13/10/25

Stanley Whitney @ Gagosian, Athens - 'Return to the Garden' Exhibition

Stanley WhitneyReturn to the Garden
Gagosian, Athens
October 2, 2025 – January 17, 2026

Stanley Whitney - The Courage of the Poet
Stanley Whitney
The Courage of the Poet, 2025
Oil on linen
60 x 60 inches (152.4 x 152.4 cm)
© Stanley Whitney
Photo: Owen Conway
Courtesy Gagosian

Stanley Whitney - Gagosian
Stanley Whitney: Return to the Garden
Installation View, 2025
© Stanley Whitney
Photo: Stathis Mamalakis
Courtesy Gagosian

Gagosian presents Return to the Garden, an exhibition of new and recent paintings by Stanley Whitney in Athens. This is Whitney’s first exhibition in Greece since his participation in Documenta 14 in 2017.

The exhibition’s title, Return to the Garden, evokes themes of arcadian innocence and harmony with nature. Unencumbered by preconceived subjects or narrative elements, these vibrant abstractions offer viewers the opportunity to engage with a heightened awareness of color and perception.

Stanley Whitney asserts the power of color through loose grids of roughly rectangular shapes, creating compositions of three or four rows separated by horizontal bands that traverse the canvas. Characterized by active brushwork, layered pigment, and jostling borders, each field is defined in relation to its neighbors and to each painting as a whole. In some works, he repeats variations of the same hues either between multiple blocks or extended across their lateral bands, establishing myriad formal connections and contrasts. 

Stanley Whitney - On the Street Where You Live
Stanley Whitney
On the Street Where You Live, 2024
Oil on linen
60 x 60 inches (152.4 x 152.4 cm)
© Stanley Whitney
Photo: Owen Conway
Courtesy Gagosian

Stanley Whitney - Gagosian
Stanley Whitney: Return to the Garden
Installation View, 2025
© Stanley Whitney
Photo: Stathis Mamalakis
Courtesy Gagosian

By sustaining this format, Stanley Whitney has developed a compositional framework from which to produce individual canvases full of unexpected, energetic harmonies between vivid colors and fluid gestures. Influenced by traditions including Abstract Expressionism and quiltmaking, his paintings additionally parallel the polyphonies and syncopation of jazz, forming compelling expressions of creativity and freedom.

Stanley Whitney also admires ancient Greek vase painting, particularly of the preclassical Geometric and Archaic eras (c. 900–500 BCE). Painted by hand and divided into banded registers, the abstract linear patterns of these early vases underly the compositions of later, more figurative styles. In looking to such ancient sources when developing his stacked compositions, Stanley Whitney draws upon an interest in archaic forms that similarly motivated both the Abstract Expressionists and earlier modernists.

Stanley Whitney - Gagosian
Stanley Whitney: Return to the Garden
Installation View, 2025
© Stanley Whitney
Photo: Stathis Mamalakis
Courtesy Gagosian

Stanley Whitney - Roma
Stanley Whitney
Roma 55, 2023
Oil on linen
24 x 24 inches (61 x 61 cm)
© Stanley Whitney
Photo: Owen Conway
Courtesy Gagosian

In another connection with Mediterranean antiquity, the title of the Roma series (2017–) speaks to the inspiration Stanley Whitney found in Rome, where he lived and worked for five years in the 1990s. It was then that he consolidated the approach to abstraction that he continues to explore, a method sparked in part by the ancient architecture and murals that he encountered there and in Egypt. Unlike the straight lines of modern construction, the weathered, hand-built structures of the ancient world possess irregular contours and surfaces that correspond with the gestural demarcations of Whitney’s paintings.

Other works featured in Return to the Garden include new paintings from the ongoing Stay Song series (2017–), which Stanley Whitney debuted in Athens for Documenta 14, as well as the Monk & Munch paintings (2020–). In these rectangular canvases, he pays homage to jazz pianist and composer Thelonious Monk and expressionist painter Edvard Munch, highlighting essential relationships between art and music.

