27/10/23

Miikka Vaskola @ Helsinki Contemporary Gallery - "Infinite Numbers of Tomorrow" Exhibition

Miikka Vaskola
Infinite Numbers of Tomorrow
Helsinki Contemporary
27 October - 26 November 2023

Miikka Vaskola
MIIKKA VASKOLA
Monuments of the Unseen, 2023
Ink, iron oxide, charcoal, acrylic on canvas, 210 x 200 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
Courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

Miikka Vaskola
MIIKKA VASKOLA
Infinit Numbers of Tomorrow, 2023
Ink, charcoal and acrylic on canvas, 140 x 115 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
Courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary
“After all, the thought of endless tomorrows stretching on forever is bewildering and yet also rather beautiful.” – Miikka Vaskola
MIIKKA VASKOLA’s approach to painting is similar to the way he perceives the passage of time: “Tomorrow isn’t just a certain day in the future, but an eternal canvas that is constantly being shaped by the paths we take and the choices we make today.” The abstract paintings and free-form sculptures featured in Infinite Numbers of Tomorrow came together gradually through an evolving series of repeated actions within the organic continuum of his process.   

Miikka Vaskola describes his method as a form of archaeology, a process of stratigraphic excavation into layers of time. By digging into familiar soil, he invariably discovers something new, deepening his understanding of his own process. Searching, combining and experimenting with new materials and techniques is another hallmark of his method. Through his sculptures and paintings, Miikka Vaskola seeks to unearth forms and expressions that challenge entrenched assumptions about what is natural and what is artificial.

Infinite Numbers of Tomorrow is built around a set of diptychs juxtaposing landscapes and maps. The paired images are conflated, yet without either being subordinated by the other. They are composed in such a way as to guide our gaze from the bottom to the top, from near to far, transforming the viewing experience into an event similar to reading a map. How we interpret what we see is determined by the imagined distance between ourselves and the object. Miikka Vaskola’s paintings have a well-nigh archaic quality – they seem to offer a glimpse of something ancient and eternal.

Miikka Vaskola
MIIKKA VASKOLA
Compass, 2023 
Ink, iron oxide, charcoal, acrylic on canvas, 210 x 170 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
Courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

Miikka Vaskola
MIIKKA VASKOLA
Haru, 2023
Ink, iron oxide, charcoal and acrylic on canvas, 200 x 200 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
Courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

The title of the diptych Haru (2023) refers to the outer archipelago, an out-of-the-way place that is dear to the artist. For Miikka Vaskola, paddling an unsteady kayak to the remote island and gazing across the waves towards the distant horizon is the perfect way of living in the moment and absorbing everything around him. A sea kayaker must read the waves tirelessly; as one paddles, the perspective keeps changing ceaselessly. “When you glide past 3,000-million-year-old cliffs, you find yourself thinking about prehistoric timespans that you cannot fathom, but which nevertheless exist.”

In his most recent paintings, natural formations and human traces on the landscape are blended together, as they are on a map. The gestures imprinted on the canvas recall the shapes of ice-age meltwater basins, dune fields, mountain ranges or rainswept cliffs. By toggling our perspective, we might see either an aerial view of forest topography or a map of the seabed. The paintings are accented by metallic shades of bronze and copper, as well as earthy ochre and terracotta, patinated and oxidized by the passage of time.

Miikka Vaskola
MIIKKA VASKOLA
Foundations IX, 2023
Plaster, wood and resin, 30 x 27 x 26 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
Courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

Miikka Vaskola
MIIKKA VASKOLA
Foundations II, 2023
Plaster, wood and resin, 30 x 25 x 16 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
Courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

Also featured in the exhibition are Miikka Vaskola’s “unearthings”, in which he employs his signature method of combining diverse materials. He collects different timber varieties from the forest and casts them in plaster and resin to create sculptural objects. 
“My sculptures were inspired by the achievements of modern geology and technology. The result is a grotesque hybrid of the natural and the synthetic.” – Miikka Vaskola
 
Miikka Vaskola
MIIKKA VASKOLA
Photograph Courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

MIIKKA VASKOLA (b. 1975) is a Helsinki-based artist who graduated from the Finnish Academy of Fine Arts in 2008. He is known for paintings and sculptures that straddle the borderlands between the organic, natural and cultural worlds in both their form and choice of materials. Miikka Vaskola has presented his work in numerous solo and group exhibitions in Finland and abroad, most recently in the Handle with Care group exhibition at Turku Art Museum (2023), at Akureyri Art Museum in Iceland (2022), Norrtälje Konsthall in Sweden (2022), Berg Contemporary in Iceland (2019), as part of the Hydra School Projects on the Greek island of Hydra (2019) and at EMMA – Espoo Museum of Modern Art (2018). His previous solo exhibition at Helsinki Contemporary, Shore to Shore, was in autumn 2020. Miikka Vaskola’s work is found in numerous major private and public collections, including HAM Helsinki Art Museum, Turku Art Museum, the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma, EMMA - Espoo Museum of Modern Art, the Heino Collection and the Jenny and Antti Wihuri Foundation Collection. 

Helsinki Contemporary would like to express their thanks to the Arts Promotion Centre Finland (Taike) and the Swedish Cultural Foundation in Finland for supporting the artist’s work.

HELSINKI CONTEMPORARY
Bulevardi 10 - 00120 Helsinki

26/10/23

Sam Gilliam @ National Gallery of Art, Washington - Gift of Elinor K. Farquhar

Sam Gilliam - Acquisition
Gift of Elinor K. Farquhar 
National Gallery of Art, Washington

Sam Gilliam
Sam Gilliam
Yellow Edge, 1972
Acrylic on canvas
Overall: 139.7 x 114.3 cm (55 x 45 in.)
National Gallery of Art, Washington
Gift of Elinor K. Farquhar 
2023.17.1

American artist SAM GILLIAM (1933–2022) was associated with the Washington Color School, a group of Washington, DC-area abstract artists focused on color field painting from the 1950s to the 1970s. The National Gallery of Art has acquired Yellow Edge (1972), an example of Sam Gilliam’s revolutionary beveled-edge Slice paintings. The work was given to the National Gallery by Elinor K. Farquhar. Yellow Edge exemplifies Sam Gilliam’s innovations in process and display from the 1960s and 1970s and his predilection for bright hues, which are seen in much of his 1970s work.

