educational programs.

 

 

ABOUT THE ANDY WARHOL FOUNDATION FOR THE VISUAL ARTS

 

In accordance with Andy Warhol’s will, the mission of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts is the advancement of the visual arts. The Foundation manages an innovative and flexible grants program while also preserving Warhol’s legacy through creative and responsible licensing policies and extensive scholarly research for ongoing catalogue raisonné projects. T o date, the Foundation has given nearly $300 million in cash grants to more than 1,000 arts organizations in 49 states and abroad and has donated 52,786 works of art to 322 institutions worldwide.

 

 

 

 

ABOUT THE TERRA FOUNDATION FOR AMERICAN ART

 

The Terra Foundation supports visual arts projects with a focus on art of the United States and Indigenous art of North America that question and broaden understandings of American art and transform how its stories are told. The foundation encourage projects that generate knowledge and interpretive frameworks that reflect the range and complexity of American art and its histories through the diversity of artists represented, voices included, and stories told; that center artists, scholars, and communities who have been systematically excluded from narratives, practices, and presentations of American art; and that commit to inclusive and equitable practices across project development and implementation in order to lead to structural change.

 

 

 

ABOUT PAMM

 

Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM), led by Director Franklin Sirmans, promotes artistic expression and the exchange of ideas, advancing public knowledge and appreciation of art, architecture, and design, and reflecting the diverse community of its pivotal geographic location at the crossroads of the Americas. The 40-year-old South Florida institution, formerly known as Miami Art Museum (MAM), opened a new building, designed by world-renowned architects Herzog & de Meuron, on December 4, 2013 in Downtown Miami’s Maurice A. Ferré Park. The facility is a state-of-the-art model for sustainable museum design and progressive programming and features 200,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor program space with flexible galleries; shaded outdoor verandas; a waterfront restaurant and bar; a museum shop; and an education center with a library, media lab, and classroom spaces.

 

 

Accredited by the American Alliance of Museums, Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) is Sponsored in part by the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Arts and Culture and the Florida Council on Arts and Culture. Support is provided by the Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners. Additional support is provided by the City of Miami and the Miami OMNI Community Redevelopment Agency (OMNI CRA). Pérez Art Museum Miami is an accessible facility. All contents ©Pérez Art Museum Miami. All rights reserved.






For more information about this exhibit and other exhibits currently on view and upcoming, please visit the Pérez Art Museum website here. PAMM can also be found on Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, and Facebook.

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Every Sound is a Shape of Time

Installation view: Every Sound is a Shape of Time: Selections from PAMM's Collection, Pérez Art Museum Miami, 2024–25. Photo: Oriol Tarridas

(MIAMI, FL)— Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) is pleased to present Every Sound Is a Shape of Time, a multidisciplinary exhibition featuring over 20 works by 17 artists including painting, sculpture, and lightwork. Curated by PAMM Director Franklin Sirmans, the exhibition showcases works from the museum’s collection made between 1958 and 2020—half of which will be presented for the first time

Installation view: Every Sound is a Shape of Time: Selections from PAMM's Collection, Pérez Art Museum Miami, 2024–25. Photo: Oriol Tarridas

The title of the exhibition, Every Sound Is a Shape of Time, alludes to Cuban artist Glenda León’s work, inspired by “the space where sound and the visual merge. ” The exhibition speaks to the interconnectedness between universal elements through the various multimedia artworks on view, centered around the core elements of beauty and humanism, and grounded in the strength of a plurality of voices.

 

 

With Every Sound Is a Shape of Time, we’re excited to bring together works that reflect on the common threads that emerge from our collection.
— PAMM Director Franklin Sirmans




 

Morris Louis. Delta Eta, 1960. Acrylic resin on canvas. 105 1/4 x 231 inches. Collection Pérez Art Museum Miami, gift of the Estate of Morris Louis. © Pérez Art Museum Miami

 

Core to Every Sound Is a Shape of Time is Chilean artist Alfredo Jaar’s neon lightwork, I Can't Go On. I'll Go On. (2016). Two other works by Jaar further ground the show, including Europa (1994), his monumental installation responding to the Bosnian War and the indifference in response to this crisis in the early 1990s. Also of note in the exhibition is an entire gallery space showcasing several of the first acquisitions made by the museum, which include works by leading figures in Post-Painterly Abstraction of the 1950s and 1960s such as Helen Frankenthaler and Morris Louis. This group of artists strived to create something new in a moment of tumult and friction between abstraction and representation, as well as the parallel divide between inner and outer worlds in contemporary art’s subject matter.

 

Installation view: Every Sound is a Shape of Time: Selections from PAMM's Collection, Pérez Art Museum Miami, 2024–25. Photo: Oriol Tarridas

Participating artists include Abraham Cruzvillegas, Alfredo Jaar, Ellsworth Kelly, Glenda León, Helen Frankenthaler, Jennie C. Jones, Jules Olitski, Julie Mehretu, Lawrence Weiner, Luis Camnitzer, Lydia Okumura, Mark Bradford, Morris Louis, Nicole Cherubini, Richard Serra, Richard Dupont, and Robert Morris. Every Sound Is a Shape of Time: Selections from PAMM's Collection is organized by PAMM Director Franklin Sirmans with PAMM Curatorial Assistant Fabiana A. Sotillo.

 

Jennie C. Jones. Constant Structure, 2020. Acrylic on canvas. 12 x 90 inches, overall. Collection Pérez Art Museum Miami, museum purchase with funds provided by PAMM’s Collectors Council, with additional funds provided by Alexander Guest and Camille and Patrick McDowell. ©Jennie C. Jones. Courtesy the artist and PATRON Gallery, Chicago. Photo: Pierre Le Hors

 

 

ABOUT PAMM

 

Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM), led by Director Franklin Sirmans, promotes artistic expression and the exchange of ideas, advancing public knowledge and appreciation of art, architecture, and design, and reflecting the diverse community of its pivotal geographic location at the crossroads of the Americas. The nearly 40-year-old South Florida institution, formerly known as Miami Art Museum (MAM), opened a new building, designed by world-renowned architects Herzog & de Meuron, on December 4, 2013 in Downtown Miami’s Maurice A. Ferré Park. The facility is a state-of-the-art model for sustainable museum design and progressive programming and features 200,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor program space with flexible galleries; shaded outdoor verandas; a waterfront restaurant and bar; a museum shop; and an education center with a library, media lab, and classroom spaces.

 

 

Accredited by the American Alliance of Museums, Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) is Sponsored in part by the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Arts and Culture and the Florida Council on Arts and Culture. Support is provided by the Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners. Additional support is provided by the City of Miami and the Miami OMNI Community Redevelopment Agency (OMNI CRA). Pérez Art Museum Miami is an accessible facility. All contents ©Pérez Art Museum Miami. All rights reserved.

 

 

.  The exhibition opened on August 8, 2024, and will be on view through March 16, 2025.

 

 

For more information about this exhibit and other exhibits currently on view and upcoming, please visit the Pérez Art Museum website here. PAMM can also be found on Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, and Facebook.

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Joel Shapiro: Out of the Blue

Joel Shapiro: Out of the Blue 510 West 25th Street, New York, NY 10016 September 13–October 26, 2024 Photography courtesy Pace Gallery

New York – Pace is pleased to present Joel Shapiro: Out of the Blue at its 508 and 510 West 25th Street galleries in New York. The artist’s first solo show with Pace in New York since 2014, this exhibition, which will be accompanied by a new catalogue from Pace Publishing with an essay by poet and scholar Vincent Katz, opened on September 13 and will run until October 26, featuring three new large-scale painted wood sculptures and a selection of studies and small bronzes that provide a vibrant glimpse into the artist’s practice.

 

 

One of America's most renowned artists, Shapiro has pushed the boundaries of sculptural form over the course of his 55-year career with a body of work distinguished by its dynamism, complexity, and formal elegance. Since the early 1970s, Shapiro has sought to transcend the constraints of Minimalism to introduce a more referential, intimate, and psychologically profound mode of art. Though he is best known for helping to reshape the language of contemporary sculpture with cast bronze forms that blur the line between abstraction and figuration, he has employed various methods and materials throughout his practice and continues to explore sculpture’s ability to alter one’s sense of space and scale with works that attest to human resilience in the face of catastrophe and collapse.

 

 

Joel Shapiro untitled, 2002 wood, wire and casein 27" × 31" × 31" (68.6 cm × 78.7 cm × 78.7 cm)

Over the past two decades, the kinetic, often cantilevered compositions that defined Shapiro’s sculpture throughout the 1980s and 1990s have been torn apart and reassembled into rapturous, chromatic combinations. Prompted in part by the events of September 11, 2001, the artist began to break apart models and figures in his studio, often recombining the wooden elements using hot glue and industrial pin guns. Sometimes reworking and suspending these constructions in space with wire, Shapiro strove to create forms free from the dictates of the tabletop and floor in a process that has evolved to this day.

 

 

In Out of the Blue, Shapiro relinquishes the suspended forms of his acclaimed 2010 Pace installation—described in The New Yorker as “like a Malevich canvas bursting to life in 3-D”—and returns with renewed vigor to vibrant, precariously joined, free-standing sculptures that, although floor-bound, retain intimations of flight, expansion, and buoyancy. Splay, a spry, brightly-painted sculpture, seems to rise and reach—or perhaps bounce back—from the floor. Another work, Wave, crashes forward in a cascade of blue, green, and black triangular, shard-like elements.

 

Joel Shapiro: Out of the Blue 510 West 25th Street, New York, NY 10016 September 13–October 26, 2024 Photography courtesy Pace Gallery

The centerpiece of the exhibition is a multipart sculpture, titled ARK, which careens across the gallery as it verges on taking off, its welter of brightly colored limbs and planks projecting outward as if from a maelstrom. ARK reveals a multitude of associations as one moves around and engages with its forms. Two lean, elongated volumes—one ultramarine, another pale yellow—tilt like masts or extended limbs in the air. Another blue-green element thrusts outward in conjunction with a purplish-red oblong that kisses the ground at its furthest point. From another angle, an element that suggests an elongated coffin juts forward and echoes another slightly-larger-than-human-scale form tilting upright, as it conceals yet another compressed, crimson volume below. On one side of the sculpture, a large ultramarine quadrangular plank—in conjunction with two other rectilinear planes—keels toward the viewer, obscuring the flurry of elements on the other side and creating a sense of relative calm and awe.

 

Complementing the larger works on view at Pace’s 510 West 25th Street gallery are small bronzes and painted wood studies in the adjacent 508 space, which offer a window into the highly intuitive and haptic mode of assemblage that constitutes the core of Shapiro’s recent practice. Although most works date from 2002 to 2022, one study—a small wood figure seemingly blown to pieces and projecting with wire from a bright green ground—dates from the early 1980s. Another—what appears to be a disjointed figure held together with thin steel rods and accentuated with acidic-orange daubs of spray paint—is from the late 1990s. Both studies anticipate the artist’s post-9/11 investigations of fracture, dislocation, and precarious connection, imbuing the array of bronzes and studies in the 508 West 25th Street gallery with a sense of vitality, tenderness, and freighted joy.

 

Portrait of Joel Shapiro, 2024  Photo Credit : Kyle Knodell

Joel Shapiro untitled, 1998 wood, steel rod, spray paint and hot glue 20-1/4" × 14" × 13-3/8" (51.4 cm × 35.6 cm × 34 cm)

Since his participation in the landmark Anti-Illusion: Procedures/Materials exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in 1969, Joel Shapiro (b.1941) has been the subject of numerous solo and retrospective exhibitions worldwide, at institutions including the Whitechapel Gallery, London (1980); the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (1982); the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (1985); the Louisiana Museum for Moderne Kunst, Humlebæk, Denmark and IVAM Centre Julio González, Valencia, Spain (1990–91); the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City (1995–96); the Haus der Kunst, Munich (1997–98); the Yorkshire Sculpture Park, United Kingdom (1999–2000); the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Roof Garden at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (2001); the Musée d’Orsay, Paris (2005); the Museum Ludwig, Cologne (2011); the Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas (2016); the Kunstmuseum Winterthur, Switzerland (2017); the Yale University Art Gallery (2018); and the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art, Wisconsin (2018).

 

Shapiro’s work can be found in numerous public collections in the United States and abroad, including The Museum of Modern Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.; the Philadelphia Museum of Art; The Art Institute of Chicago; The Menil Collection and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; the Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the J. Paul Getty Museum, and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles; Tate, London; IVAM Centre Julio González, Valencia; the Serralves Foundation Museum of Contemporary Art, Portugal; the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; the Musée National d’Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; the Leeum-Hoam Art Museum, Seoul, South Korea; and the Hakone Open-Air Museum, Kanagawa, Japan.

 

Joel Shapiro untitled (structural study for 20 Elements), 2004-05 wood and casein 16-1/4" × 17-3/4" × 11-1/2" (41.3 cm × 45.1 cm × 29.2 cm)

In 1993, Shapiro installed Loss and Regeneration at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. Other prominent commissions and publicly sited works include Conjunction for the United States Embassy in Ottawa, Canada, on behalf of the Foundation for Art and Preservation in Embassies (FAPE); Verge for 23 Savile Row, London; For Jennifer, commissioned by the Denver Art Museum; Now, commissioned by FAPE and installed in 2013 at the new U.S. Consulate in Guangzhou, China; 20 Elements, which is on permanent display as part of the Nancy A. Nasher and David J. Haemisegger Collection at NorthPark Center, Dallas; and Blue, which was installed in 2019 on the grounds of The Reach at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. Shapiro was elected to the Swedish Royal Academy of Art in 1994 and the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1998. The French Minister of Culture named Shapiro Chevalier in the Order of Arts and Letters in 2005.

 

 

 

 

 

Pace is a leading international art gallery representing some of the most influential artists and estates of the 20th and 21st centuries, founded by Arne Glimcher in 1960. Holding decades-long relationships with Alexander Calder, Jean Dubuffet, Agnes Martin, Louise Nevelson, and Mark Rothko, Pace has a unique history that can be traced to its early support of artists central to the Abstract Expressionist and Light and Space movements. Now in its seventh decade, the gallery continues to nurture its longstanding relationships with its legacy artists and estates while also making an investment in the careers of contemporary artists, including Torkwase Dyson, Loie Hollowell, Robert Nava, Adam Pendleton, and Marina Perez Simão.