GAGOSIAN GALLERY
22 Anapiron Polemou Street, Athens 11521

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Hans-Peter Feldmann @ 303 Gallery, NYC - Exhibition of photographs, sculptures and paintings

Hans-Peter Feldmann
303 Gallery, New York
November 5 - December 20, 2025

303 Gallery presents a solo exhibition dedicated to the work of Hans-Peter Feldmann (1941-2023). Coinciding with his retrospective at the Kunstpalast Düsseldorf (September 18, 2025 – January 11, 2026), this presentation brings together over 40 photographs, sculptures and paintings spanning the artist’s 60-year career.

Düsseldorf-based Hans-Peter Feldmann was a passionate collector of images and ephemera, an original thinker and one of the first conceptual artists. Hans-Peter Feldmann focused on photography and artist books since the late sixties. Often collaging found images from magazines, postcards, books, advertisements, and stamps, Feldman used familiar motifs to explore the boundaries between art and everyday life. Unmade beds, car radios – Feldmann focalized unattended moments for a contemplative narrative based on being rather than acting.

Influenced by the Dadaist, the Situationists, Fluxus and Vienna Actionists, Hans-Peter Feldmann viewed art as an impression rather than the object. Feldmann's practice was defined not by materiality but by ideas. On view are several works from Feldmann’s Time series which began in 1970, which use analogue film rolls to shoot continuously the same place, object, or person. Modest subjects and trivial themes are chronicled frame by frame, recording the passage of time. His methods focused on the sequence rather than a single frame; it was through repetition that ideas became more conscious and deeper insight could be gleaned. His work Beine consists of 30 photographs of women’s legs – where one photograph of a woman’s legs may simply be provocative, 30 photographs pinned together becomes something more. In Alle Kleider einer Frau, 70 pieces of woman’s garment are displayed one photo at a time, the woman hidden, the artist emotionally distant, opening up space for the viewer’s interpretation.

In 2007, Hans-Peter Feldmann returned to painting without assuming the traditional role of the painter. Modifying and appropriating 19th Century paintings sourced from auctions and flea markets, Feldmann would transform classical depictions into post-modern caricatures by adding red noses or smudged lipstick to portraits, tattoos or tan lines to nudes. Feldmann’s work Horizont consists of 11 landscape paintings from various time periods. Differing in size, the pictures are aligned with their horizon line to create a continuous thread and reveal a new genre of landscape. Several paintings on view are suspended from the ceiling, a call back to Lina Bo Bardi’s design for the Museu de Arte de Sao Paolo (1968), this ‘floating installation’ democratizes the experience of the artwork, putting the viewer on equal ground with the paintings. 

Hans-Peter Feldmann spent his career challenging the social role of images and subverting expectations, reframing notions of beauty and representation. Feldmann believed art isn't confined to a gallery or museum but woven into everyday life – his works are a reflection on looking, an ability that every viewer holds.

303 GALLERY
555 W 21 Street, New York, NY 10011

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12/10/25

Grace Weaver @ Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin - 'Mothers' Exhibition

Grace Weaver: Mothers
Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin
11 September – 29 November 2025

Grace Weaver
Grace Weaver 
Untitled (Madonna of the Pinks), 2025
Photo: def image
© Grace Weaver, courtesy Galerie Max Hetzler

Galerie Max Hetzler presents Mothers, an exhibition of new paintings by Grace Weaver at Goethestrasse 2/3. This marks the artist’s fifth solo presentation with the gallery, and her first in one of the Berlin spaces.

In her latest series, Grace Weaver turns to archetypal motifs, including the mother and child, and the female nude. For Weaver, the body is not just a subject but a site – a stage on which line is choreographed in lyrical gestures, and through which emotion comes to the fore. Despite their monumental scale, Weaver’s new works disclose humble subjects and tender sentiments.