Sam Gilliam came to Washington, DC, in 1962 and joined the second generation of Washington Color School painters. Like the first generation of the group, which included Morris Louis and Kenneth Noland, Sam Gilliam was interested in the expressive qualities of color. By applying acrylic paint to unprimed canvas, his work took on an organic, intuitive quality. As he became more interested in process and the ways he could manipulate his materials, Sam Gilliam developed more innovative techniques that allowed the materials to manipulate themselves.

Throughout the 1970s, Sam Gilliam would alternate making his celebrated Drape paintings with his Slice paintings, in which he stretched canvas over beveled-edge frames. The Slice paintings protrude from the wall so that they are encountered, rather than simply seen, by the viewer. The rich atmosphere of Yellow Edge is dominated by a sea of orange acrylic with stains of acidic yellow across the surface. Splashes of red and blue appear in the top left, bottom right, and middle of the canvas, as a pool of electric green seems to emerge from an amorphous field of yellow in the lower right corner.

Sam Gilliam was the first African American artist to represent the United States at the Venice Biennale in 1972. Among other prizes, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship and the Art Institute of Chicago’s Norman Walt Harris Prize. He received honorary doctorates from the University of Louisville in 1980 and Northwestern University in 1990. Sam Gilliam’s works have been acquired by numerous museums, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Baltimore Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, and the Walker Art Center.

NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART
Sixth Street and Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC

David Adamo @ Rodolphe Janssen Gallery, Brussels - On the Fence

David Adamo: On the Fence 
Rodolphe Janssen, Brussels 
October 26 - December 16, 2023 

Rodolphe Janssen presents On the Fence, DAVID ADAMO’s third solo exhibition at this gallery. Talking about the show, David Adamo described his most current explorations in the following terms.
“I started the process for the show funny enough with painting. Something I haven’t really explored over the years as an artist, something I’ve definitely dreamt about but somehow too self-conscious to try. I spent the summer on a residency in Liguria at the former residence and studio of Danish artist Asger Jorn. For one month, I slept in his former bedroom, and I firmly believe he entered my dreams, and I got permission to paint by Asger’s spirit. I came back to Berlin and suddenly had the urge. As if a drain had suddenly been unclogged, something started to flow. I started with small still-life studies, looking a lot at cozy old catalogs of Cézanne, Manet, Bonnard. And for the first time in a while, I was actually enjoying it, enjoying coming to the studio, enjoying painting, laughing at myself, starting to experience the world in a different way, looking at colors, the light, noticing compositions. Totally engrossed in the process, not giving a shit, which is an attitude that had been missing. Maybe it isn’t always the smartest or strategic way, but arguably more important, honest and raw. I’m showing a few attempts here.”

For example, in Untitled (Elina 1), while I was painting over the summer, every once in a while, my partner would come over and look at my work in what I would describe as a suspicious manner, almost as if she was experiencing the mysterious waft of ripe unpleasantries. Using this as a starting point, I did a few studies of her at the studio and also at our home. Some of them I would show to her, and we would laugh uncontrollably together, which is pretty healthy, I think, or not. The thing I liked about the process is I didn’t have to look far to be inspired; the everyday moments are more than enough. I followed this process for a couple months and finally built up the courage to share some of my studies with Rodolphe. He was less than enthused about them and suggested perhaps I was wasting my energy. Understandably, most people in my experience (myself included) are very resistant to change.

Deflated, I returned back to my sculptures, which had been sleeping. Over the years, I’ve accumulated many works which I’ve exhibited and, for one reason or another, ended up on a shelf in storage, in hibernation. For the works in the show, I’ve dragged out a few of these old friends and started to reimagine them in a different way. Trying to let the material show me something else inside. There is always somewhere else to go. I knew I wanted to work on a series of busts as, over the last 8 years, I’ve been studying the subject in an interdisciplinary manner. Firstly, in my training as a barber and secondly, my extensive studies and teaching of the Alexander Technique, a method specifically looking at the dynamic relationships between the head, neck and spine. With fresh eyes, I woke up the works: gouging, digging, chopping, hacking, chiseling, hammering, grinding, sanding, painting, nailing, affixing, dressing, praying, crying, but most importantly, looking and listening. I let the painting process inform how I approached these works as well, allowing color, portraiture, gesture and posture to play a larger role in the group. They reflect upon different facets of my imagination and personality: the armored discipline, stubbornness, the knot in my stomach… The confused, cloudy, shy, punky characters that lurk in my brain and hide in the material. The infectious spirit of something that was there before but is now slowly revealing itself as another. Is it Asger Jorn haunting me? I hope so... Don’t know. I’m on the fence.”
DAVID ADAMO (b. 1979 in Rochester, NY USA. Lives and works in Berlin, Germany)
David Adamo is a sculptor ‘avant la lettre’ due to his engagement with form and materiality. His sculptures of chipped away wood for example, express this interest in the materiality of the object very well. These sculptures are often surrounded by the wooden fragments that were chopped off, thereby referring to the creation process of the sculptures. In his humorous small-scale sculptures Adamo plays with the expectations of the audience. These sculptures appear to be everyday objects, but by further examining them it becomes clear that the objects are removed from their traditional context due to the use of impossible materials.
— LVB
Recently, David Adamo was included in solo and group exhibitions at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, CT, USA; The Mordes Collection, West Palm Beach, FL, US ; M.A.C – Museo de Arte Contemporaneo, Lima, Peru; Museo de Arte de Rio, Rio de Janeiro; The Albright Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY USA ; Bielefelder Kunstverein, Bielefeld, Germany; Whitney Biennale, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY USA, among others. His work is included in the collections of The Albright Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY USA.

RODOLPHE JANSSEN
35 rue de Livourne — Livornostraat, 1050 Brussels

25/10/23

Artist Andrzej Urbanski @ Everard Read London - "Intersected" Exhibition

Andrzej Urbanski: Intersected
Everard Read London
10 November - 2 December 2023

Everard Read London presents an exhibition of new works by Cape Town-based artist, Andrzej Urbanski (b. 1983 in Poznan, Poland), known for his meticulous, hard-edged abstract paintings and sculpture.

Andrzej Urbanski’s source material is memory, sensory and spatial encounters as well as emotional and psychic states, all of which he deftly works into the overlapping colourful, geometric shapes and the precise, intricate forms for which he is best known.