 

Under the current leadership of CEO Marc Glimcher and President Samanthe Rubell, Pace has established itself as a collaborative force in the art world, partnering with other galleries and nonprofit organizations around the world in recent years. The gallery advances its mission to support its artists and share their visionary work with audiences and collectors around the world through a robust global program anchored by its exhibitions of both 20th century

and contemporary art and scholarly projects from its imprint Pace Publishing, which produces books introducing new voices to the art historical canon. This artist-first ethos also extends to public installations, philanthropic events, performances, and other interdisciplinary programming presented by Pace.

 

 

 

Today, Pace has eight locations worldwide, including two galleries in New York—its eight-story headquarters at 540 West 25th Street and an adjacent 8,000-square-foot exhibition space at 510 West 25th Street. The gallery’s history in the New York art world dates to 1963, when it opened its first space in the city on East 57th Street. A champion of Light and Space artists, Pace has also been active in California for some 60 years, opening its West Coast flagship in Los Angeles in 2022. The gallery maintains European footholds in London and Geneva as well as Berlin, where it established an office in 2023. Pace was one of the first international galleries to have a major presence in Asia, where it has been active since 2008, the year it first opened in Beijing’s vibrant 798 Art District. It now operates galleries in Hong Kong and Seoul and opens its first gallery in Japan in Tokyo’s Azabudai Hills development in 2024.

The exhibition opened on September 13 and will be on view until October 26 at Pace’s New York location at 510 West 25th Street, New York, NY 10016.. Please visit the Pace Gallery's website here for more information about this exhibition and others. Pace Gallery can be found on Instagram and Artsy, too.

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Shirazeh Houshiary: The Sound of One Hand

Installation view: Shirazeh Houshiary, The Sound of One Hand, Lisson Gallery Los Angeles (14 September – 2 November 2024) © Shirazeh Houshiary, Courtesy Lisson Gallery.

For her first solo show in Los Angeles for over a decade, the British artist Shirazeh Houshiary presents new and recent works, exploring the origins of life and the mysteries of the cosmos, from a microscopic cellular level, to the stratospheric phenomenon of the aurora borealis. The show’s title relates to a Zen Buddhist teaching that instructs the student to listen to the sound of one hand clapping, in order to open their mind to such a possibility and transcend the constraints of the physical body. Despite not being a Zen practitioner, Houshiary realised that her work revolves around the insistent sound made by one of her hands, making tiny, looping, scratched marks in pencil onto large aluminum surfaces, building up worlds through the silence of her inscribed words.

 

 

Shirazeh Houshiary Earth Lament, 2023 Pigment and pencil on Aquacryl on canvas and aluminium  190 x 300 cm 74 3/4 x 118 1/8 in © Shirazeh Houshiary, Courtesy Lisson Gallery

Houshiary’s abstract paintings emerge from an initial pour of liquid color that floods the surface in irregular pools, before she then covers these areas with her own calligraphic gestures in graphite, which are in fact tiny repetitions of the Arabic phrases: “I am” and “I am not”, which she also likens to the natural act of inhaling and exhaling. For one of the two largest works in the show, entitled Enchanter (2024), Houshiary applies red pigment and pencil to a black ground in five ring shapes, recalling structures of carbon particles linked in a chain. Matching this in scale but cooler in tone, is the painting Earth Lament (2023), with two silhouetted blue figures that somehow materialized from the sedimented pigment, one appearing to soar and the other seemingly being dragged down.




This accidental figuration also occurs in the work Cicada (2023), which could just as easily be a depiction of the wings of this insect as it could be a representation of its rhythmic song. At the other end of the scale are the galactic indigo swirls of So Far So Near (2024) and the bands of ethereal light crisscrossing the work titled Aurora (2023), recalling those seen occasionally streaking across a night sky.

Shirazeh Houshiary Enchanter, 2024 Pigment and pencil on Aquacryl on canvas and aluminium 190 x 300 cm 74 3/4 x 118 1/8 in © Shirazeh Houshiary, Courtesy Lisson Gallery

Occupying the floor is a sculptural installation in nine parts, made from an open latticework of aluminum bricks in blue and green hues, each with the same footprint, but all at different heights, growing at increments of one layer at a time (the shortest has five layers, the highest thirteen). Entitled Maelstrom (2022), these curved forms, both hard and supple at the same time, recall not only the molecular structures of the red painting Enchanter, or “that primeval storm within the spiral of creation where something grows,” as the artist puts it, but also the shape of the ouroboros snake eating its own tail.

 

 From Left to Right

                                                                                                                                                             
Cicada, 2023 Pigment and pencil on Aquacryl on canvas and aluminium, 190 x 190 x 5 cm,  74 3/4 x 74 3/4 x 2 in © Shirazeh Houshiary, Courtesy Lisson Gallery, Aurora, 2023, Pigment and pencil on Aquacryl on canvas and aluminium,190 x 190 x 5 cm, 74 3/4 x 74 3/4 x 2 in, © Shirazeh Houshiary, Courtesy Lisson Gallery, So Far So Near, 2024,Pigment and pencil on Aquacryl on canvas and aluminium 190 x 300 cm, 74 3/4 x 118 1/8 in,© Shirazeh Houshiary, Courtesy Lisson Gallery

A second sculpture, seemingly another form defying logic and gravity, bursts from the wall. Its two sinuous, entangled lines are the artist’s approximation of the movement of a solitary wave – lending it the name Soliton (2024) – which is a type of swelling or surging motion that is not dependent on previous pulses, or followed by other waves. From such unfathomable objects, to minute molecules and gigantic expanses of space, Houshiary’s art works represent a journey through everything from the chaos and messiness of the Big Bang to the silent contemplation of the resulting energies that surround every one of us.

 

 

About the artist

 

 

Since rising to prominence as a sculptor in the 1980s, Shirazeh Houshiary’s practice has swelled to encompass painting, installation, architectural projects and film. “I set out to capture my breath,” she said in 2000, to “find the essence of my own existence, transcending name, nationality, cultures.” Veils, membranes and mists are leitmotifs in work that tries to visualise modes of perception, spanning the scientific and the cosmic while drawing on sources as wide-ranging as Sufism, Renaissance painting, contemporary physics and poetry. Houshiary finds succour in the transformation of material: Arabic words, one an affirmation the other a denial, are pencil-stroked onto canvas so lightly, and clouded over by finely wrought skeins of pigment, that they morph in front of the naked eye and defy reproduction. So too, aluminum armatures and elliptical brick towers, charged with dynamic tension, appear different from every angle, as if negating their own presence; her commission for the East window of St Martin in the Fields, London, presents a cross, warped and spanning from a circular motif, as if reflected in water. “The universe is in a process of disintegration,” she says, “everything is in a state of erosion, and yet we try to stabilise it. This tension fascinates me and it’s at the core of my work” (2013).

 

Shirazeh Houshiary was born in Shiraz, Iran in 1955, where she attended university before moving to London, UK in 1974. She has a BA from Chelsea School of Art (1979) and lives and works in London, UK. She has had solo exhibitions at Lisson Gallery, London (2021), Shanghai (2020), and New York (2017); Singapore Tyler Print Institute, Singapore (2016); The Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin, Ireland (2007); Tate Liverpool, UK (2003); Islamic Gallery, British Museum, London, UK (1997); Magasin-Centre national d’art contemporain, Grenoble, France (1995); University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA (1994); Camden Arts Centre, London, UK (1993); Musée Rath, Geneva, Switzerland (1988); and in 2013, her exhibition ‘Breath’ was a celebrated Collateral Event of the 55th Venice Biennale in Italy.

 

Recent group exhibitions include: ‘Artists and the Rothko Chapel: 50 Years of Inspiration’, Moody Center for the Arts, Rice University, Houston, Texas, USA (2021); ‘Abstraction and Calligraphy − Towards a Universal Language’, Louvre Abu Dhabi in collaboration with Centre Pompidou, Abu Dhabi, UAE (2021); ‘Spirit and Endeavour’, Salisbury Cathedral, Salisbury, UK (2020); Jesus College, Cambridge, UK (2017); Fondazione Palazzo Albizzini, Collezione Burri, Citta di Castello, Perugia, Italy (2016); University of Michigan Museum of Art, Ann Arbor, MI, USA (2014). Her work has been included in major group exhibitions since the 1980s including: Dayton Art Institute, Dayton, OH, USA (2011); Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, USA (2007); Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice, Italy (2002); Rijksmuseum Kröller-Müller, Otterlo, Netherlands (1990); Centre Pompidou, Paris, France (1989); Louisiana Museum, Humlebaek, Denmark (1986). She has also participated in numerous biennials including Cartagena deIndias, Colombia (2014); Kiev Biennale, Ukraine (2012); the 17th Biennale of Sydney, Aus

 

About Lisson Gallery

 

Lisson Gallery is one of the most influential and longest-running international contemporary art galleries in the world. Today the gallery supports and promotes the work of more than 70 international artists across spaces in London, New York, Los Angeles, Shanghai and Beijing. Established in 1967 by Nicholas Logsdail, Lisson Gallery pioneered the early careers of important Minimal and Conceptual artists such as Art & Language, Carl Andre, Daniel Buren, Donald Judd, John Latham, Sol LeWitt, Richard Long and Robert Ryman among many others. It still works with many of these artists and others of that generation, from Carmen Herrera and Olga de Amaral to Hélio Oiticica and Lee Ufan. In its second decade the gallery introduced significant British sculptors to the public for the first time, including Tony Cragg, Richard Deacon, Anish Kapoor, Shirazeh Houshiary and Julian Opie. Since 2000, the gallery has gone on to represent many more leading international artists such as Marina Abramović, Ai Weiwei, John Akomfrah, Liu Xiaodong, Otobong Nkanga, Pedro Reyes, Sean Scully, Hiroshi Sugimoto and Wael Shawky. It is also responsible for raising the international profile of a younger generation of artists including Dana Awartani, Cory Arcangel, Garrett Bradley, Ryan Gander, Hugh Hayden, Haroon Mirza, Laure Prouvost and Cheyney Thompson.

 

The exhibition opened on September 13 and will run through till October 26, 2024. The exhibition is being held at  1037 N. Sycamore Avenue, at the  Los Angeles location

 

 
For more information about this exhibition and others, please visit the Lisson Gallery here. The gallery can also be found on Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram.

 

 

 

 

 

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Srijon Chowdhury : Tapestry

Installation view : Srijon Chowdhury Tapestry September 6 – October 19, 2024 Courtesy the artist and P•P•O•W, New York

P·P·O·W is pleased to present Tapestry, Srijon Chowdhury’s first solo exhibition with the gallery. Oscillating between a highly stylized technique and uncanny realism, the Portland-based artist’s prismatic compositions mine elements from daily life to find the universal in the quotidian. Combining interests in philosophy, religion, ecology, and art history, Chowdhury’s intensely detailed, saturated, and hypnotic narrative compositions transform the artist’s immediate environment into immersive dreamscapes where the boundaries between our physical reality and the metaphysical, mythological and the supernatural dissolve.

 

 

 

Speaking to subjective perceptual experience, Tapestry aims to transport the viewer on a visceral and emotional level. At the center of the gallery stands a welded steel circular fence. Developed over a decade, the structure mimics the architecture of a circular mosque built by the artist’s ancestors in the coastal farmlands of Bangladesh. In Chowdhury’s construction, Islamic geometric patterning is replaced with the language of archaic sigils. The two halves of the sigil fence represent two poems by William Blake; “A Divine Image” and

Installation view : Srijon Chowdhury Tapestry September 6 – October 19, 2024 Courtesy the artist and P•P•O•W, New York

“The Divine Image.” Counterparts, the poems contemplate the dark and light aspects of humanity. Affixed to the fence is a series of intimately scaled twists on traditional genre painting. Potently charged and framed by the fence’s mysterious latticing, the paintings become the windows of an encloser which is both isolated from and inseparably connected to its exterior world. Referencing other structures such as Giulio Camillo’s 16th century Theatre of Memory and Buddhist prayer wheels, Chowdhury’s fence is meant to be walked through, and activated by the viewers sensory experience of image, symbol, and architecture.

 

 

 

Surrounding the fence are several immersive large-scale paintings, which act as both backdrop and landscape for the circular structure. First exhibited in Same Old Song, Chowdhury’s 2022 solo exhibition at the Frye Museum in Seattle, Mouth (Divine Dance) , 2022, is a monumentally scaled painting comprising of five panels which depict a fiery inferno framed by parted lips. Shadow-like figures clasp hands and dance amidst the flames, as if the whole of humanity has joined together in their shared fate. Chowdhury also faintly renders more than a hundred motifs and figures from his prior works along the wide mouth’s lip creases, operating as a survey of the artists’ rich symbolic lexicon.

 

 

Installation view : Srijon Chowdhury Tapestry September 6 – October 19, 2024 Courtesy the artist and P•P•O•W, New York

In many of Chowdhury’s paintings, portraits of his family and natural surroundings can be viewed as both direct representations and greater universal archetypes. His engulfing floral patterns recall medieval allegories such as the unicorn tapestries which contemplate the dualistic nature of desire and love. In Tapestry, Chowdhury includes multiple depictions of a cherry tree that blooms once a year for one week in his backyard. Works such as Andreas with Wildflowers , 2024, depict the artist’s friend leaning against the blossoming tree. However, instead of a domestic landscape, a riotous sea of wildflowers and sprawling tree limbs create a sublime architecture, punctuated by an abstract “rose window” at top of the canvas. For Chowdhury flowers represent a microcosm of the universe, of both spring and fall, life and death, and the fleetingness and unattainability of the mystical experience.