Across a series of large square-format canvases, Weaver’s mothers pose in enveloping embraces: swaying, kneeling, or cradling children in their laps. Stretching five metres in length, two paintings present the mother and child in frieze-like proportions, drawing the viewer’s eye along their sweeping arcs. Along the gallery’s far wall, a grid of twenty-six smaller canvases unfolds a chorus of female figures in tender embrace – some nurturing children, others folding their arms around themselves in bowing stances reminiscent of Eve or Aphrodite, attempting to shield their nude bodies from the viewer’s gaze. By contrast, the mother and child paintings propose a triangularity of gazes: at times either mother or child stares outward, at others they remain locked in one another’s gaze. Elongated, curving necks recall the postures of Weaver’s ‘Flowers’ series (2024). As in this earlier body of work, Weaver’s central motif is recognisable, and yet drifts towards abstraction; limbs taper into space, and abbreviated lines merely suggest garments or contours. Whether in flowers or figures, Weaver’s primary subject seems to be posture itself, used as a means to convey subtleties of mood.

Grace Weaver paints on the floor, using an all-over fresco-like process. Over a base of black, she applies watery matte washes of paint with over-sized brushes. Working wet-on-wet, the artist paints ‘in the round’, moving around the canvas as though executing a dance of deliberate, curving gestures. The saturated canvas becomes a responsive ground, absorbing each mark and resisting revision. Lines rhyme and harmonise. Surrounding the figure’s arcing outlines, haptic drips from Weaver’s overloaded brush register her movements, bringing the immediacy of drawing into painting. Grace Weaver prepares for each painting in successive ballpoint pen sketches, reducing figures to a few essential lines, so that the final act of painting proceeds in a determined choreography. The painting’s palettes – inky cobalts, pale pastels and papery cream tones – recall the materials of drawing.

Weaver’s investigation of the mother and child motif began in sketches of a diminutive fifth-century BCE Boeotian terracotta figurine of a woman nursing a young child, inspired by its formal abstraction and emotive reality. As she developed the series, references multiplied, with subsequent works drawing from Cranach’s Madonnas, with their crimped coiffure and rubbery anatomy. Throughout, Grace Weaver cites poses from Cypriot sandstone figurines, Netherlandish altarpieces, Egyptian statuettes of Isis and Horus, Orthodox Marian icons, and countless ancient Greek ‘kourotrophoi.’ Despite the breadth of influences, in their immediacy, Weaver’s paintings step outside of the specificities of time, space and allegory. Unadorned and close, they speak not of divine authority but of physical intimacy, vulnerability and a rare looseness of posture and presence.

Grace Weaver’s work is also on view as part of a joint exhibition with Günther Förg at Galerie Max Hetzler | Salon in Athens through 8 November 2025.

GRACE WEAVER (b. 1989, Vermont) lives and works in New York and Berlin. Solo exhibitions of the artist’s work have been held in international institutions including Yuz Museum, Shanghai; Neues Museum Nürnberg (both 2023–2024); Oldenburger Kunstverein; Kunstpalais Erlangen (both 2019); Kunstverein Reutlingen (2017); and DakshinaChitra, Chennai (2012). Weaver’s work has also been exhibited in group exhibitions including Oldenburger Kunstverein (2025); Yuz Museum, Shanghai (2023); Braunsfelder, Cologne; Wilhelm Hallen, Berlin; Miettinen Collection, Berlin; Neue Galerie, Gladbeck; Villa Merkel, Esslingen (all 2022); Kunstmuseum Ravensburg (2021); Galerie Wedding, Berlin (2018); ARoS Aarhus Art Museum (2016); University of Georgia (2015); Burlington City Arts (2013); Flynn Center for the Performing Arts, Burlington (2012); Colburn Gallery, University of Vermont, Burlington (2011); and Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne (2010).

GALERIE MAX HETZLER
Goethestrasse 2/3, 10623 Berlin

11/10/25

Hugh Hayden @ Lisson Gallery, London - "Hughmanity" Exhibition + Biography

Hugh Hayden: Hughmanity
Lisson Gallery, London 
26 September – 1 November 2025

A dining table engulfed in flames, a lifeboat lined with thorns, a child’s dress fashioned from tree bark—these are among the striking new works featured in Hughmanity, Hugh Hayden’s first return to London since his 2020 debut with the gallery was abruptly closed just days after opening due to COVID-19 restrictions. Now staging his seventh show with Lisson Gallery, the Texan-born artist expands upon his ongoing investigation of congregation, passage and assimilation through the transformation of familiar cultural symbols into allegories of community, rupture, and belief. These new works, meticulously crafted from trees through a series of techniques like felling, milling, carving, and laminating, extend Hayden’s sculptural language, while the introduction of painted surfaces signals a significant new expanding element within his practice.