The bold shards of colour characterising Andrzej Urbanski’s art may recall objects, places and experiences from his youth - the colour of a building or a room - or they may be a manifestation of his state of mind as he enters his studio.

In this collection, the artist presents both high and low frequency works as well as a synthesis between these modes. The result, in many of the paintings, is an animated balance between the medium frequency in his faceted forms, and high frequency in his use of colour.

Sinuous, curved edges have found their way into this new body of work - a new characteristic which the artist attributes, in part, to the experience of his becoming a father. These soft edges add visual interest and contrast, without disrupting the symmetry of Andrzej Urbanski’s creations.

The artist favours the use of spray paint as it produces flat colour and removes any trace of the ‘artist’s hand’. This conforms not only to the minimalist ethos, but also to his desire to replicate imagery that appears to be digitally generated.

Urbanski's interest in creating this illusion is rooted in his fascination with digitally-produced art, the digital tools he uses in mapping his intricate compositions and the status assigned to handmade products in the post-industrial era. It is also informed by his appreciation for the minimalist movement, although he is influenced by a range of high modernists, from Rothko to Mondrian. As art commentator Mary Corrigall observed,  “Urbanski has settled on a vocabulary and aesthetic that chimes with these times though its lines extend back in time.”

*The Cape Times (23 August, 2017)

EVERARD READ LONDON
80 Fulham Road London, SW3 6HR

IFPDA Print Fair 2023 Highlights - 30th anniversary edition - Javits Center, New York

IFPDA Print Fair 2023 Highlights
Javits Center, New York
October 26 – 29, 2023

The IFPDA Print Fair—the largest art fair in the world dedicated to prints and printmaking—announces the exhibitor and public programme’s highlights for its 30th anniversary edition.  In its strongest edition to date, the Fair will be welcoming over 90 exhibitors from 7 countries—from the world’s best print studios and dealers to renowned publishers—who will showcase over 550 years of printmaking, from Old Masters to contemporary works.
“Printmaking can be simultaneously one of the most democratic mediums and also create some of the rarest and most costly works of art,” said Jenny Gibbs, Executive Director of the IFPDA. “We are celebrating our 30th anniversary with programming that explores all facets of printmaking and connoisseurship, from Yashua Klos, with his take on Diego Rivera’s Detroit murals and the printmaking practice of Nuyorican artist/activist Juan Sanchez, to new scholarship from art historian Susan Dackerman on Albrecht Dürer’s fascination with the Islamic East and a highly anticipated conversation between Ed Ruscha and Christophe Cherix from MoMA. We are so thankful for our friends and cultural partners who worked with us to create this robust calendar of programs, both in-person at the fair and online for Print Month.”

“The IFPDA Print Fair is the annual, must-attend event for print curators and serious print collectors from all over the world. This year’s 30th anniversary edition features an extraordinary number of highly rare old master works alongside classic, iconic modern prints, drawings, and new discoveries by young artists,” said David Tunick, President of the IFPDA. “We’re also very excited to be offering public programming with distinguished speakers that complements the range of material on view.”
Julie Mehretu
Julie Mehretu  
Treatises on the Executed (from Robin’s Intimacy), 2022. 
10-panel etching/aquatint from 50 plates 93
1/2 x 173 1/8" (237.5 x 439.7 cm). Edition of 22. 
Image courtesy of Gemini G.E.L. at Joni Moisant Weyl

WOMEN IN PRINT

Over 20 exhibitors at the IFPDA Print Fair will showcase pioneering women printmakers from across time and around the world, with many artists who explore women’s identity and sexuality. David Zwirner will present recently published works by Hayley Barker and breakout artist Cynthia Talmadge, alongside upcoming new releases. The booth will also feature historical prints made by Ruth Asawa at the Tamarind Lithography Workshop. Hauser & Wirth exhibits a range of celebrated women artists including Amy Sherald, Louise Bourgeois, Nicole Eisenman, Mary Heilmann, and Jenny Holzer.

Gemini G.E.L. at Joni Moisant Weyl showcases Julie Mehretu’s Treatises on the Executed (from Robin’s Intimacy), a monumental etching comprising 10 panels. LeRoy Neiman Center for Print Studies, Harlan & Weaver, and Krakow Witkin Gallery will all present prints by Kiki Smith, one of the most influential artists of her generation, to exemplify how she stretched the printmaking medium in exciting new ways.

Universal Limited Art Editions (ULAE) will show new groups of etchings by Marina Adams and Charline von Heyl, as each artist continues explorations in abstract forms, ranging from paper shape cutouts to dense layering applied to intaglio and relief printing. . In addition, ULAE will show Sarah Crowner’s debut lithograph editions. Marlborough Graphics will present Louise Bourgeois, whose work with printmaking allowed her to fully indulge in experimentation through the reworking and reprinting of plates. Gallery Neptune and Brown will be presenting Night Sky screenprints by Latvian-American artist Vija Celmins. 

Tamarind Institute will present a monotype by Danielle Orchard, who depicts women in their daily lives, painting their nails, washing thongs in the sink, alongside a five-lithograph series by Henni Alftan—a Paris-based artist known for her intimate depictions of hands, knitwear, hosiery and fur—and lithographs by Native American visual artist Jaune Quick-to-See-Smith.

José Clemente Orozco
José Clemente Orozco 
Image courtesy of Childs Gallery

MODERNISTS AND THEIR CONTEMPORARIES

Gemini G.E.L. at Joni Moisant Weyl—the famed Los Angeles print publisher—will spotlight a presentation of lithographs by Ellsworth Kelly in celebration of the artist’s centennial, alongside works by Richard Serra that exemplify his 50 years of collaborations with Gemini and a new series of prints by Frank Gehry. Childs Gallery will showcase works by American realist artist Edward Hopper and esteemed Mexican muralist, painter, and lithographer José Clemente Orozco.

William P. Carl Fine Prints—which specializes in modern prints from 1880–1960—will present iconic images by Charles Sheeler, Joan Miró, and Grant Wood, among others. Ursus Books will offer a selection of publications demonstrating the involvement of artists in book making, including Henri Matisse’s illustrations of Mallarmé’s poems and Jasper John's masterful illustrations of Beckett’s Fizzles. Additionally, Ursus will exhibit a group of major books illustrated by women artists, namely: Joan Mitchell, Vija Celmins, and Beatriz Milhazes.