 

Installation view : Srijon Chowdhury Tapestry September 6 – October 19, 2024 Courtesy the artist and P•P•O•W, New York

Together, the works in Tapestry capture the mysterious and eternal drama of the internal plane and aim to reflect upon the way art can be used to locate beauty and magic during periods marked by climate collapse and political turmoil. In Chowdhury’s references to mythologies of the past, the present moment is located within a larger history of mysticism and devotion. As writer SJ Cowan states, through Chowdhury’s works “the crises of the world can be viewed as the miracle of existence made manifest.”

 

About the Artist

 

Srijon Chowdhury (b. 1987) was born in Dhaka, Bangladesh, and lives and works in Portland, OR, where he and his wife Anna Margaret run the exhibition space Chicken Coop Contemporary. He holds a BFA from the University of Minnesota Twin Cities, Minneapolis and Saint Paul, MN, and an MFA from the Otis College of Art and Design, Los Angeles, CA. He has been awarded grants from the Oregon Arts Commission, 2018; Regional Arts and Culture Council, 2018; Andy Warhol Foundation, Portland Institute for Contemporary Art, and Calligram Foundation, 2017; and the Otis Governors Grant, 2012. In 2017, he was awarded the Oregon Arts Commission Individual Artists Fellowship. Chowdhury has presented solo exhibitions at Frye Art Museum, Seattle, WA; Foxy Production, New York, NY; Anat Ebgi, Los Angeles, CA; SE Cooper Contemporary, Portland, OR; CFA Live, Milan, Italy; Antoine Levi, Paris, France; and Ciaccia Levi, Paris, France; among others.

 

 

His work has been included in group shows at the FLAG Art Foundation, New York, NY; François Ghebaly, Los Angeles, CA; Foxy Production, New York, NY; Et al., San Francisco, CA; Franz Kaka, Toronto, Canada; Chapter NY, New York, NY; Deli Gallery, New York, NY; White Columns, New York, NY; Nir Altman, Munich, Germany; the Santa Monica Museum of Art, Santa Monica, CA; Torrance Art Museum, Torrance, CA; among others. Chowdhury’s work was recently showcased in the 2024 Artists’ Biennial in Portland, OR. Concurrent with his co-curation of the Frye Art Museum’s group exhibition Door to the Atmosphere , the institution held Chowdhury’s first solo museum exhibition Same Old Song in 2022, coinciding with a publication of the same name.

 

 

For more information about this exhibition and others please visit the P·P·O·W gallery’s website. Also, the gallery can be found on Instagram, and Artsy. Srijon’s interview with the magazine can be found here. The exhibition opened on September 6th and will conclude on October 19, 2024.

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Margarita Cabrera : Secuelas : cuerpo , tierra , y mar

Installation view. Courtesy of the artist and Jane Lombard Gallery. Photo credit: Arturo Sanchez.

Jane Lombard Gallery is pleased to present Secuelas : cuerpo , tierra , y mar ( Repercussions : body , land , and water ) , a solo exhibition by gallery artist Margarita Cabrera. Secuelas marks the artist’ s first solo presentation with the gallery.

 

Utilizing textile, gouache, dye, copper, and sound, the works delve into Cabrera's unyielding exploration of global policies surrounding migration, displacement, and capitalism. The exhibition opened on September 6th , there was an opening reception on Friday, September 6th, 6 - 8 PM. The exhibition will conclude on October 26th.

 

Margarita Cabrera El Flujo de Extracciones (Corriente 44), 2023 Cochineal gouache on paper, U.S. Border Patrol uniform fabric, wood box frame 18 x 4 x 3 in.

This series reflects my ongoing exploration of memory and identity, blending personal experiences with universal themes. Each piece is a conversation between the past and present, revealing layers that speak to both personal growth and collective history.
— Margarita Cabrera

 

Secuelas : cuerpo , tierra , y mar weaves together narratives of immigration, identity, and heritage, addressing both historical and present-day perspectives of colonization. Emphasizing currency as a marker of power dynamics behind contemporary border relations, Craft of Resistance, a kaleidoscope of copper butterflies, swarms across the gallery walls. The copper sculptures, fabricated in a maquiladora-type setting, are imprinted with the wing pattern of the monarch butterfly on one side and the impression of the American penny on the other. The work speaks to the transformation of transborder experiences as well as the invisible labor behind Mexican and US economies.

 

Installation view. Courtesy of the artist and Jane Lombard Gallery. Photo credit: Arturo Sanchez.

El Vaivénd el Mar, the central installation of the exhibition, features a soft sculpture ship sailing upon a vibrant sea of intertwined flamenco dresses. Taking the shape of the undulating waves, the dresses layered upon one another, ruffle and fall, suggesting the violence associated with navigating turbulent waters and subjecting unwilling communities. The ship references Spanish fleets that once transported the enslaved between the African coast and colonies of the New World while also pointing to the pervasive influence and control America extorts over current global affairs. Fabricated from US border officer uniforms and constructed into the form of an Iberian trading vessel, the ship becomes a symbol and a vehicle of justification for exploitation. El Vaivénd el Mar brings contemporary immigration policies into question, illustrating the enduring legacy of conquest through the movement, fluctuation, and reshaping of collective colonial histories.



Margarita Cabrera Space in Between -- Agave, in collaboration with L.G. (Mexico/USA), 2016 U.S. Border Patrol uniform fabric, copper wire, PVC pipe, foam, thread, and terra coBa pot 39 x 20 x 23 in.

Utilizing culturally charged materials and community participation, Cabrera's ongoing collaborative series Space in Between investigates migratory crossroads, focusing on the experience of the borderlands and the people who cross them. Transforming US Border Patrol uniforms into indigenous plants, Cabrera works with recent migrant communities to embroider their personal stories onto the work. New iterations to this series expand beyond the Mexico & US border to include perspectives of cross-continental relocation from that of Argentina, Chile, El Salvador, and Pakistan to Spain, in particular, Barcelona. Accordingly, the soft sculptures take on the shape of the native flora and fauna of the region of their embroiderer. This expansion reinforces the symbolic landscape of ‘spaces in between, ’ where relationships across divides are renegotiated.


Similarly, Cabrera’ s ongoing series El Flujode Extracciones , continues to explore the extraction of natural resources, the exploitation of indigenous knowledge and culture through fabric collage with gouache and cochineal dye.

 

Pepita  Para  El  Lo o  Para  Que  Hable  o  Calle , Cabrera’ s life-size sculptures of endangered red-crowned Amazon parrots engage viewers in an immediate dialogue about border politics and surveillance. These robotic birds, equipped with voice-activated mimicry devices, create a cacophonous chatter that mirrors the contentious public discourse around border crossings and immigrant detention. The new iterations of these parrots will feature pre-recorded messages by Cabrera describing the use of surveillance equipment in areas of war and political unrest as prototypes for similar technologies used at the US border, underscoring the global consequences of control tactics. Secuelas : cuerpo , tierra , y mar offers a profound exploration of the intersections between art, history, and social justice, inviting viewers to engage with multilateral experiences of displacement, subjugation, and supremacy.

 

About Margarita Cabrera

 

 

Margarita Cabrera (b. 1973, Monterrey, Mexico) received an MFA from Hunter College in 2007. She is an associate professor at the School of Art at Arizona State University. Recent solo exhibitions have been held at the Longmont Museum of Art, CO; McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, TX; Dallas Contemporary, TX; and the Wellin Museum of Art, Clinton, NY . Her work has also been shown at the Barbican Centre, London, UK; Denver Museum of Art, CO; Phoenix Art Museum, AZ; Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, PA; LACMA, CA; the Smithsonian Museum of American Art, Washington, DC; MFA Houston, TX; the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, TX; the Ford Foundation, New York, NY; Seattle Art Museum, WA; the Sweeney Art Center for Contemporary Art at the University of California, Riverside, CA; El Museo del Barrio, New York, NY; and El Museo Rufino T Tamayo, Mexico City, Mexico. Cabrera was a Knight Artist in Residence at the McColl Center for Visual Art in Charlotte, NC. She was a recipient of the Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant, presenting a community public art sculpture commissioned by Lego at Discovery Green in Houston, Puentes Culturales. In 2019, Cabrera unveiled the public sculpture Árbol de la Vida : Memorias y Voces de la Tierra in San Antonio, Texas, and was named Texas Artist of the Year. Cabrera was awarded a 2023 Latinx Artist Fellowship.

 

 

For more information about this exhibition and more at Jane Lombard Gallery, please visit the gallery’s site here. The gallery can also be found on Instagram and Facebook.

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Wendy Nichol : Departing the World Once More

Photo Credit : Luisa Opalseky

Open thru 10/17 at the Museum Building (9 Mercer Street, 2nd Floor) is the 1st solo art show for accomplished downtown NYC fashion & jewelry designer Wendy Nichol who is expanding into the art world after starting to paint last year which has been a transformative process. Titled Departing the World Once More, the show challenges our preconceived notions of mortality, exploring the playful, mysterious, and sometimes absurd relationship we have with the concept of death. This exhibition invites viewers to confront the inevitable with a sense of curiosity, humor, and even joy—breaking away from traditional depictions of death as morbid or tragic. Bridging her silk tulle world onto the canvas, her color palette highlights earth tones, black, gold, beige, many pieces having an abstract expressionism influence. Also inspired by her early childhood fascination with fashion photography, Nichol has included several portraits that reflect her love of working with models.

 

Installation View: Departing the World Once More, 2024 Courtesy of  Museum Building and Wendy Nichol. Photo Credit : Kunning Huang

In her first solo art show, Wendy Nichol transitions her artistry into the realm of painting. Drawing on her experience with transparent fabrics, fluid lines, and stitch-like details, Nichol’s newfound love of painting is showcased in this collection, her work reflecting signature techniques—delicate, flowing strokes that mimic the soft fall of fabric and intricate, and thread-like patterns that echo the stitches of couture design. In this collection, the artist weaves together abstract forms, distorted figures, and rich textures to present a visual dialogue between the seen and unseen. These works aim to strip away fear, offering instead a perspective that celebrates the unknown and embraces death as a part of life’s grand tapestry.

 

'Missing Witches' - Wendy Nichol - 12' x 6' Acrylic on Canvas with 1.5" brass frame Photo Credit : Kunning Huang

The largest piece in the show “Missing Witches” (12’ x 6’) taps into the esoteric undercurrents of past life regression, channeling the energies and memories of lost wisdom and forgotten histories. In this piece, abstract forms intertwine to create an otherworldly narrative, evoking the presence of the “missing witches”—women and mystics who once held sacred knowledge, now hidden, or fragmented across time. The fluid, gestural strokes and ethereal hues suggest an exploration of the spiritual residue left behind by these figures, who have transcended physical form but continue to influence the energetic realms.

 

And one of the smaller portraits, “Beauty as a Decision” explores the powerful notion that beauty is not something inherent or dictated by societal standards, but rather an intentional act, a conscious choice made by the individual. This portrait, with its striking red lips, stark white suit, and bold, minimalist lines, challenges traditional constructs of gender, race, and identity. It suggests that beauty transcends physicality and becomes a personal declaration. The subject’s gaze is strong, unflinching, and confident, embodying the idea that beauty is defined by the wearer—it is a decision, a form of self-expression that defies external expectations and asserts individuality with unapologetic power. The painting compels the viewer to reconsider how they perceive beauty, seeing it not as a passive trait, but as an active, cellular level, self-determined force.

 

Nichol started her design brand in 2007 after working with Joe Mimran/Club Monaco as accessories designer; quickly building a loyal clientele which led to opening 2 Soho boutiques, she’s since had many of our most beloved style icons wear her mesmerizing fashion pieces like Beyoncé (multiple times including a custom couture gown for Black is King and the iconic black sheer tulle gown for Drunk in Love music video; Beyoncé also wears a WN diamond middle finger ring on Homecoming album art), Rihanna, Lindsay Lohan, Zoë Kravitz, Claire Danes, Naomi Campbell, Rita Ora, Jessica Alba, Lena Dunham, Rebecca Hall (who got engaged with a custom black diamond & opal WN engagement ring and wore a WN dress at her wedding), and Ilana Glazer, who also wore a WN dress at her wedding (Ilana is a friend who even wrote Wendy into a Broad City episode, the S3 premiere where Wendy played a downtown gallerist). Her successful decade run with her 2 Soho stores ended their leases in 2020, and while a new world order prevailed, her clients started wanting more privacy/exclusivity so in 2022, she opened the new studio. The expansive space not only lent itself to a sacred atelier atmosphere, it led to Nichol creating large scale canvases, soon realizing her next move was a brand new passion, painting.




Installation View: Departing the World Once More, 2024 Courtesy of  Museum Building and Wendy Nichol. Photo Credit : Kunning Huang


For more information about this exhibition please visit Nichol’s website, also follow her on Instagram here.

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Under a Southern Star: Identity and Environment in Australian Photography

Tobias Titz (born 1973, Trier, Germany; active Melbourne, Australia), Raymond Bush, Jilamara artist, from the series Tiwi Artists, 2019. Inkjet print from Polaroid 665; 55.9 × 71.1 × 3.2 cm (frame). Courtesy of the artist. © Tobias Titz.

PRINCETON, NJ – Under a Southern Star: Identity and Environment in Australian Photography will be on view at the Princeton University Art Museum’s Art on Hulfish gallery from August 17, 2024, to January 5, 2025. The exhibition explores the tension between the so-called “Old World” of Europe and the “New World” of Terra Australis, documenting changing perceptions of Australian identity and environmentalism over the last one and a half centuries. Under a Southern Star will be the final exhibition to be held at the Museum’s Art on Hulfish space, which closes in January in preparation for the opening of the new Museum building later in the year.

Judith Nangala Crispin (born 1970, Sydney, Australia; active Canberra, Australia), Ben sometimes felt he carried his artist girlfriend a lot, but she painted him stars while he slept., 2018. Lumachrome glass print, cliché-verre. Double exposure. Road-killed magpie, seeds, and ash on fiber paper. First exposure, 12 hours under marked glass in the back of a ute. Second exposure, 12 hours with additional seeds and dirt. Winter light.; 73.7 × 101.6 cm (frame). Courtesy of the artist. © Judith Nangala Crispin.