John Szoke Gallery will offer lithography and linocuts by Pablo Picasso from the 1940s–60s. Peter Blum Galley plans to exhibit work by Alex Katz, Louise Bourgeois, Eric Fischl, Yukinori Yanagi, James Turrell, Kimsooja, and Philip Taaffe, all of whom have collaborated with Peter Blum and Peter Blum Edition to create individual prints or portfolios over the last four decades. Long-Sharp Gallery will feature over two dozen works by Andy Warhol that examine the artist’s work in and about the fashion industry from his first years in New York to his last.

Albrecht Dürer
Albrecht Dürer 
The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, 1498 
Image courtesy of David Tunick, Inc.

OLD MASTERS FROM DÜRER TO REMBRANDT

David Tunick, Inc.—the world-renowned gallery specializing in fine prints and drawings from the 15th to the mid-20th century—will exhibit a range of works by Old Masters, including Albrecht Dürer, Rembrandt, and Lucas Cranach the Elder. Brigitta Laube presents an engraving by Pieter van der Heyden, The Stone Operation or the Witch of Mallegem (after Pieter Bruegel the Elder), alongside works by Dürer.

Childs Gallery offers works by Old Master artists like Francisco Goya, Rembrandt, and Albrecht Dürer, alongside prints by contemporary artists, providing a thoughtful look at the commonalities and distinctions between old and new, traditional and experimental. Contemporary woodblock printmaker and political artist William Evertson presents two new pieces, Ginni and the Supremes and Samuel Beset by Dürer's Witch, emphasizing the current politicization of the Supreme Court by referencing historical prints by John Faed and Dürer, respectively.

On Friday, October 27, the IFPDA will feature a lecture by Susan Dackerman, titled “Durer's Prints and the Islamic East,” exploring three of the artist’s most enigmatic print projects: the engraved Sea Monster, woodcut Knots, and etched Landscape with Cannon.

Dindga McCannon
Dindga McCannon 
If you want to speak to God, Speak to the Winds. 2022. 
Image courtesy of Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop

AFRICAN ARTISTS AND ARTISTS OF THE DIASPORA

A wide variety of African visual artists and artists of the African diaspora will be on view at the Print Fair. Crown Point Press will present new works by Nigerian-American artist Odili Donald Odita that represent his first exploration into intaglio printing. Gemini G.E.L. at Joni Moisant Weyl showcases a monumental etching comprising 10 panels by Ethiopian-American artist Julie Mehretu.

Hauser & Wirth will exhibit works by world-renowned artists Mark Bradford, Rashid Johnson, and Amy Sherald. Paulson Fontaine will present new works by McArthur Binion and Torkwase Dyson, two African-American artists that use abstraction to distill stories of oppression and Black liberation. Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop will exhibit a new series of prints by Dindga McCannon inspired by a publication the artist illustrated, Speak to the Winds: Proverbs from Africa. The booth will include folk art-inspired lithographs by Michael Kelly Williams, woodblock prints by Otto Neals, and lithographs by Michele Godwin.

Black Women of Print exhibits six contemporary Black women printmakers including LaToya M. Hobbs, Deborah R. Grayson, Althea Murphy-Price, Karen J. Revis, Stephanie M. Santana, and Tanekeya Word. Galerie Myrtis will offer works by Delita Martin, a master printmaker who often depicts women that have been marginalized, offering a different perspective of the lives of Black women. The booth will also include a serigraph by Nelson Stevens, a significant member of AfriCOBRA (African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists).

Jeffrey Gibson
Jeffrey Gibson 
SAY A PRAYER, 2021 
Twenty-one color lithograph with chine collé elements  
Paper Size: 39 x 30 1/4 inches 
Collaborating Printers: Valpuri Remling and Lindsey Sigmon  
Edition of 20 
Image courtesy of Tamarind Institute

INDIGENOUS PERSPECTIVES

Tamarind Institute presents work by prominent Indigenous artists, including Jaune Quick-To-See-Smith, who adopts aspects of traditional Indigenous art styles with more current pictorial aesthetics and imagery drawn from contemporary American pop culture. On the heels of her Whitney Museum solo exhibition, Tamarind offers lithographs from Quick-to-See-Smith’s nine-color lithograph series Coyote in Quarantine. Tamarind will also present recent work by Jeffrey Gibson, who was recently selected to represent the United States at the next rendition of the Venice Biennale, making him one of the first Indigenous artists to represent the country. His twenty-one color lithograph with chine collé elements, SAY A PRAYER, is produced in an edition of 20 and will be on view.

In addition, Peter Blum Gallery will exhibit monotypes by Nicholas Galanin, a Tlingit and Unangax̂ multi-disciplinary artist and musician from Alaska, who aims to redress the widespread misappropriation of Indigenous visual culture and the impact of colonialism in his work.

Ed Ruscha 
Castiron Calendar, 2023 
Color direct gravure. 26 1/4 × 42 in | 66.7 × 106.7 cm
Edition of 40
Image courtesy of Crown Point Press

LEGACY AND INFLUENCE: LIVING LEGENDS OF PRINTMAKING

The IFPDA Print Fair regularly presents standout works by legendary, living artists with decades-long legacies in printmaking. Crown Point Press presents a 2023 print, Castiron Calendar, by Ed Ruscha (b. 1938) that reflects his use of words as subject matter. The words play against each other: “calendar” marks the passage of time, while “cast iron,” in its heaviness and solidity, endures. The booth will also feature prints by preeminent abstract artist Mary Heilmann (b. 1940).

Krakow Witkin Gallery, who will be exhibiting online, will display a wide selection of prints by world-renowned living artists, including 1970s lithographs by Richard Serra (b. 1938), etchings from the ‘90s by James Turrell (b. 1943), and silkscreen prints from the ‘70s by Robert Mangold (b. 1937).

Gallery Neptune and Brown offers important screenprints by Vija Celmins (b. 1938), while Kunst Kunz Gallery Editions will present historical works by German Neo-Expressionist artist Karl Horst Hödicke (b. 1938).

Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop will exhibit a new series of prints by Dindga McCannon (b. 1947) inspired by a publication the artist illustrated, Speak to the Winds: Proverbs from Africa.