Organized in partnership with Curatorial Exhibitions and drawn in part from the Farrell Family Australian Photography Collection at the Museum of Photographic Arts at the San Diego Museum of Art, the exhibition presents a range of visually arresting photographic techniques, including Lumachrome glass printing and AI animation, to address the impact of colonialism on the region’s cultures and resources. The exhibition particularly highlights the fundamental importance of Aboriginal culture to the Australian experience.

 

Tracey Moffatt (born 1960, Brisbane, Australia; active Sydney, Australia, and New York, NY), Something More #1 , from the series Something More , 1989. Chromogenic print; 104.1 × 182.9 × 3.3 cm (frame). Museum of Photographic Arts at the San Diego Museum of Art. Gift of Farrell Family. © Tracey Moffatt

While highlighting the work of internationally celebrated contemporary artists, Under a Southern Star also features iconic Australian imagery from the late nineteenth and the early twentieth century by artists such as Max Dupain and Harold Cazneaux. Visitors to the exhibition will encounter the cinematic narratives of Tracey Moffatt, the experimental camera-less imagery of Justine Varga, and the humanistic portraiture of Ricky Maynard. Also on view are collaborative works made by the photographer Tobias Titz and artists from Aboriginal communities.

 

The exhibition explores Australia’s changing environment with haunting landscapes by Anne Zahalka and Rosemary Laing, while ethereal images by Judith Nangala Crispin feature wildlife struck down by human encroachment in the outback. Also included are selections from Vee Speers’s haunting series Guilty Not Guilty, a video installation featuring hand-colored mug shots that reference the country’s convict past.

 

 

Australian photography past and present deserves to be better known globally, and in keeping with the goals we’ve had for Art on Hulfish since its launch three years ago, this exhibition seeks to bring new attention to important bodies of work that in turn contend with such essential issues as colonialism, nationalism, and the environment.
— James Steward, Nancy A. Nasher– David J. Haemisegger, Class of 1976, Director of the Princeton University Art Museum.



 

Installation image of Under a Southern Star: Identity and Environment in Australian Photography, 2024. Courtesy of the Princeton University Art Museum. Photo: Joseph Hu.

Under a Southern Star: Identity and Environment in Australian Photography is curated by Deborah Klochko, former executive director and chief curator, Museum of Photographic Arts at the San Diego Museum of Art; and by Graham Howe, founder and CEO, Curatorial Exhibitions; with independent curator Ashley Lumb. This exhibition was originated by the Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego, with generous support from the Farrell Family Foundation, and is toured by Curatorial Exhibitions, Pasadena, California.

 

 

 

About Art on Hulfish

 

 

Art on Hulfish showcases a roster of exhibitions led by photography and time-based media that consider issues of profound impact on twenty-first-century life. Located at 11 Hulfish Street in downtown Princeton, it encompasses some 5,500 square feet of space for exhibitions and public programming, ranging from drop-in activities to scheduled work with artists. Admission is free. Launched in December 2021, the gallery is presenting four exhibitions each year through early 2025, during the time when the Museum’s new facility designed by Adjaye Associates is under construction.

 

 

Art on Hulfish is made possible by the leadership support of Annette Merle-Smith and Princeton University. Generous support is also provided by William S. Fisher, Class of 1979, and Sakurako Fisher; J. Bryan King, Class of 1993; John Diekman, Class of 1965, and Susan Diekman; Julie and Kevin Callaghan, Class of 1983; Annie Robinson Woods, Class of 1988; Barbara and Gerald Essig; Rachelle Belfer Malkin, Class of 1986, and Anthony E. Malkin; the Curtis W. McGraw Foundation; Jim and Valerie McKinney; Tom Tuttle, Class of 1988, and Mila Tuttle; Nancy A. Nasher, Class of 1976, and David J. Haemisegger, Class of 1976; the Len & Laura Berlik Foundation; Gene Locks, Class of 1959, and Sueyun Locks; and Palmer Square Management.

 

 

About the Princeton University Art Museum

 

 

With a collecting history that extends back to 1755, the Princeton University Art Museum is one of the leading university art museums in the country, featuring collections that have grown to include more than 115,000 works of art ranging from ancient to contemporary art and spanning the globe. Committed to advancing Princeton’s teaching and research missions, the Art Museum also serves as a gateway to the University for visitors from around the world. The main Museum building is currently closed for the construction of a bold and welcoming new building, slated to open in 2025.

 

 

Art on Hulfish, a gallery project of the Art Museum located at 11 Hulfish Street, is open daily. Art@Bainbridge, a gallery project at 158 Nassau Street, is open Tuesday through Sunday. Admission to both galleries is free.

 

Please visit the Museum’s website for digital access to the collections, a diverse portfolio of programs, and details on visiting our downtown galleries.

 

For more information about the exhibition ‘Under a Southern Star’ at Art on Hulfish and others at Princeton Art Museum, please visit their site here. The museum can also be found on Facebook , Instagram and YouTube. The Museum Store in Palmer Square, located at 56 Nassau Street in downtown Princeton, is open daily and can be visited online here.

 

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Calida Rawles : Away with the Tides

Away with the Tides, 2024 Acrylic on canvas 96 x 120 inches Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Seoul, and London

(MIAMI, FL — ) — Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) is pleased to present Calida Rawles: Away with the Tides, an exhibition featuring all-new, site-specific works alongside a novel large-scale video installation. Marking Rawles’s first solo museum exhibition in the United States, Away with the Tides reflects aspects of Miami’s diverse communities, natural environments, and rich history.

 

Internationally recognized for her intricate and delicate acrylic on canvas paintings, Rawles blends hyperrealism with poetic abstraction and situates her subjects in dynamic, undulating spaces. Her recent work utilizes water as a vital, organic, and multifaceted element—as well as a historically charged space that concomitantly represents racial exclusion and individual healing.

 


Away with the Tides seeks to illuminate and celebrate Miami’s history, resilience, and beauty, in the hands of a distinct talent in contemporary painting. Supporting and collaborating with the local communities of Miami and South Florida is one of PAMM’s core values and central facets of its mission. I want to thank Calida for sharing her work, passion, and restless desire to experiment and evolve with PAMM and with our audiences.
— PAMM Director Franklin Sirmans

 

Away with the Tides bridges the past and present, depicting elements of Miami’s history through the eyes of its residents. Delving into the experience of Black people in America, Rawles partnered with members of the historically Black community of Overtown in Miami. Akin to Tremé in New Orleans, the Historic West End in Charlotte, and countless other neighborhoods in the United States, Overtown transformed from a thriving cultural and commercial hub for Black people in the 1930s to a town subjected to gentrification, systemic racism, and mass displacement beginning in the 1950s and 60s.

 


To See What It Is, 2024 Acrylic on canvas 84 x 48 inches Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Seoul, and London

It is extremely exciting to work with Rawles on her first museum solo presentation. While Rawles’s signature style will be present, she is also pushing her boundaries and working in natural waters for the first time, resulting in paintings with a new color composition and feel. Miami is a complicated and difficult place to understand. I hope this exhibition gives others the courage to dive into their city or town’s history, no matter how dark or difficult.
— PAMM Associate Curator Maritza M. Lacayo

 

Release What I Will Not Give, 2024 Acrylic on canvas 30 x 24 inches Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Seoul, and London

Rawles’s process began with a series of preliminary photoshoots in Virginia Key Beach and the public pool at Theodore Gibson Park in Overtown, which then informed the subject matter for the lifelike paintings on view. Ranging from a 10-month-old baby to senior citizens, the portraits provide representation for those who call Overtown home while capturing the generational shift the community has undergone and giving shape to an American experience that is often overlooked. With residents as the subjects of her paintings, it became evident that the exhibition would be a transformative experience—for some, it would also be their first time at a museum, emphasizing the silos Miami still struggles to navigate despite geographical proximity.

 

Impact, 2024 Acrylic on canvas 60 x 72 inches Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Seoul, and London

Furthermore, by photographing Black individuals in the ocean, Rawles interrogates the Atlantic Ocean's history as the site of the supremely exploitative Transatlantic Slave Trade. As a result, the finished work critically engages with Miami’s water-entwined climate, while connecting to larger histories of beauty, oppression, and persistence in contemporary American life.

 

I am so inspired by the Overtown community’s resilience and strength. Through my work, I hope to shine a new light on the beauty and untold stories of its residents. I’m immensely grateful to Franklin Sirmans and Maritza M. Lacayo for supporting my vision and giving me the opportunity to engage so meaningfully with this incredible community.
— Calida Rawles

 

Away with the Tides is accompanied by an exhibition catalogue, the most in-depth volume to date on Calida Rawles’s art and practice, featuring collaborators Regina R. Robertson, Christine Y. Kim, and Enuma Okoro.

 

Installation view: Calida Rawles: Away with the Tides, Pérez Art Museum Miami, 2024–25. Photo: Oriol Tarridas

Away with the Tides is organized by Maritza M. Lacayo, Associate Curator, with the support of Fabiana Sotillo, Curatorial Assistant.

 

ABOUT CALIDA RAWLES

Rawles received a B.A. from Spelman College, Atlanta, GA (1998) and an M.A. from New York University, New York, NY (2000). Solo exhibitions of her work have been organized at Lehmann Maupin, New York, NY (2021); Various Small Fires, Los Angeles, CA (2020); and Standard Vision, Los Angeles, CA (2020). Her work has been featured in numerous group exhibitions including Generation*. Jugend trotz(t) Krise, Kunsthalle Bremen, Bremen, Germany (2023); Rose in the Concrete, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA (2023); 12th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art, Berlin, Germany (2022); Black American Portraits, Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Los Angeles, CA (2021),  Spelman College Museum of Fine Art, Atlanta, GA (2023); A Shared Body, FSU Museum of Fine Arts, Tallahassee, FL (2021); View From Here, Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Los Angeles, CA (2020); Art Finds a Way, Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach, FL (2020); Visions in Light, Windows on the Wallis, Beverly Hills, CA (2020); Presence, Fullerton College Art Gallery, Fullerton, CA (2019); With Liberty and Justice for Some, Walter Maciel Gallery, Los Angeles, CA (2017); Sanctuary City: With Liberty and Justice for Some, San Francisco Arts Commission, San Francisco, CA (2017); LACMA Inglewood + Film Lab, Inglewood, CA (2014); and Living off Experience, Rush Arts Gallery, New York, NY (2002). Rawles created the cover art for Ta-Nehisi Coates’s debut novel, “The Water Dancer,” and her work is in numerous public and private collections, including Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, TX; Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Los Angeles, CA; Pérez Art Museum Miami, Miami, FL; Spelman College Museum of Fine Art, Atlanta, GA; and Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY.

 

ABOUT PAMM

Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM), led by Director Franklin Sirmans, promotes artistic expression and the exchange of ideas, advancing public knowledge and appreciation of art, architecture, and design, and reflecting the diverse community of its pivotal geographic location at the crossroads of the Americas. The 40-year-old South Florida institution, formerly known as Miami Art Museum (MAM), opened a new building, designed by world-renowned architects Herzog & de Meuron, on December 4, 2013, in Downtown Miami’s Maurice A. Ferré Park. The facility is a state-of-the-art model for sustainable museum design and progressive programming and features 200,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor program space with flexible galleries; shaded outdoor verandas; a waterfront restaurant and bar; a museum shop; and an education center with a library, media lab, and classroom spaces.

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Accredited by the American Alliance of Museums, Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) is Sponsored in part by the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Arts and Culture and the Florida Council on Arts and Culture. Support is provided by the Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners. Additional support is provided by the City of Miami and the Miami OMNI Community Redevelopment Agency (OMNI CRA). Pérez Art Museum Miami is an accessible facility. All contents ©Pérez Art Museum Miami. All rights reserved

Away with the Tides opened on June 27, 2024, and will be on view until February 2, 2025. For more information about this exhibit and other exhibits currently on view and upcoming, please visit the Pérez Art Museum website here. PAMM can also be found on Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, and Facebook.

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Anri Sala : Time No Longer

Installation View Anri Sala: Time No Longer Marian Goodman Gallery Los Angeles | 7 September - 26 October, 2024 Courtesy of the artist and Marian Goodman Gallery Photo credit: Elon Schoenholz

Marian Goodman Gallery is delighted to present the first exhibition of Anri Sala in Los Angeles as well as the West Coast debut and gallery premiere of his immersive video, sound, and light installation, Time No Longer, 2021. Since the late 1990s, Sala has worked primarily with time-based media, often looking at the performance of music to narrate and interpret various histories of culture and politics. Within this exhibition, we find Sala engaging two seemingly disparate art forms that are united as condensations of time that embrace the past and the future, respectively, in fresco painting and computer-generated imagery.

 

 

Temporal elements are also fused within the historical, musical and visual aspects of the work, Time No Longer, wherein a weathered record player is portrayed floating in a space station. While spinning in zero gravity, the turntable plays a new arrangement of French composer Olivier Messiaen’s 1941 work, “Quartet for the End of Time,” perhaps one of the most searingly haunting and memorable works composed in incarceration. During the Second World War, Messiaen (1908–1992) was captured at Verdun and incarcerated at a German prisoner-of-war camp. While imprisoned, he composed “Quartet for the End of Time,” performing with three fellow musician prisoners before an audience of captives and guards, using only the instruments they knew how to play and had available.

 

 

In Messiaen’s elegiac piece of chamber music, Sala recognized a sense of overwhelming loneliness and despair within an insurmountable crisis, along with the need to bring something, however fragile and soft- spoken, into that numbness. Within the composition, Sala extracted "The Abyss of the Birds," the only solo movement, written for a clarinet, for use in Time No Longer. The abyss, to Messiaen, represented time, “with its sadness and tediums,” while “birds are the opposite of Time; they are our desire for light...”. Further, Messiaen’s concept of time can be interpreted beyond our conventional understanding of past and future, a chronometry resembling an eternal rhythm that exists and extends beyond linearity.