Roger Brown
Roger Brown 
The Fisherman, Lithograph, c. 1970 
Image courtesy of Aaron Galleries

HAIRY WHO & THE CHICAGO IMAGISTS

Aaron Galleries will exhibit a selection of prints from leading artists of the Chicago Imagists—an unofficial group that formed around the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in the 1960s and rejected the approach of the New York art world, then dominated by Pop art. Instead, the Imagists looked to self-taught artists, Japanese woodblock prints, comic books, storefront window displays, and advertisements in magazines to inform their irreverent works, which featured grotesque figures, vibrant colors, and elements of Surrealism.

Chicago Imagists including Jim Nutt, Roger Brown, and Karl Wirsum are eatured in the Aaron Galleries booth. Both Nutt and Wirsum were graduates of School of the Art Institute of Chicago and began mounting exhibitions alongside four other artists, who together made up the “Hairy Who.” United through humor and the emotional power of imagery, the collective exhibited together for only three years (1966–69), but their contribution to art history is long lasting. The Hairy Who drew international attention to the Chicago artists during the 60s and catalyzed the broader Chicago Imagist movement, which extended into the 1980s.

James Tissot
James Tissot
(1836-1902) 
Le Journal (W. 73)”, 1883 
Etching and drypoint 
Edition about 100 
Image courtesy of Georgina Kelman

MUSES, FEMALE FORM, AND REPRESENTATION ACROSS THE CENTURIES

A range of exhibitors offers works that trace the historic representation of women across time in a variety of media. Georgina Kelman :: Works on Paper will exhibit women-focused works by Henri Evenepoel, Peter Ilsted, Eugène Delâtre, alongside artist James Tissot, who is perhaps best known for his “La femme à Paris” series that documented what made the modern Parisian woman unique in late nineteenth-century cosmopolitan society. One exemplary Tissot work on view with Georgina Kelman, Le Journal, depicts a fashionable female sitter digesting the latest news, and observes the changing ambitions of women before the turn of the century.

Galerie Henze & Ketterer presents a booth focused exclusively on Erich Heckel, one of the founders of Die Brücke, and his muses. From girlfriends, companions, dancers, actresses to casual acquaintances, in the graphic work of Heckel, the twentieth-century woman is often at the center. The female body inspired Heckel to create woodcuts, lithographs and etchings, in which he found inspiration for motif and style. They all testify to the artist's intense engagement with the theme of femininity—one of the oldest motifs in art—and its translation into modernity at the onset of the twentieth-century. Together with Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Fritz Bleyl and Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, he rebelled against rigid bourgeois traditions and found in the female, liberated nude a metaphor for breaking away from conventions.

Elizabeth Catlett
Elizabeth Catlett 
Links Together, 1996
Lithograph, A/P
Image courtesy of Dolan:Maxwell

Dolan:Maxwell offers an important lithograph by Elizabeth Catlett, Links Together, which depicts three Black women connected through hand holding. Catlett taught art at Dillard University in New Orleans—where she battled discrimination daily—and met her first husband, artist Charles White, while living in Chicago. She later studied lithography under Jacob Lawrence in New York City, and produced a number of works on paper that center mothers, daughters, and other images of dignified women. “The thing that I knew the most about was Black women, because I am one, and I lived with them all my life, so that’s what I started working with,” Catlett once said.

Black Women of Print presents six contemporary, twenty-first century, Black women printmakers who use experimental and traditional printmaking techniques on paper, wood, and textiles. In Need of Rest, a mixed media woodcut by LaToya M. Hobbs—a painter and printmaker who uses representational, figurative, imagery that centers Black womanhood in ways that dismantle prevailing stereotypes—depicts the psychological weight placed on contemporary women of color. A new quilting cotton screenprint by Stephanie M. Santana uses family photos and imagery from the Jim Crow Era and the United States Civil Rights Movement to invoke the legacies of Black resilience. The Santana work, When Called Upon / Gathering in the Wake, excises archival images and repurposes them to depict a stately, matriarchal figure alongside two Black children.

Ana Benaroya
Ana Benaroya
 
The Swans, 2023 
19 color silkscreen with gold and silver leaf, 48 x 71 inches
Edition of 15
Courtesy of the artist and Two Palms, NY

THE NEXT GENERATION OF PRINTMAKERS

The Print Fair features numerous young printmakers experimenting with the medium (some for the first time), revealing a new generation of artists exploring the potential of collaboration with a master printer. Famed publisher Two Palms presents new silkscreen works by Ana Benaroya (b. 1986) that feature 19 layers of luminous color and gold and silver leaf to create shimmering stars. Harlan & Weaver offers a new publication by Haitian-born artist Didier William (b. 1983) whose work explores his Haitian heritage and the Black body, further defined by intersectional relationships to gender, sexuality, place, space, and time.

Jungle Press Editions offers a recent lithograph series by Tunji Adeniyi-Jones (b. 1992) that feature abstract depictions of figures in small groups or pairs that are characteristic of the artist’s fluid, rhythmic compositions. Krakow Witkin Gallery presents recent salt prints by celebrated photographer Paul Mpagi Sepuya (b. 1982).

Tamarind Institute presents prints by young artists Henni Alftan (b. 1979) and Danielle Orchard (b. 1985), while Planthouse exhibits solid glass sculptures by Victoire Bourgois (b. 1987).

On Saturday, October 28, the IFPDA will feature a panel discussion with young printmakers: “Printing Contemporary; A Conversation with the Next Generation of Artists Making Print an Essential Part of Their Practice” with artists Jameson Green (b.1992) and Didier William (b. 1983) in conversation Elleree Erdos, Director of Prints and Multiples at David Zwirner.

Giambattista Tiepolo
Giambattista Tiepolo
(1696–1770) 
Centaur carrying off a female faun
Pen and brown ink and brown wash, over an underdrawing in black chalk 
Image courtesy of Stephen Ongpin Fine Art

DRAWINGS FOR PRINTS: PROCESS AND INFLUENCE

Master Drawings New York (MDNY)—one of the largest art fairs for drawings and works on paper—will present a shared booth of the most important international drawings dealers at the IFPDA Print Fair. Offering a curated concept, Drawings for Prints: Process and Influence will explore the process of printmaking through the lens of preparatory drawings.