 

 

The isolated clarinet, the compositional title and its meaning tie the work to another remarkable musical event: the story of Ronald McNair and his saxophone. In 1986, McNair, one of the first Black astronauts to have reached space, was also a professional saxophonist who had planned to play and record a solo performance on the Challenger space shuttle. This would have been the first original piece of music recorded in space, had the mission not ended tragically; the spacecraft disintegrated seconds after takeoff, killing everyone on board. Time No Longer was commissioned in 2021 by the Buffalo Bayou Partnership in Houston, where the Challenger disaster occurred 35 years earlier.

 

 

Sala envisioned that composing a saxophone element for "The Abyss of the Birds" would underscore the vast loneliness that connects McNair and Messiaen, respectively, as experienced through outer space and incarceration. The saxophone, performed by André Vida, emerges in Time No Longer only when the needle lifts from the vinyl, granting McNair his forsaken performance, refracted into space alongside the original Messiaen score, performed by clarinetist Raphaël Sévère. Further, the connection forms a duet between two instrumental voices, intertwined through circumstance.

 

 

Time No Longer, 2021 Computer-generated imagery, multichannel sound, dynamic lights; Duration: 13 minutes
Projection approx.: 1771 5/8 x 250 in. (4500 x 635 cm) Courtesy of the artist and Marian Goodman Gallery Photo credit: ElonSchoenholz

The vast, eerie stillness, coupled with the absence of humanity as conveyed in Time No Longer evokes the aftermath of a catastrophe — with the turntable serving as a custodian of that absent humanity. With its own acrobatic intelligence, the player’s tonearm moves across the record, its needle intermittently touching down, lifting off, resuming and then halting the music. In a manner that seems not entirely subject to weightlessness, it perpetually conducts itself, witnessing sixteen earthly sunrises and sunsets each day from its vantage point in space.

 

The fortuity of time figuratively extends into an adjacent gallery, where Sala presents selections from his new series of frescoes. Here, Sala returns to the al fresco technique that he first learned about in the 1990s while studying art in his native Albania. This ancient method unfolds ambiguously over time, demanding precise temporal awareness. Each composition is divided into giornatas, the portions of work that can be completed in a single day while the medium, known as intonaco, remains fresh. Once it dries, the layers of pigments are permanently bonded to the surface, making any further alterations impossible.

 

 

Anri Sala Noli Me Tangere Inversa (Fragment 2), 2024 Fresco painting, intonaco on aerolam, Tartaruga marble 19 1/4 x 31 1/8 x 1 5/8 in. (49 x 79 x 4 cm) Courtesy of the artist and Marian Goodman Gallery Photo credit: Francesco Squeglia

One group of works, titled Surface to Air, originated from snapshots of clouds that the artist took from an airplane window. In this series, the gesture imprints the surface through three intertwined temporalities, creating a contemporary archaelogy. The ephemeral moments of the clouds, echoing the passage of time, are captured by the photograph. The marble, formed by accumulated sedimentary layers, serves as a solid and frozen representation of bygone period, imparting a new sense of chronology to the works. Finally, the fresco technique, governed by the rhythm of the giornatas, evokes the structured flow of time.

 

 

The second body of works, Noli Me Tangere Inversa, is based on a famous fresco from 1425-30 by Italian Renaissance artist Fra Angelico, which depicts Jesus Christ and Mary Magdalene at the Garden Tomb after his resurrection. Sala painted these frescoes using an innovative approach that enables him to transpose the modern process of colorimetric negatives, typically found in photography, onto fragments of a Quattrocento masterpiece. The viewer's gaze is met with the tension arising from the intersection of two contrasting techniques.

 

 

Anri Sala Surface to Air XVIII (Cipollino/5°15'21”S, 38°50'17"E), 2024 Fresco painting, intonaco on aerolam, Cipollino marble 47 5/8 x 97 5/8 x 2 3/8 in. (121 x 248 x 6 cm) Courtesy of the artist and Marian Goodman Gallery Photo credit: Francesco Squeglia

The frescoes serve as literal time capsules, presenting multiple and nuanced temporalities, however frozen and eternal. In contrast, the sapphire stylus on the vinyl in Time No Longer, intermittently jumping from one groove to the other or remaining suspended in space, subject to the vagaries of weightlessness, challenges the linearity of time, which becomes synonymous with rupture and unpredictability.

 

 

Recent solo shows have been at the Winsing Art Place, Taipei, Taiwan; Bourse de Commerce, Fondation Pinault, Paris; and GAMeC, Bergamo, Italy (all 2022); Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria (2021); Buffalo Bayou Park Cistern, Houston (2021); MUDAM, Luxembourg (2019); Castello di Rivoli, Turin, Italy (2019); Fundacíon Botín, Santander, Spain (2019); the Garage, Moscow, Russia (2018); Instituto Moreira Salles, Sao Paulo, Brazil; (2017-2018); Museo Tamayo, Mexico City (2017); Kaldor Public Art Projects, Sydney, Australia (2017); The New Museum (2016); Instituto Moreira Salles, Rio de Janeiro (2016); Teshima Seawall House, Benesse Art Site Naoshima, Teshima Island, Japan (2016); Haus der Kunst, Munich (2014); the French Pavilion at the 55th Venice Biennale (2013); the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (2012); The Serpentine Gallery, London (2011); The Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati (2009); The Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami (2008); and the Fondazione Nicola Trussardi, Milan (2005); among other venues.

 

 

Sala has received the Vincent Award (2014), the 10th Benesse Prize (2013), the Absolut Art Award (2011), and the Young Artist Prize at the Venice Biennale (2001). He has taken part in many group exhibitions and biennials, including the 12th Havana Biennial (2015), the Sharjah Biennial 11 (2013), representing France at the 55th Venice Biennale, Italy (2013), the 9th Gwangju Biennale (2012), documenta (13) (2012), the 29th São Paulo Biennial (2010), the 2nd Moscow International Biennale of Contemporary Art (2007), and the 4th Berlin Biennial (2006).

 

About Marian Goodman Gallery Los Angeles

Located in Hollywood near the Highland Corridor, at North Hudson Avenue off Santa Monica Boulevard, Marian Goodman Gallery Los Angeles comprises a 13,000-square-foot facility, featuring 5,000 square feet of flexible, skylit galleries as well as a landscaped garden, viewing rooms, office space, and dedicated parking. The Gallery was designed by the L.A.- based architectural firm Johnston Marklee, acclaimed internationally for their cultural buildings and adaptive reuse projects.

 






There was an opening reception at the Los Angeles gallery on Saturday,  on September the 7th, from 5-7 pm at 1120 Seward Street in Los Angeles, CA 90038. The exhibition closes on October 26th of this year.






For more information about the exhibit, please visit the Marian Goodman Gallery’s site. The gallery can be found on Instagram and Artsy, too.

 

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ROBIN KID : SEARCHING FOR AMERICA

Toutes les images / All images : © Courtesy of the artist and TEMPLON, Paris —Brussels — New York

Templon New York is pleased to announce Searching For America, an immersive exhibition of new works by Robin Kid, which will be the artist’s first solo exhibition in the United States.

Today, I think the only honest thing for me to do, is to refuse the pressure of being in a constant state of projected happiness and instead acknowledge that our world is fucked up and that we are driving straight off the cliff.
— Robin Kid

Toutes les images / All images : © Courtesy of the artist and TEMPLON, Paris —Brussels — New York

                               

We live in an era of mass culture and a society of ceaseless consumption, our identities are being formed and transformed by the content we watch, the headlines we scroll, the advertising we assimilate and the algorithms we are targeted and framed by.

As the 21st century kicks off with a rocky start this narrative has only increased in intensity, distinctions now seem to be blurred, propaganda is blending with news, church with state, brands have melted with art and perhaps we can no longer distinguish one from the other. 

 

Toutes les images / All images : © Courtesy of the artist and TEMPLON, Paris —Brussels — New York

Robin Kid’s new show Searching For America is a wide-eyed, provocative - and sometimes even offensive - journey through a multitude of different “Americas”, from the one that comforts to the one that worries, from the one that creates to the one that destroys. Through his work the artist dives headlong into the maelstrom of American iconography as an export, the kind of imagery that programmed the morals, fears and expectations for generations worldwide. Paintings, sculptures and installations are filtered through a European sensibility and serve as a fascinating exploration of a culture that is both immediately familiar and thoroughly alien but which influence leaves no-one untouched.

 

By conjuring up feelings of uncertainty but also of our most naive hopes and dreams gathered during our formative childhood and teenage years, Robin Kid illustrates how our collective consciousness through programmed memories can serve as an allegory for History at large, addressing larger social and political issues, whether directly or abstractly. This perspective highlights the fluid and sometimes fictional nature of our understanding of the past and our expectations for the future.

 

Toutes les images / All images : © Courtesy of the artist and TEMPLON, Paris —Brussels — New York

Fascinated by the power of consumer spectacle, Robin Kid seizes upon the vocabulary of billboard advertising - with its thrills of big planes of color, giant slogans that invade your life and its overall promise that “the future can only be better” - as a way of expressing the disillusionment felt by today’s youth and addresses the hypocrisy which feels prevalent in the present landscape. 

By combining die-cut stainless steel panels with oil paintings and aluminum sculptures in a playful toylike manner, the artist is manufacturing an idealized billboard to our shared fears and desires while operating in a context of power and control. 

 

Influenced by the works of James Rosenquist and Robert Rauschenberg’s “combines” or Jim Dine’s early works like ‘lawnmower’ and  ‘child’s blue wall’, Robin Kid’s new pieces are hybrids, neither painting nor sculpture, but both at once. They invade the viewer’s space, demanding its attention and instigate a dialogue by becoming eye-popping and menacing yet perfectly balanced advertisements, invoking a nostalgia so strong it amounts to an ache, for they might show us a time and place of which we are and always have been exiled from.

 

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Toutes les images / All images : © Courtesy of the artist and TEMPLON, Paris —Brussels — New York

ROBIN KID (b. 1991), is a self-taught multidisciplinary artist from Dutch descent. Raised by his grand parents in a post war little mining town in the rural south of Holland, Robin had difficulties fitting in at school and preferred to rush home to find his refuge in front of the American programs on TV. From re-runs of Davy Crocket, music videos on MTV to explosive fights on Jerry Springer and the commercials in between, Robin was mesmerized by the spectacle and power of American consumerism. After dropping out of high school and a short-lived career at Mc Donalds, he decided he would teach himself to paint and sculpt through YouTube as a way to navigate today’s world by drawing on the one of his childhood. His work hijacks a variety of social, political and traditional imagery of the past and present, with rebellious, religious, fantastical and in some ways offensive undertones. He pulls intuitively from the world of advertising, the Internet, the entertainment industry and his childhood memories, to produce ambitious, enigmatic and thought-provoking narratives, which question our polarized world of the 21st century.

 

In parallel, Robin Kid’s solo exhibition The Future Is Old is on view at the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art MOCO in Barcelona following his three-year solo exhibition at MOCO Amsterdam, and his monumental sculpture The State We Are In, In The Consciousness Of A Country’s Empty Mind as well as four paintings by the artist are on view at the Twenty-First Century Museum 21C in Louisville as part of the group exhibition This We Believe after its three-year exhibition at the 21C Museum in Chicago.

ROBIN KID works are part of public, corporate and private collections in Switzerland, France, Netherlands, Spain, Germany, China, South Korea, the UK and the USA.



For more information about ROBIN KID’s artwork and his exhibition, please visit Templon’s site. The gallery can also be found on Instagram, artnet, Facebook, YouTube, and Artsy.

 

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Joanna Pousette-Dart: ‘Centering’



Exhibition view of Joanna Pousette-Dart’s ‘Centering’ at Lisson, Gallery New York, 5 September – 19 October 2024  © Joanna Pousette-Dart, Courtesy Lisson Gallery

I had to make a break, which had a lot to do with the physical way color and light and materiality come together and are contained in a painting. I liked the idea that the shape of a painting could be defined by my peripheral vision, or my mind’s eye and what it chooses to take in and how it edits and frames the world.
— Joanna Pousette-Dart

 

 

For her seventh exhibition with Lisson Gallery, Joanna Pousette-Dart returns to her native city with a major show of new paintings, entitled ‘Centering’. Since the 1970s, when the artist began moving away from traditional rectilinear formats – initially by intertwining unstretched canvas into soft grids and then by creating shaped canvases on which to paint in the 1990s – Pousette-Dart has been utilizing dynamically shaped formats to suggest the expansive, visceral, and all-encompassing qualities of landscape. From these surfaces of vertically joined curvilinear panels, she has reimagined painting as an arena of depth and breadth, creating a light and space continuum where the inner drawing is in constant dialogue with the outer shape, and everything is in perpetual motion. To further enhance the living, breathing quality of these forms and the constantly shifting and expanding worlds within worlds, the artist bevels the edges of the paintings so that they appear to float off the walls.

 

Joanna Pousette-Dart Centering #1, 2024 Acrylic wash on Arches watercolor paper 56.5 x 67 cm 22 1/4 x 26 3/8 in © Joanna Pousette-Dart, Courtesy Lisson Gallery

 

Pousette-Dart’s new arching and domed works further this exploration, but have a uniquely encompassing quality. Each is hand drawn and subtly asymmetrical, giving the paintings a slight list or the suggestion of spin, which sets the fields of colors and forms in motion. Each is comprised of two panels with a ‘horizon’ line that divides the space differently from one painting to another, so that the interior space of each painting has its own rise and fall or gravitational pull. Horizontal bands of color suggest a hierarchy of distances and fluctuating qualities of light achieved through the accumulation of thinly applied layers of varying, sometimes complimentary tones. The color modulates sometimes subtly and at other times dramatically from light to dark, or warm to cold and becomes one of the ways in which Pousette-Dart moves us though the cyclical and rotational motions inherent in each work, visually suggesting a passage from one state or realm to another. Her singular vocabulary of lines and calligraphic forms defines the orientation, as well as the sense of drama and focus of each painting, at times functioning in opposition to its internal movement and at others, echoing it.

 

Joanna Pousette-Dart Centering #7, 2024 Acrylic wash on Arches watercolor paper 74.3 x 87.6 cm 29 1/4 x 34 1/2 in © Joanna Pousette-Dart, Courtesy Lisson Gallery

 

In addition to the New Mexican vistas she's been recalling and revisiting for many years, Pousette-Dart’s influences range widely from Mozarabic manuscripts and Catalan frescos to Etruscan tombs and Chinese landscape painting, to name but a few. Key to her painterly process is an intuitive approach to creating each image. She describes it as unearthing the painting’s visual and poetic logic and it involves examining a range of shifting possibilities by working through large revisions and incremental adjustments until the elements coalesce and the painting achieves its own sense of ‘presence’. For her it’s always a surprising and revelatory process and the residue of layers and gestures from various stages accrue and add richness to her images.

 

 

Joanna Pousette-Dart Centering #2, 2024 Acrylic wash on Arches watercolor paper 56.5 x 66.7 cm 22 1/4 x 26 1/4 in © Joanna Pousette-Dart, Courtesy Lisson Gallery

While suggesting a vast sense of space, her paintings are resolutely human in scale, having been shaped by her own field of vision and the physical reach of her hand. Equally important to their scale and composition is the artist’s inclusion of the viewer as integral to that experience. At the same time, these asymmetrical, vertiginous compositions suggest qualities of imminent change and realignment, so it is indeed the presence of the viewer that balances and centers the activity of each painting. And just as the artist enters into a negotiation with each work – wrestling with its internal dynamics – so too the viewer is placed front, center and in dialogue with each painting.

 

 

 

Portrait of Joanna Pousette-Dart, 2021. © Joanna Pousette-Dart, Courtesy Lisson Gallery

About the artist

 

 

Born in New York to abstract expressionist painter and founding member of the New York School of painting, Richard Pousette-Dart, and having studied painting at Bennington College in Vermont amongst the likes of Greenbergian Formalists Kenneth Noland and Larry Poons, Joanna Pousette-Dart’s experience as a painter rises from rich tradition. However, despite this traditional modernist background, her paintings remain anything but conventional. Pousette-Dart’s shaped paintings are unique in their melding of formal and poetic concerns, and take their inspiration from many sources: Islamic, Mozarabic and Catalonian art, Chinese landscape paintings and calligraphy, Mayan and American Indian art, as well as the landscape itself, to name a few. In the early 1970s, Pousette-Dart began living and working intermittently in New Mexico. Her perceptions of the place deeply influenced her paintings, ultimately resulting in the abandonment of a rectangular format in the 1990s for works composed of curved panels. The dynamic configurations of these works evoke the constantly shifting light and form, the vastness of the spaces, and the sense of the earth’s curvature that she experienced there. Her paintings take many forms, each with its own dynamic sense of expansion and compression, buoyancy and gravity. The painted contours of the interior shapes create an added complexity, sometimes echoing the contours of the canvas, and at other times challenging them. Her use of color suffuses all elements with a sense of light which feels redolent of the natural world.

 

 

Joanna Pousette-Dart was born in New York, NY in 1947, where she still lives and works. She has a BA from Bennington College, Vermont (1968). Her work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at Wiesbaden Museum, Wiesbaden, Germany; Locks Gallery, Philadelphia, PA, USA; Moti Hasson Gallery, New York, NY, USA; Texas Gallery, Houston, TX, USA; Charles Cowles Gallery, New York, NY, USA; and Susan Caldwell Gallery, New York, NY, USA, as well as a three-person exhibition at MoMA PS1 in New York. Pousette-Dart has been featured in group exhibitions at the University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, USA; School of Visual Arts, New York, NY, USA; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA, USA; Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, USA; Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indianapolis, IN, USA; Neuberger Museum, Purchase, NY, USA; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY, USA; and the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara, CA, USA, among others. Her work is held in public collections around the world including Albright Knox, Buffalo, NY, USA; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA, USA; Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, NY, USA; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY, USA; Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, USA; Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indianapolis, IN, USA; Parrish Art Museum, Southampton, NY, USA; Portland Art Museum, Portland, OR, USA; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY, USA. In 2021 she was selected to become a National Academician by The National Academy of Design in New York.

 

 

 

About Lisson Gallery

 

Lisson Gallery is one of the most influential and longest-running international contemporary art galleries in the world. Today the gallery supports and promotes the work of more than 70 international artists across spaces in London, New York, Los Angeles, Shanghai and Beijing. Established in 1967 by Nicholas Logsdail, Lisson Gallery pioneered the early careers of important Minimal and Conceptual artists such as Art & Language, Carl Andre, Daniel Buren, Donald Judd, John Latham, Sol LeWitt, Richard Long and Robert Ryman among many others. It still works with many of these artists and others of that generation, from Carmen Herrera and Olga de Amaral to Hélio Oiticica and Lee Ufan. In its second decade the gallery introduced significant British sculptors to the public for the first time, including Tony Cragg, Richard Deacon, Anish Kapoor, Shirazeh Houshiary and Julian Opie. Since 2000, the gallery has gone on to represent many more leading international artists such as Marina Abramović, Ai Weiwei, John Akomfrah, Liu Xiaodong, Otobong Nkanga, Pedro Reyes, Sean Scully, Hiroshi Sugimoto and Wael Shawky. It is also responsible for raising the international profile of a younger generation of artists including Dana Awartani, Cory Arcangel, Garrett Bradley, Ryan Gander, Josh Kline, Hugh Hayden, Haroon Mirza, Laure Prouvost and Cheyney Thompson.







The exhibition opened on September 5 with an opening held from 6 – 8pm and will be on view until 9 October 2024 at Lisson Gallery New York location at 504 West 24th Street, New York.




 
For more information about this exhibition and others, please visit the Lisson Gallery here. The gallery can also be found on Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram.

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Josh Kline: Social Media

Josh Kline, Social Media, 2024 Installation. Exhibition view at Lisson Gallery New York, 5 September – 19 October © Josh Kline, Image courtesy of the artist and Lisson Gallery

For the artist’s inaugural exhibition with Lisson Gallery, Josh Kline presents a series of self-portraits for the first time, building on previous bodies of work to examine employment and the changing, precarious workforce. Titled ‘Social Media’, Kline’s new suite of works approaches the selfie – one of the most common kinds of image on social media platforms – as a tool of critique, questioning our turbulent era’s obsession with the self. As he steps inside the 3D-scanning rig, Kline both turns the camera on himself and holds up a mirror to the conditions of artists in the third decade of the twenty-first century. The exhibition runs alongside ‘Climate Change’, Kline’s solo exhibition at The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, until January 2025, and follows his major mid-career survey exhibition, ‘Project for a New American Century’ (2023), at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York.

 

Kline is known for charged, visceral installations that evoke contemporary retail environments, the starchitecture of global financial centers like New York and London, a disintegrating Western middle-class, ruinous floods, and surveillance zones. Mobilizing iconic elements of design, style and architecture that are both site and time-specific, his installations are immersive period pieces set in the present or all too possible futures. Kline’s earliest installations were made against the backdrop of and in response to the financial crisis and great recession, that also saw the first flowering of the smartphone-enabled social media platforms which would transform our lives. Now in this exhibition, Kline returns to the subject of his earliest installations: creative labor. In that body of work, produced between 2009-2014, the focus was on the challenges faced by creative workers – DJs, graphic designers, publicists and art directors – as they navigated promoting themselves as a persona online. Works such as Creative Hands (2011) reproduced the hands of these workers as silicone casts, each clutching a tool that reflects the merging of their personal and professional identities, from an iPhone to a bottle of Advil or a computer mouse. In this new body of work, Kline abandons surrogates and uses his own image, focusing on the place of the artist in an art world increasingly described by its participants as “the art industry.” The sculptures that will debut at Lisson Gallery update core interests from that earlier body of work: the commodification, promotion, and disposal of the self in a society shaped by social media.

 

Josh Kline Professional Default Swaps 2024 3D-printed sculptures in acrylic-based photopolymer resin; steel, low-iron tempered glass, plywood, custom tinted polyurethane paint, tinted acrylic enamel paint, UV protective coating, and museum wax 95.3 x 127 x 76.2 cm 37 1/2 x 50 x 30 in © Josh Kline, Image courtesy of the artist and Lisson Gallery

 

Kline brings to bear on his subject the vocabulary that he has developed and deployed over the last 15 years to depict contemporary class and labor. In Blue Collars (2014–20) Kline interviewed blue-collar service industry workers such as waitresses, cleaners and delivery drivers in videos discussing their employment, aspirations, political views and the future, and created 3D printed portraits of these subjects in an assemblage of their bodies and the products and tools they used on the job, highlighting their working conditions in the aftermath of both offshoring and industrial automation of labor. Similarly, in the installation Unemployment (2016), Kline portrayed middle-class office workers predicted to face mass layoffs due to automation in the 2020s, 2030s and 2040s. The most iconic works from the project were disturbingly realistic life-size portraits of unemployed white-collar professionals in these vulnerable professions: a lawyer, banker, administrator, secretary, accountant, journalist. In this moment amid the rise of AI, and speculation about the coming obsolescence of creative workers, Kline adds visual artist to the list of at-risk professions. Now implicating himself in these labor portraits, Kline highlights the precarity of artists working with contemporary tools and in studios with unsustainable rents within increasingly tenuous cultural centers like New York City. Painstakingly rendering this obsolescence in hyperrealistic digital sculptural form, ‘Social Media’ immortalizes the aspirations and vulnerabilities of artists in the present day through the tools, presentation and consumption of art and the artist’s body itself.

 

 

 

From left to right:  Josh Kline New York Artist 2024 3D-printed sculpture in acrylic-based photopolymer resin; Ikea chair, denim, UV protective coating, and museum wax 88.9 x 67.9 x 67.9 cm 35 x 26 3/4 x 26 3/4 in © Josh Kline, Image courtesy of the artist and Lisson Gallery, Josh Kline Professional Default Swaps 2024 3D-printed sculptures in acrylic-based photopolymer resin; steel, low-iron tempered glass, plywood, custom tinted polyurethane paint, tinted acrylic enamel paint, UV protective coating, and museum wax 95.3 x 127 x 76.2 cm 37 1/2 x 50 x 30 in © Josh Kline, Image courtesy of the artist and Lisson Gallery, Josh Kline Honorarium 2024 3D-printed sculpture in acrylic-based photopolymer resin; Ikea chair, shredded financial documents, credit-card offers,and junk mail; polypropylene; clear vinyl; clear vinyl tubing; UV protective coating, and museum wax 86.7 x 67.9 x 67.9 cm 34 1/8 x 26 3/4 x 26 3/4 in © Josh Kline, Image courtesy of the artist and Lisson Gallery, Josh Kline Professional Default Swaps 2024 3D-printed sculptures in acrylic-based photopolymer resin; steel, low-iron tempered glass, plywood, custom tinted polyurethane paint, tinted acrylic enamel paint, UV protective coating, and museum wax 95.3 x 127 x 76.2 cm 37 1/2 x 50 x 30 in © Josh Kline, Image courtesy of the artist and Lisson Gallery, Josh Kline Going for Broke 2024 3D-printed sculpture in acrylic-based photopolymer resin; Ikea chair, denim, UV protective coating, and museum wax 88.3 x 67.9 x 67.9 cm 34 3/4 x 26 3/4 x 26 3/4 in © Josh Kline, Image courtesy of the artist and Lisson Gallery, Josh Kline Professional Default Swaps 2024 3D-printed sculptures in acrylic-based photopolymer resin; steel, low-iron tempered glass, plywood, custom tinted polyurethane paint, tinted acrylic enamel paint, UV protective coating, and museum wax 95.3 x 127 x 76.2 cm 37 1/2 x 50 x 30 in © Josh Kline, Image courtesy of the artist and Lisson Gallery, Josh Kline Professional Default Swaps 2024 3D-printed sculptures in acrylic-based photopolymer resin; steel, low-iron tempered glass, plywood, custom tinted polyurethane paint, tinted acrylic enamel paint, UV protective coating, and museum wax 95.3 x 127 x 76.2 cm 37 1/2 x 50 x 30 in © Josh Kline, Image courtesy of the artist and Lisson Gallery.



Josh Kline, 2024, high-definition image of 3D model. © Josh Kline, Courtesy Lisson Gallery


About Josh Kline

 

Josh Kline (b. 1979, Philadelphia, USA) works in installation, video, sculpture, and photography. In his works, he questions how emergent technologies are being used to change human life in the 21st Century. Kline often utilizes the technologies, practices, and forms he scrutinizes – digitization, image manipulation, 3D-printing, commercial and political advertising, productivity-enhancing substances – aiming them back at themselves. Some of his most well-known videos use early deep fake software to speculate on the meaning of truth in a time of post-truth propaganda. At its core, Kline’s prescient practice is focused on work and class, exploring how today’s most urgent social and political issues – climate change, automation, disease, and the weakening of democracy – impact the people who make up the labor force.

 

In 2024, Kline opened a solo exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (until January 5, 2025) and was included in the 24th Biennale of Sydney (9 March – 10 June, 2024) and the 8th Yokohama Triennial (March 15–June 9, 2024). In 2023 the Whitney Museum of American Art presented the first U.S. museum survey of his work. Kline’s art has been widely exhibited in the United States and internationally, in exhibitions at The Museum of Modern Art, the New Museum, and MoMA PS1 in New York; The Hirshhorn Museum and The National Portrait Gallery in Washington D.C.; The Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; LAXART, Los Angeles; ICA Boston; ICA Philadelphia; MOCA Cleveland; Portland Art Museum; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; KW, Berlin; Kunsthalle Fridericianum, Kassel; Modern Art Oxford, UK; Yuz Museum, Shanghai; Louisiana Museum, Denmark; and MCAD Manila, Philippines, among many others. Kline’s works are included in the collections of major museums including those of The Museum of Modern Art; The Guggenheim; The Whitney Museum; and The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.