Including Stephen Ongpin Fine Art, Agnew’s Works on Paper, Christopher Bishop Fine Art, Libson and Yarker Ltd., and Mireille Mosler Ltd., the booth will feature a number of side-by-side juxtapositions of prints and their preparatory drawings. These works are particularly important in illuminating not only the process by which prints were made, but also the ways in which artists often worked side-by-side—correcting prints together in order to ensure the quality of the final prints. The showcase will include artists such as Jean-Baptiste Le Prince, Stefano Della Bella, Giambattista Tiepolo, Pietro Antonio Novelli, il Guercino, Carlo Maratta, Salvator Rosa and more.

The exhibition aims to explore the way in which the established aesthetic of prints influenced the practice of draftsmanship and vice versa. Throughout the centuries, many printmakers were draftsmen and many draftsmen (and women) made prints. This relationship of practice began to affect not only their ways of working, but also their ways of seeing, a theme which will be explored with a panel presentation at the fair with curators Nadine Orenstein (The Metropolitan Museum of Art), Jamie Gabbarelli (Art Institute of Chicago), and Kim Conaty (Whitney Museum of American Art).

IFPDA Print Fair 2023 Exhibitor List

Aaron Galleries
Alice Adam
Allinson Gallery, Inc
Anderson Ranch Arts Center*
Atelier-Galerie A. Piroir
August Laube Buch- und Kunstantiquariat
Black Women of Print*
Burnet Editions
C.G. Boerner LLC
Cade Tompkins Projects
Carolina Nitsch
Childs Gallery
Cirrus Gallery
Conrad Graeber
Crown Point Press
David Tunick, Inc.
David Zwirner
Dolan/Maxwell
Durham Press, Inc.
EFA Robert Blackburn Printmaking* Workshop
Eminence Grise Editions (Michael Steinberg
Fine Art)
Flying Horse Editions
Galerie Henze & Ketterer
Galerie Lelong
Galerie Maximillian
Galerie Myrtis Fine Art & Advisory
Gallery Neptune and Brown
Gemini G.E.L. at Joni Moisant Weyl
Georgina Kelman :: Works on Paper
Gilden's Art Gallery
Goya Contemporary Gallery/ Goya-Girl Press
Graphicstudio/USF
Harlan and Weaver, Inc
Harris Schrank
Hauser & Wirth
Hill-Stone
Isselbacher Gallery
Jacobson Gallery
Jan Johnson, Old Master & Modern Prints
Jim Kempner Fine Art
John Szoke Gallery
Jörg Maas Kunsthandel
Josh Pazda Hiram Butler
Jungle Press Editions
Keith Sheridan LLC
Knust Kunz Gallery Editions
Krakow Witkin Gallery
LeRoy Neiman Center for Print Studies,
Columbia University
Long-Sharp Gallery
Lower East Side Printshop
Lyndsey Ingram
Marlborough Graphics
Master Drawings New York (+4)*
Mixografia
Moeller Fine Art
Noire Editions
Pace / Pace Verso*
Paramour Fine Arts
Parkett*
Paulson Fontaine Press
Peter Blum Edition
PIA GALLO LLC
Planthouse
Pratt Contemporary
RENÉ SCHMITT
Roger Genser - The Prints & The Pauper
Ruiz-Healy Art
Sarah Sauvin
Scholten Japanese Art
Shapero Modern
Shark's Ink.
SHORE PUBLISHING
Solo Impression
Stewart & Stewart
Stoney Road Press
Susan Teller Gallery
Tamarind Institute
The Paris Review*
Tandem Press
The Old Print Shop, Inc.
The Tolman Collection
Two Palms NY
Universal Limited Art Editions
Ursus Books
Weyhe Gallery
Wildwood Press
William P. Carl Fine Prints
Wingate Studio
Zucker Art Books*

*Invitational Exhibitors

IFPDA PRINT FAIR 2023
River Pavilion, Javits Center, 11th Avenue at 35th Street, New York

Drawing attention: emerging artists in dialogue @ York Art Gallery, Wolverhampton Art Gallery, Hartlepool Art Gallery - British Museum Touring Exhibition

Drawing attention: 
emerging artists in dialogue 
A British Museum Touring Exhibition
York Art Gallery
27 October 2023 – 28 January 2024 
Wolverhampton Art Gallery 
10 February 2024 – 6 May 2024 
Hartlepool Art Gallery 
18 May 2024 – 24 August 2024 

Sin Wai Kin
Sin Wai Kin
(born 1991)
what you have gained along the way, 2017
Make up on facial wipe
© 2023 The Trustees of the British Museum
Reproduced by permission of the artist

Hans Burgkmair the Elder
Hans Burgkmair the Elder
(1473–1531) 
Head of Christ crowned with thorns, c.1508–15
Woodcut on paper
© 2023 The Trustees of the British Museum

Between October 2023 and August 2024, a British Museum Touring Exhibition Drawing attention: emerging artists in dialogue can be seen in York, Wolverhampton and Hartlepool. It presents some of the most compelling up-and-coming names in the field of contemporary drawing, displayed alongside highlights of the British Museum’s collection.

These new acquisitions include some of the youngest artists to be collected by the British Museum, presented alongside works by celebrated artists from Mary Delany, Andy Warhol and Barbara Hepworth to Edouard Manet. 

Exhibited emerging artists: Emii Alrai (b. 1993); Catherine Anyango Grünewald (b. 1982); Josephine Baker (b. 1990); Miriam de Búrca (b. 1972); Somaya Critchlow (b. 1993); Jake Grewal (b. 1994); David Haines (b. 1969); Rosie Hastings & Hannah Quinlan (b. 1991); Mary Herbert (b. 1988); Jessie Makinson (b. 1985); Jade Montserrat (b.1981); Ro Robertson (b. 1984); Sin Wai Kin (b. 1991); Charmaine Watkiss (b. 1964).

In this surprising and thought-provoking selection, emerging artists are taking the medium of drawing in new directions. A wide range of techniques and practices are represented, including drawings using make-up on face wipes by Sin Wai Kin, to a drawing made with chalk collected from the White Cliffs of Dover by Josephine Baker.

Artists show how drawing, often considered a quiet or private medium, can be used to challenge social norms, explore identity, or protest injustice.

This tour has evolved from an exhibition at the British Museum. Each of the partner galleries in York, Wolverhampton and Hartlepool will use this exhibition to highlight their collections, while making meaningful connections with the British Museum’s collection of both historical and contemporary drawing.