 

About Lisson Gallery

 

Lisson Gallery is one of the most influential and longest-running international contemporary art galleries in the world. Today the gallery supports and promotes the work of more than 70 international artists across spaces in London, New York, Los Angeles, Shanghai and Beijing. Established in 1967 by Nicholas Logsdail, Lisson Gallery pioneered the early careers of important Minimal and Conceptual artists such as Art & Language, Carl Andre, Daniel Buren, Donald Judd, John Latham, Sol LeWitt, Richard Long and Robert Ryman among many others. It still works with many of these artists and others of that generation, from Carmen Herrera and Olga de Amaral to Hélio Oiticica and Lee Ufan. In its second decade the gallery introduced significant British sculptors to the public for the first time, including Tony Cragg, Richard Deacon, Anish Kapoor, Shirazeh Houshiary and Julian Opie. Since 2000, the gallery has gone on to represent many more leading international artists such as Marina Abramović, Ai Weiwei, John Akomfrah, Liu Xiaodong, Otobong Nkanga, Pedro Reyes, Sean Scully, Hiroshi Sugimoto and Wael Shawky. It is also responsible for raising the international profile of a younger generation of artists including Dana Awartani, Cory Arcangel, Garrett Bradley, Ryan Gander, Hugh Hayden, Haroon Mirza, Laure Prouvost and Cheyney Thompson.

 

The exhibition had an opening on September 5th from 6 – 8 pm and will be on view until 19 October 2024 at the Lisson Gallery New York location 508 W 24th Street, New York

 
For more information about this exhibition and others, please visit the Lisson Gallery here. The gallery can also be found on Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram.




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Sarah Blaustein : Overture

Installation View SARAH BLAUSTEIN: Overture, 2276 E. 16th Street, Los Angeles, California 90021, September 14 — October 19, 2024 Photography courtesy Ed Mumford and Night Gallery.

Night Gallery is pleased to announce Overture, an exhibition of new paintings by Sarah Blaustein. This is the artist’s debut solo exhibition in Los Angeles and follows her participation in the group show The Big Picture, 2023.

Painter Sarah Blaustein captures fleeting moments of creativity and collision. The artist’s studio labors remain unseen, while her paintings record the blossoming of ink and acrylic across wet canvas. Domestic tools such as rags, sponges, and house painters’ brushes aid the artist as she applies paint, and water gives the marks new life. Her canvases encourage viewers to focus on the here and now, to feel more human and alive.

 

Sarah Blaustein Press Play R-10, 2023 ink and acrylic on canvas 95 1/2 x 75 1/2 in (242.6 x 191.8 cm) (SBS013) Photo Credit : Nik Massey

Blaustein conceives of her Night Gallery show as an overture: an introductory piece of music that produces a powerful sense of movement. The composer (here, the artist) guides the audience from the chaos of life into a focused, intentional place of being. The exhibition title also positions Blaustein as an artist confident in her rhythms, at the threshold of extended composition.

 

Blaustein made her Overture paintings in the San Francisco Bay Area, where she lives and works, and at the American Academy of Rome, where she was a 2023 Visiting Artist. In Rome, the artist listened to Beethoven’s “Coriolan Overture,” took inspiration from the city’s operatic fountains, and began working with Italian canvases that held water for twice as long as their American counterparts. The new substrate allowed Blaustein time to re-enter her paintings, to begin working over strokes she’d previously considered finished at first touch.

 

Installation, View SARAH BLAUSTEIN: Overture, 2276 E. 16th Street, Los Angeles, California 90021, September 14 — October 19, 2024 Photography courtesy Ed Mumford and Night Gallery.

This new approach is evident in works such as Press Play IT-14 (2023), a dynamic composition of jagged marks and softer featherings that appear to simultaneously erupt from the bottom of the canvas and to move back towards an unspecified origin. To further the symphonic effect, Blaustein sets bright blues, purples, and pinks against an alternately soft and acidic yellow background. As in many of her Press Play IT canvases, beauty emerges from turmoil and revision

 

 

Elsewhere, the artist’s marks radiate from her paintings’ centers to suggest feminine forms and budding flowers. If Blaustein’s paintings evoke O’Keeffe’s ecologies and Frankenthaler’s soak- stains, they also demonstrate a contemporary dilemma: the desire to turn inward while contending with an inescapably violent, disordered world. 

Photo Credit : Cayce Clifford

Sarah Blaustein (b. 1982, San Francisco East Bay, CA). Blaustein is a visual artist living and working in the San Francisco Bay Area. Recent solo exhibitions include Night Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco, CA; Institute of Contemporary Art San José, San José, CA; private showing and salon at PACE Gallery, Palo Alto, CA; and Hesse Flatow Gallery, New York, NY. Her work has been included in group shows at Night Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco, CA; Paul Thiebaud Gallery, San Francisco, CA; Berry Campbell Gallery, New York, NY; and Hesse Flatow East Gallery, Amagansett, NY. In January 2023, art historian Alexander Nemerov (Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA) spoke about her work at a private exhibition The Call and salon hosted by Jennifer Stockman (New York, NY). In September 2023, Blaustein showed her work at a private salon To Radiate hosted by Berggruen Gallery at Casa Cipriani (New York, NY) where art historian Laura D. Corey (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY), spoke about her work and Helen Hatch (MOMA, New York, NY) moderated the talk. In June and December 2023, she painted at the American Academy of Rome through their Artist and Scholars Program (Rome, Italy). Blaustein has exhibited her work at The Armory Show (New York, NY), Art Basel Miami Beach (Miami, FL), Dallas Art Fair (Dallas, TX) and Fog Design + Art (San Francisco, CA). In 2023, she exhibited her work in Trodden Path a group show at Hesse Flatow East (Amagansett, NY) and The Big Picture a group show at Night Gallery (Los Angeles, CA). In 2024, she showed her work in Abstract Perspectives and California Gold group shows at Berggruen Gallery (San Francisco, CA).

Overture opened on September 14 and will be on view until October 19 of this year at Night Gallery, located at 2276 E. 16th Street, Los Angeles, California 90021; the gallery’s website can be found here for more information about this exhibit and others. Sarah’s interview with the magazine can be found here

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Jiro Takamatsu: The World Expands

Jiro Takamatsu: The World Expands 540 West 25th Street, New York, NY 10001 September 20 – November 2, 2024 Photography courtesy Pace Gallery

New York – Pace is pleased to present its first exhibition of Jiro Takamatsu—a profoundly influential artist, theorist, and teacher who emerged in postwar Japan in the early 1960s—since its representation of the artist’s estate this year. The exhibition opened on September 20 and will be open until  November 2; the presentation at the gallery’s 540 West 25th Street flagship in New York will focus on Takamatsu’s Shadow and Perspective concepts—throughout his entire oeuvre, Takamatsu used the term “concept” to denote certain ideas or phenomena. Bringing together a selection of his paintings, drawings, and sculptural objects dating from 1966 to 1997, this exhibition will showcase his inventive, deeply philosophical practice and his important role in the development of Conceptual Art.

 

 

A prolific artist who produced thousands of works over the course of his 40-year career, Takamatsu worked across painting, sculpture, drawing, photography, and performance, exploring questions about perception, space, existence, and absence. Early in his practice, during the 1960s, he staged performative interventions in public spaces around Tokyo as part of the artist collective Hi Red Center, liberating art from its traditional context and shaking the foundations of the Japanese art world at the time. Presenting politically minded actions in public spaces throughout postwar Tokyo, Hi Red Center sought to dissolve boundaries between art and life—producing what the group called a “descent into the everyday”—through experimental and unorthodox approaches to making. It was also during this decade, in 1968, that Takamatsu represented Japan at the 34th Venice Biennale, cementing his status as a key figure within the international avant-garde.

 

Jiro Takamatsu Double Shadow of a Baby, 1969- 1997 Acrylic on canvas 85-7/8" × 9' 6" (218.1 cm × 289.6 cm) No. 92867 © The Estate of Jiro Takamatsu, Courtesy Yumiko Chiba Associates, Tokyo, Pace Gallery, New York and Stephen Friedman Gallery, London. Photo by Richard Gary.

Viewing the act of creating as an intensely intellectual endeavor, Takamatsu adopted a somewhat reclusive, solitary lifestyle as part of his practice. Grounded by his thoughts about and observations of the world around him, the artist’s highly conceptual works often examine ideas about reality and the self, matter and space, and presence and absence. Producing diverse bodies of work simultaneously, he examined these concepts through various mediums and forms. In one of Takamatsu’s best-known bodies of work—his iconic Shadow paintings, which he created from 1964 up until his death in 1998—he explored questions of perception and dimension as they relate to our experience of matter. In these illusionistic paintings depicting shadows of figures and objects, he presents a visual summation of the complex relationships between that which is at once existent and nonexistent, tangible and intangible, in both physical and metaphysical terms.

 

 

Jiro Takamatsu: The World Expands 540 West 25th Street, New York, NY 10001 September 20 – November 2, 2024 Photography courtesy Pace Gallery

A selection of the artist’s Shadow paintings and drawings will figure in Pace’s upcoming presentation in New York, alongside works from his lesser-known Perspective series. Takamatsu began creating his Perspective paintings, drawings, and sculptures in the mid-1960s in tandem with his Shadow works, and the relationship between these two concepts hinges on the illusionistic potential of space, when perspective is bent by human intervention. While many of his two-dimensional, mathematically minded Perspective works depict silhouetted figures occupying geometric structures within different planes, some of these compositions are devoid of figures, focusing instead on the ways that combinations of shapes can imply interiority, exteriority, and depth. Several material objects from the Perspective series on view in the gallery’s show will shed light on the ways in which Takamatsu extended these inquiries into three dimensions, imbuing his painted abstractions with a physicality that makes them all the more surreal.

 

Engaging with histories of Dadaism and Surrealism through a minimalist visual language. Jiro Takamatsu’s (b. 1936, Tokyo; d. 1998, Tokyo) art centers on metaphysical ideas and concepts related to time, space, and emptiness. Over the span of his four-decade career, the artist engaged with a range of mediums, including sculpture, photography, painting, drawing, and performance art, through which he explored concepts related to perception, space, and objecthood. Takamatsu studied at the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, where he cultivated an interdisciplinary artistic practice after graduating in 1958. In the following years, he helped establish the collective known as Hi Red Center (1963– 64), which sought to dissolve boundaries between art and life through politically minded actions in public spaces. Takamatsu was also a leading figure in the Mono-Ha (School of Things) movement, centering on materiality and material conditions through non-representational art. Through his practice, Takamatsu investigated how painting could serve as a tool for critical inquiry, questioning the role of perceptual and visual phenomena in constructing notions of reality.

 

An influential figure of the Japanese avant-garde, presenting numerous solo exhibitions during his lifetime, Takamatsu is once again the subject of international attention, his practice lauded by scholars and curators across institutions globally.

Jiro Takamatsu Shadow No. 1452, 1997 acrylic on canvas 51-5/16" × 63-13/16" (130.3 cm × 162.1 cm) No. 92240 © The Estate of Jiro Takamatsu, Courtesy Yumiko Chiba Associates, Tokyo, Pace Gallery, New York and Stephen Friedman Gallery, London. Photo by Peter Clough.


In 2014, the National Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo opened Jiro Takamatsu: Mysteries, which traced three distinct phases of his career; in 2015, the National Museum of Art in Osaka mounted the major retrospective Jiro Takamatsu: Trajectory of Work. Takamatsu has also been the subject of solo exhibitions at the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds, United Kingdom (2017) and the Royal Society of Sculptors, London (2019). The artist’s work is held in important public collections worldwide, including Aomori Museum of Art, Japan; Dallas Museum of Art, Texas; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; The National Museum of Art, Osaka; The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; and Tate, London; among others.

 

Jiro Takamatsu Shadow, 1989/1997 Acrylic on canvas 9' 6-3/4" × 85-7/8" (291.5 cm × 218.1 cm) No. 89830 © The Estate of Jiro Takamatsu, Courtesy Yumiko Chiba Associates, Tokyo, Pace Gallery, New York and Stephen Friedman Gallery, London. Photo by Richard Gary.

Pace is a leading international art gallery representing some of the most influential artists and estates of the 20th and 21st centuries, founded by Arne Glimcher in 1960. Holding decades-long relationships with Alexander Calder, Jean Dubuffet, Agnes Martin, Louise Nevelson, and Mark Rothko, Pace has a unique history that can be traced to its early support of artists central to the Abstract Expressionist and Light and Space movements. Now in its seventh decade, the gallery continues to nurture its longstanding relationships with its legacy artists and estates while also making an investment in the careers of contemporary artists, including Torkwase Dyson, Loie Hollowell, Robert Nava, Adam Pendleton, and Marina Perez Simão. Under the current leadership of CEO Marc Glimcher and President Samanthe Rubell, Pace has established itself as a collaborative force in the art world, partnering with other galleries and nonprofit organizations around the world in recent years. The gallery advances its mission to support its artists and share their visionary work with audiences and collectors around the world through a robust global program anchored by its exhibitions of both 20th century and contemporary art and scholarly projects from its imprint Pace Publishing, which produces books introducing new voices to the art historical canon. This artist-first ethos also extends to public installations, philanthropic events, performances, and other interdisciplinary programming presented by Pace.

 

 

Today, Pace has eight locations worldwide, including two galleries in New York—its eight-story headquarters at 540 West 25th Street and an adjacent 8,000-square-foot exhibition space at 510 West 25th Street. The gallery’s history in the New York art world dates to 1963, when it opened its first space in the city on East 57th Street. A champion of Light and Space artists, Pace has also been active in California for some 60 years, opening its West Coast flagship in Los Angeles in 2022. The gallery maintains European footholds in London and Geneva as well as Berlin, where it established an office in 2023.

 

Pace was one of the first international galleries to have a major presence in Asia, where it has been active since 2008, the year it first opened in Beijing’s vibrant 798 Art District. It now operates galleries in Hong Kong and Seoul and opens its first gallery in Japan in Tokyo’s Azabudai Hills development in 2024.

 

Photography courtesy Pace Gallery. For more information about this exhibition and others, please visit the Pace Gallery’s website here. Pace Gallery can be found on Instagram and Artsy, too.

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Mary Corse: Presence in Light

Mary Corse: Presence in Light 540 W 25th Street, New York, NY September 13 – October 26 Photography courtesy Pace Gallery

New York – Pace is pleased to present an exhibition of new work by Mary Corse at its 540 West 25th Street gallery in New York. Which opened on September 13th and will be on view until October 26, this presentation marks Corse’s first solo show in the city since 2019 and follows several recent institutional exhibitions by the artist at the Long Museum West Bund in Shanghai and the Amorepacific Museum of Art in Seoul, as well as her 2018 traveling retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Corse’s upcoming exhibition at Pace will coincide with her participation in Particles and Waves: Southern California Abstraction and Science, 1945–1990—a group exhibition organized as part of the Getty’s PST ART: Art & Science Collide initiative—at the Palm Springs Art Museum in California.

 

Untitled (Yellow Diamond with White Inner Band)2024 PAINTING glass microspheres in acrylic on canvas 92" × 92" × 4" (233.7 cm × 233.7 cm × 10.2 cm) No. 92698

 

Over the course of her six-decade career, Corse has explored phenomena of light, space, and perception in sublime and boundary-crossing abstractions across mediums. A key member of the Los Angeles artist community from the 1960s to the present, she is often associated with the Light and Space movement but has always been committed to the possibilities of painting, which remains her primary concern. As part of her empirical and highly tactile approach to art making, Corse has continually investigated the ways in which light can be both subject and material. In the late 1960s, while searching for a way to embed light inside her paintings, Corse experienced an epiphany. Driving along the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu at sunset, she noticed the road markings were progressively illuminated by headlights as she drove along. Investigating the industrial applications that make this effect possible, she discovered glass microspheres—a material used to enhance visibility of road signage. In 1968, Corse began applying these refractive microspheres onto the surfaces of her White Light paintings, endowing these works with a sense of illumination projected from within the picture plane itself.

 

The body of work that Corse will debut in her presentation at Pace in New York this fall centers on a new series of diamond-shaped paintings, which continue her longstanding practice of incorporating glass microspheres into the painted surface. Corse has experimented with the physical structure of her canvases since her time as a student at the Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles between 1964 and 1968. Although she created her first diamond-shaped paintings while still in her 20s, this body of work marks the first diamond-shaped canvases she has made since the 1960s. Corse’s return to the format of the diamond underscores one of the hallmarks of her practice: an interest in recursion and return to early ideas. With her new Diamond paintings, the artist delves ever deeper into the fundamental concepts that animated her practice at its outset. She expands the scope of her inquiry into the metaphysical dimensions of her oeuvre through these new iterations of ideas that have long been essential to the work.

 

Untitled (Blue Diamond with Black Inner Band), 2024 PAINTING glass microspheres in acrylic on canvas 92" × 92" × 4" (233.7 cm × 233.7 cm × 10.2 cm) No. 92671 © Mary Corse, courtesy Pace Gallery

 

The works in the presentation at Pace, all of which have never before been exhibited, will include Corse’s Halo Room, a new architectural installation that she has been developing over the last several years. This work, which will be installed in the center of the gallery space but can also be placed outdoors, offers a participatory, intimate experience of scale, space, and light. When a viewer enters the room, a single interior light projects their shadow onto a White Light painting. The resulting effect produces a glowing halo around the viewer’s shadow, registering their presence but also incorporating it into the painting itself. The installation hinges on the energetic relationship between individual and object, producing a moment of intersubjective collision that facilitates a spiritual manifestation of bodies within space. Up to two participants will be allowed inside the installation at a time, and each viewer will only be able to see their own halo—a phenomenon that speaks to the personal nature of experiencing Corse’s art.

 

The Halo Room 2023-2024 SCULPTURE glass microspheres in acrylic on powder coated aluminum, glass microspheres in acrylic on canvas, light 9' × 10' × 11' (274.3 cm × 304.8 cm × 335.3 cm) No.92448 © Mary Corse, courtesy Pace Gallery

Corse’s Halo Room continues and deepens a long tradition of grappling with questions of presence in post-1960s art. In his 1967 essay “Art and Objecthood,” the critic Michael Fried famously condemned Minimal aesthetics for their perceived “theatricality.” Fried contrasted this with an all-over painting, in which the entire composition could be perceived by the viewer all at once, in a single instant. Fried called this quality “presentness,” and in the essay, he famously declared: “Presentness is grace.” Although not a minimalist, Corse is associated with many of the post- 1960s practices to which Fried was referring, having shown with Dick Bellamy’s Green Gallery in New York in the late 1960s. Her new work is equally concerned with questions of presence and presentness. The Halo Room serves as a counterpoint to Fried’s argument, in which the presence and presentness of the viewer within the work itself—both literally and pictorially—becomes a pure expression of grace, a reflection of the ethos that has animated Corse’s practice for decades: the work of art is, as she puts it, “not on the wall, it’s in your perception.”

 

 

Untitled (White Diamond with Black Inner Band)2024 PAINTING glass microspheres in acrylic on canvas 110-3/8" × 110-3/8" × 3-3/4" (280.4 cm × 280.4 cm × 9.5 cm) No. 92442 © Mary Corse, courtesy Pace Gallery

Mary Corse (b. 1945, Berkeley, California) investigates materiality, abstraction, and perception through the subtly gestural and precisely geometric paintings that she has made over her sixty-year career. Earning a BFA in 1968 from Chouinard Art Institute, Los Angeles, Corse developed her initial work during the emergence of the Light and Space movement in Southern California. Throughout the 1960s, she experimented with unconventional media and supports, producing shaped canvases, works with plexiglass, and illuminated boxes. In 1968, Corse discovered glass microspheres, an industrial material used in street signs and dividing lines on highways. Combining these tiny refractive beads with acrylic paint, she began to create paintings that appear to radiate light from within and produce shifts in appearance contingent on their surroundings and the viewer’s position. She first developed her White Light paintings, and by the 70s she transitioned to making her Black Light series with black acrylic and microspheres. The Black Earth works followed: large ceramic slabs that she fired in a custom-built kiln and glazed black. After thirty years of working monochromatically, she reintroduced primary colors into her paintings based on her understanding of color as constitutive of white light. Corse’s art emphasizes the abstract nature of human perception, expanding beyond the visual to include subtleties of feeling and awareness.

 

Untitled (Black Diamond with Black Inner Band), 2023 PAINTING glass microspheres in acrylic on canvas 70-3/4" × 70-3/4" × 4-1/2" (179.7 cm × 179.7 cm × 11.4 cm) No. 90272 © Mary Corse, courtesy Pace Gallery

 

In 2021, Corse was the subject of a major solo exhibition at the Long Museum, Shanghai which traveled to the Amorepacific Museum of Art in Seoul in 2022. Mary Corse: A Survey in Light, the artist’s first solo museum survey, was presented at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 2018 and 2019, respectively. Comprehensive catalogs were published with both surveys. A focused presentation of Corse’s work was on view at Dia: Beacon in New York for four years highlighting historical works from the collection.


Untitled (White Diamond with White Inner Band)2024 PAINTING glass microspheres in acrylic on canvas 110-1/2" × 110-1/2" × 3-3/4" (280.7 cm × 280.7 cm × 9.5 cm) No. 92441 © Mary Corse, courtesy Pace Gallery


Corse was also included in the major presentation Pacific Standard Time: Crosscurrents in L.A., Painting and Sculpture, 1950-1970 at The J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles in 2011. In 2023, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art presented Light, Space, Surface, in which Corse’s work was exhibited. She was also included in Long Story Short at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2023–2024). In 2024, Corse is participating in Particles and Waves: Southern California Abstraction and Science, 1945–1990—a group exhibition organized as part of the Getty’s PST ART: Art & Science Collide initiative—at the Palm Springs Art Museum in California. The artist’s work can be found in the permanent collections of Amorepacfic Museum of Art, Seoul; Dia Art Foundation, New York; The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles; Long Museum, Shanghai; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; The Menil Collection, Houston, Texas; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, among other institutions.

 

Pace is a leading international art gallery representing some of the most influential contemporary artists and estates from the past century, holding decades-long relationships with Alexander Calder, Jean Dubuffet, Barbara Hepworth, Agnes Martin, Louise Nevelson, and Mark Rothko. Pace enjoys a unique U.S. heritage spanning East and West coasts through its early support of artists central to the Abstract Expressionist and Light and Space movements.

 

 

Since its founding by Arne Glimcher in 1960, Pace has developed a distinguished legacy as an artist-first gallery that mounts seminal historical and contemporary exhibitions. Under the current leadership of CEO Marc Glimcher, Pace continues to support its artists and share their visionary work with audiences worldwide by remaining at the forefront of innovation. Now in its seventh decade, the gallery advances its mission through a robust global program— comprising exhibitions, artist projects, public installations, institutional collaborations, performances, and interdisciplinary projects. Pace has a legacy in art bookmaking and has published over five hundred titles in close collaboration with artists, with a focus on original scholarship and on introducing new voices to the art historical canon.

 

Today, Pace has seven locations worldwide, including European footholds in London and Geneva as well as Berlin, where the gallery established an office in 2023. Pace maintains two galleries in New York—its headquarters at 540 West 25th Street, which welcomed almost 120,000 visitors and programmed 20 shows in its first six months, and an adjacent 8,000 sq. ft. exhibition space at 510 West 25th Street. Pace’s long and pioneering history in California includes a gallery in Palo Alto, which was open from 2016 to 2022. Pace’s engagement with Silicon Valley’s technology industry has had a lasting impact on the gallery at a global level, accelerating its initiatives connecting art and technology as well as its work with experiential artists. Pace consolidated its West Coast activity through its flagship in Los Angeles, which opened in 2022. Pace was one of the first international galleries to establish outposts in Asia, where it operates permanent gallery spaces in Hong Kong and Seoul, along with an office and viewing room in Beijing. In spring 2024, Pace will open its first gallery space in Japan in Tokyo’s new Azabudai Hills development.

Photography courtesy Pace Gallery. For more information about this exhibition and others, please visit the Pace Gallery’s website here. Pace Gallery can be found on Instagram and Artsy, too.

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Braxon Garneau : Metamorphosis Ball

Installation View Caption Installation view, Metamorphosis Ball, 2024, Efraín López, NY Courtesy the Artist and Efraín López Photo by Inna Svyatsky

New York, NY- Efraín López is pleased to announce Metamorphosis Ball, an exhibition of new works by visual artist, Braxton Garneau. The exhibition will be on view from September 3 through October 12, 2024. For his first solo exhibition at the gallery, Garneau will present a new series of paintings, continuing his exploration of materiality and costuming. For this body of work, Garneau has employed the use of arched canvases to create portals that collapse cultural and historical elements into complex portraits of armor and adornment. Garneau ’s interest in materiality is specifically drawn out in the lace details of these works, made from hand processed shells piped into imagined lace patterns. Integrating three-dimensional costuming elements with gestural asphalt forms, Garneau is interested in both self-adornment and thinking about masquerade as a disruptive tool for social change. An opening reception took place on Tuesday, September 3, 2024, from 6 to 8pm. Metamorphosis Ball is accompanied by an essay authored by Hilary Davidson, a dress, textiles and fashion historian and curator, and chair of the MA Fashion and Textile Studies at the School of Graduate Studies at FIT.

 

Installation View Caption Installation view, Metamorphosis Ball, 2024, Efraín López, NY Courtesy the Artist and Efraín López Photo by Inna Svyatsky

Braxton Garneau is a visual artist based in amiskwaciwâskahikan (Edmonton, Canada). He holds a BFA from the University of Alberta and has had solo exhibitions at the Art Gallery of Alberta, Edmonton (2024), GAVLAK, Los Angeles (2023) and Stride Gallery, Calgary (2021). His work was featured in the retrospective exhibition Black Every Day at the Art Gallery of Alberta (2021), It's About Time: Dancing Black in Canada 1900 - 1970 and Now at Mitchell Art Gallery, Edmonton (2020), curated by Seika Boye, and New Direction, curated by AJ Girard and Artx at Château Cîroc, Miami, Florida (2021). In 2024, his work Pitch Lake (Pietà) was acquired by the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego through the Northern Trust Purchase Prize at EXPO Chicago, and he was awarded the Lieutenant Governor of Alberta Emerging Artist Award. He has been accepted into the International Studio & Curatorial Program (ISCP), Brooklyn, NY for 2025.

Braxton Garneau Masquerade V, 2024 Asphalt and acrylic on canvas with jute and crushed shell 15 x 10 inches (BG0052) Courtesy the Artist and Efraín López Photo by Inna Svyatsky

With a focus on painting, sculpture, printmaking and installation, Garneau’s practice is rooted in materiality, costuming and transformation. Working in-between cultures, he combines visual influences from classical and contemporary forms with material investigations to consider cultural, social and historical implications. Garneau is interested in what he refers to as “ material honesty, ” or the idea that the use of living matter can imbue work with their essence and power. Exploring and exploiting the physical qualities of materials, Garneau works with harvested and hand-processed mediums including asphalt, raffia, cotton, linen, sugarcane pulp, bones and shells. Garneau ’ s work investigates transformation through both natural cycles and the inherent human tendency for adornment, costuming and masquerade. Connecting materials, customs and clothing, he explores the ability of the natural world, and of the people in it, to adapt and transmute to whatever circumstances they may find themselves in.

 

About Efraín López

 

Efraín López is a Puerto Rican-American art dealer and exhibition maker based in New York City. Between 2012 and 2018, López founded and directed his eponymous gallery in Chicago, where he presented an ambitious and rigorous exhibition program, often giving artists their first solo presentation in the United States. His long-standing commitment to the career development of emerging artists has led to placements in major museum collections worldwide. In June of 2023 López opened Efraín López, a contemporary art gallery in New York' s T ribeca neighborhood. The program is conceptual, multidisciplinary, and globally minded, engaging both emerging and established artists.

 

For information about Braxton’s artwork please visit his site. Braxton’s interview with the magazine can be found here. For information about this exhibition and others, please visit Efraín López’s website. You can also follow the gallery on Instagram.

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