The touring exhibition might not be what visitors expect of the British Museum. While the Museum has actively collected contemporary drawings since the 1970s, it is now, for the first time also focusing on emerging artists.

This exhibition highlights new acquisitions by some of the freshest and most compelling new voices in the field, exploring questions of identity, memory and materiality, and using innovative materials and processes.

The works are ‘paired’ alongside prints and drawings dating as far back as the early 1500s, demonstrating their continuities with historical traditions of draughtsmanship.

Sin Wai Kin (born 1991), what you have gained along the way, make up on facial wipe, 2017, is exhibited alongside the work by Hans Burgkmair the Elder (1473–1531), Head of Christ crowned with thorns, woodcut on paper, c. 1508–15.

Charmaine Watkiss
Charmaine Watkiss
(born 1964) 
Double Consciousness: Be Aware of One’s Intentions, 2021 
Pencil, water-soluble graphite, watercolour and ink
© 2023 The Trustees of the British Museum
Reproduced by permission of the artist

Mary Delany

Mary Delany
(1700–1788) 
Passiflora Laurifolia (Gynandria Pentandria),1777
Collage of coloured papers, with bodycolour 
and watercolour, on black ink background
© 2023 The Trustees of the British Museum

Charmaine Watkiss (born 1964), Double Consciousness: Be Aware of One’s Intentions, pencil, water-soluble graphite, watercolour and ink, 2021, is exhibited alongside the work by Mary Delany (1700–1788), Passiflora Laurifolia (Gynandria Pentandria), collage of coloured papers, with bodycolour and watercolour, on black ink background, 1777.


David Haines
David Haines
(born 1969)
Man Reading Messages (Pawel), 2020
Graphite on paper
© 2023 The Trustees of the British Museum
Reproduced by permission of the artist

Wallerant Vaillant
Wallerant Vaillant
(1623–1677) 
Boy with a feathered velvet hat looking downwards and
reading a letter, c.1660–75 
Mezzotint on paper
© 2023 The Trustees of the Museum

David Haines (born 1969), Man Reading Messages (Pawel), graphite on paper, 2020, is exhibited alongside the work by Wallerant Vaillant (1623–1677), Boy with a feathered velvet hat looking downwards and reading a letter, mezzotint on paper, c. 1660–75.

Hannah Quinlan and Rosie Hastings
Hannah Quinlan and Rosie Hastings (both born 1991)
Funny Girls, 2019
Graphite on paper
© 2023 The Trustees of the British Museum
Reproduced by permission of the artists

Giorgio Ghisi
Giorgio Ghisi
(1520–1582), 
The Eritrean sibyl, after Michelangelo's fresco
on the Sistine ceiling, early 1570s,
Engraving on paper
© 2023 The Trustees of the British Museum

Hannah Quinlan and Rosie Hastings (both born 1991), Funny Girls, graphite on paper, 2019 is exhibited alongside the work by Giorgio Ghisi (1520–1582), The Eritrean sibyl, after Michelangelo’s fresco on the Sistine ceiling, engraving on paper, early 1570s.

Isabel Seligman, Monument Trust Curator of Modern and Contemporary Drawing said:
“This touring exhibition enables us to amplify some of the freshest and most compelling new voices in British contemporary art, helping us to tell stories not currently represented in the Museum collections. It addresses questions of identity and what it means to make a drawing today.”
Mark Jones, Interim Director of the British Museum, said:
“The British Museum’s prints and drawings collection is one of the best in the world. But it is vitally important for future generations that it continues to develop, so we are grateful to Art Fund’s New Collecting Award for allowing us to strengthenour holdings with exciting new British artists.”
BRITISH MUSEUM

YORK ART GALLERY
Exhibition Square, York YO1 7EW

WOLVERHAMPTON ART GALLERY
Lichfield Street, Wolverhampton WV1 1DU

HARTPOOL ART GALLERY
Church Street, Hartlepool TS24 7EQ

Troy Passey @ Tayloe Piggott Gallery, Jackson Hole - Take This Longing

Troy Passey: Take This Longing
Tayloe Piggott Gallery, Jackson Hole
October 27 - December 3, 2023

Troy Passey
TROY PASSEY 
Remember, 2022 
Graphite and acrylic on Bristol Vellum, 24 x 19 inches
© Troy Passey, courtesy of Tayloe Piggott Gallery

Troy Passey
TROY PASSEY 
Take This Longing From My Tongue - Leonard Cohen II, 2019 
Ink, ink wash, and acrylic on Neutech 25% cotton paper, 35 x 23 inches
© Troy Passey, courtesy of Tayloe Piggott Gallery

Troy Passey
TROY PASSEY
 
Beautawful
Neon, metal support, 9 ½ x 22 x 5 ½ inches
© Troy Passey, courtesy of Tayloe Piggott Gallery

TAYLOE PIGGOTT GALLERY presents Take This Longing, an exhibition of works by Boise-based artist TROY PASSEY.

Troy Passey is an interdisciplinary artist who merges idea and image in his text-based visual art. Take This Longing borrows its title from a Leonard Cohen song of the same name, and presents a selection of works on paper and neon light sculpture. These conceptual works are created through thoughtful, minimalist, and elemental compositions that utilize words as a visual–in addition to a written–language. In Troy Passey’s art, words operate in many ways; some become figurative, emerging as horizon lines or objects themselves, while others playfully name, or intuitively explain and narrate the objects drawn by Troy Passey.

Troy Passey grew up on a farm outside of Paris, Idaho, and was avid reader never without a pen or paper in his pocket. In these early years, he religiously jotted down quotes and ideas, ever-gathering what would later become his primary medium. Troy Passey always wanted to be a writer, but “would never call [himself] a writer because it was way too precious.” While studying English in college, Troy Passey also delved into art history and, later, when writing his master’s thesis on Andy Warhol, he came across words by Warhol which shifted the course of his career. “He said something that changed my life; he said, ‘People are often better at their second love than they are at their first love because you’re way too close to your first love, but, with your second love, you have some distance,’ so I changed my paradigm and called myself an artist.” His childhood habit of collecting texts, thoughts and words, and his appreciation of poetry and prose, unintentionally had been the consummate preparation for what would become his life’s work. Even today, this habit of second nature has become an integral part of Troy Passey’s artistic practice, as he continues to record the words and phrases that he encounters on a daily basis.

Although most often based on the scholarship of past writers, Troy Passey’s works are as physical and emotional as they are cerebral. A self-proclaimed “anti-calligrapher”, Troy Passey does not expect viewers to read the entirety of words he uses to build his works (which are often repetitions marked with an intensity that approaches asemic writing); rather, he hopes the works as a whole speak to people on an intuitive, elemental level, and considers the titles of the works to be the real texts to be read, crediting writers ranging from Emily Dickinson to Leonard Cohen, from Rainer Maria Rilke to Robert Frost, to The Cure. When speaking of his own work and life, Troy Passey yet turns to the words of others. “My work is not autobiographical, rather it is more reportage of the human condition. It’s kind of weird; the neon work is some of my most personal work in a way. Like “Beautawful” is almost like a Rosetta Stone for me. Joni Mitchell said, ‘Laughing and crying, you know it’s the same release,’ and I hope that my art is about that. That the world is really amazing and beautiful, but it can be awful too. You have to accept both.”

Today, Troy Passey lives, teaches, and works in Boise, Idaho. He attended Utah State University as an English major, with a minor in art history. In 1997, he graduated from Boise State University where he received master's in English. Troy Passey's art has been included in four Idaho Triennials. He was a recipient of an Idaho Commission on the Arts Fellowship, as well as an inaugural Artist in Residence, at the James Castle House in Boise, ID. Troy Passey has had numerous solo exhibitions throughout the American West, including at the Boise Art Museum, Boise, ID; Tayloe Piggott Gallery, Jackson, WY; Boise Contemporary Theater, Boise, ID; Herrett Center, Twin Falls, ID; Eagle Performing Arts Center, Eagle, ID; Sun Valley Center for the Arts, Ketchum, ID; and the Ogle Gallery, Portland, OR. His work has also been shown in group shows in Jackson Hole, Los Angeles, Boise, Ketchum, Houston, Dallas, Chicago, and Miami, among other locations. In 2023, Troy Passey completed Is Where the Angels Are, four site-specific memorials to those lost during Covid-19 at St Alphonsus Medical Centers located in Boise, ID; Nampa, ID; Ontario, OR; and Baker City, OR. He also completed KITH & KIN, a collection of sculptures at the James Castle House.

TAYLOE PIGGOTT GALLERY
62 South Glenwood Street, Jackson Hole,WY 83001

24/10/23

Exposition Jennifer Caubet @ URDLA, Villeurbanne - Négociations transversales - Lithographies

Jennifer Caubet 
Négociations transversales
URDLA, Villeurbanne
7 octobre - 16 décembre 2023

Jennifer Caubet
Jennifer Caubet 
Les Jardins des Vertus 6, 2023 
Lithographie 
75,5 x 55,5 cm, 20 ex./ vélin de Rives 
URDLA éditeur

Comment Jennifer Caubet s’empare-telle de la technique traditionnelle de la lithographie, elle qui fonde sa pratique plastique sur la mise en espace ? L’outil lithographique devient pour la plasticienne l’instigateur d’une recherche et d’une méthode de fabrication de l’image. Au-delà de la simple découverte du médium, pour Jennifer Caubet, ingénieure de l’espace, rigueur et précision s’allient à un outil du XIXe siècle.

Au sein des ateliers URDLA, elle envisage la rencontre entre des installations qui relèvent de la technologie avec des lithographies, c’est-à-dire l’impression de dessins au préalable réalisés sur une pierre calcaire. Il s’agit aussi de la rencontre des lignes faites sur le papier et des lignes qui se dessinent dans l’espace. Dans l’une des séries de lithographies elle expérimente les jeux d’empreintes et de transferts.

Jennifer Caubet
Jennifer Caubet à URDLA
Photographie © Cécile Cayon

Blettes et salades passées sous presse deviennent empreintes sur la pierre et fourniront l’image, le dessin. Cette confrontation induit un changement radical de repères en transformant des objets en volume en une représentation plane, particulièrement sur la surface du papier. Cependant, il ne s’agit pas d’évoquer une simple trace. La lithographie ne se résume pas à un simple outil, mais devient pour la plasticienne un espace analogique de confrontation, à l’image de ses Jardins des Vertus, qui mettent en lumière de manière explicite « une révolte » , celle du vivant aux portes de l’effondrement.

C’est précisément sur cet axe que réside la pratique de Jennifer Caubet. Un espace qui est tout aussi faille qu’interstice de potentialité et d’altérité. L’espace se joue dans le dessin sur le papier et dans le volume des salles d’expositions : en plus de ces grandes images imprimées, une série de volumes aux tailles et formes variées, dont la combinaison de matériaux brouille les frontières. Ces objets sophistiqués peuvent-ils être, autant des instruments de mesure, des habitations que des armes ?

Ils sont avant tout de ceux qui délimitent, attaquent ou défendent des zones. Ou peut-être leur dessein ouvre-t-il à de nouveaux champs ? En d’autres termes, ce sont des objets qui exercent des forces nommées soutènement et soulèvement, qui, malgré leur apparente opposition, permettent à Jennifer Caubet de tisser des liens dans une démarche à la fois fictive et politique. Depuis 2009 avec le déploiement de son installation E.A.T (Espace d’Autonomie Temporaire), l’artiste poursuit sa lecture d’Hakim Bey qui selon elle « s’est attaché à définir des espaces alternatifs, qui puissent naître, se soulever et disparaître ». En résulte dans son oeuvre, la mise en mouvement de « zones hors-temps » sans volonté d’exister à part entière.

JENNIFER CAUBET est née en 1982, à Tonneins. Elle vit et travaille à Aubervilliers. Elle est diplômée de l’École Nationale Supérieure des beaux-arts de Paris en 2008 après avoir suivi différentes formations à Toulouse, Barcelone et Tokyo. Grâce à des productions singulières avec des spécialistes, ingénieurs, architectes et entreprises, Jennifer Caubet amorce un travail de réflexion sur, dans et autour de l’espace, à travers la sculpture, l’installation et le dessin. Elle est représentée par Jousse Entreprise.


Les éditions et l’exposition de Jennifer Caubet ont reçu le soutien de La Passerelle, fonds de dotation.

URDLA
207 rue Francis-de-Pressensé, 69100 Villeurbanne