At the center of Hughmanity is The Last Supper (2025), a stretched table encircled by flames and rendered unreachable. Dining tables, he reminds us, are not only sites of joy and communion but also of fraught family gatherings, unspoken grief, or absence. The flames that rise from its surface also echo religious and art historical precedents, from Leonardo da Vinci’s composition of the same name to Ed Ruscha’s Burning Gas Station. Suspended nearby, 13 cast-bronze skillets embedded with African masks extends the allegory. First conceived as “melting pots” in his previous London exhibition, American Food, these diasporic skillets now embody Jesus and his disciples. Their specialized forms and polished surfaces suggest both individuality, purpose and collectivity. Together, the fiery table and its floating counterpart form a pairing that questions the conditions under which communion, whether spiritual, social or cultural, can occur. 

Tension between refuge and danger shapes The Good Samaritan (2025), a dinghy lined with thorns carved from Christmas-tree branches that point inward toward the boat’s center. Partially navigable with its two oars left clear of protrusions and a small smooth space remaining at its core, the boat hovers between promise and threat. The vessel recalls Hayden’s earlier Gulf Stream (2022), inspired by Winslow Homer’s painting of a lone fisherman adrift at sea. Here, though, the narrative shifts toward an allegory of possible survival despite treacherous conditions. 

Elsewhere, painted wooden flags punctured by cigarettes, pencils, snakes or fragment patriotic imagery into narratives of anxiety, erasure, and defiance. One flag adorned with fifty wooden cigarettes in place of stars, presents a portrait of a nation under strain. Another, Gone with the Wind (2025), is studded with erasers seemingly caught in motion. In Medusa (2025), the fifty stars are replaced with carved and painted timber rattlesnakes, their writhing presence casting the banner as both myth and menace. These works collapse the line between patriotism and critique, underscoring how a nation’s or a person’s identity can be rewritten through conflict, erasure, and resistance.

Nearby, a sharply tailored blazer lined with thorns recalls the traditions of English suiting and emphasizes how such markers of status can also torture. Other works, including Pinocchia (2025), a bark-covered child’s dress layered with pink tulle, men’s dress shoes and a set of Mary Jane flats all encased in bark, highlight the tension between blending in and being defined, or even being consumed, by the very structures that promise acceptance.

Taken together, these works lend Hughmanity a spiritual undertone that oscillates between Biblical allegory and contemporary critique. As in earlier public projects—from Brier Patch (2022), a forest of branched school desks in Madison Square Park, to The End (2025), a skeletal form slowly dissolving into the New England woods—Hugh Hayden turns familiar forms into metaphors for entropy, exclusion, and renewal. 

Artist Hugh Hayden Biography

Hugh Hayden’s practice considers the anthropomorphization of the natural world as a visceral lens for exploring the human condition. Hugh Hayden transforms familiar objects through a process of selection, carving and juxtaposing to challenge our perceptions of ourselves, others and the environment. Raised in Texas and trained as an architect, his work arises from a deep connection to nature and its organic materials. Hayden utilizes wood as his primary medium, frequently loaded with multi-layered histories in their origin, including objects as varied as discarded trunks, rare indigenous timbers, Christmas trees or souvenir African sculptures. From these he saws, sculpts and sands the wood, often combining disparate species, creating new composite forms that also reflect their complex cultural backgrounds. Crafting metaphors for human existence and past experience, Hayden’s work questions the stasis of social dynamics and asks the viewer to examine their place within an ever-shifting ecosystem. 

Hugh Hayden was born in Dallas, Texas in 1983 and lives and works in New York City. He holds an MFA from Columbia University and a Bachelor of Architecture from Cornell University. Hayden’s work has been the subject of numerous exhibitions in the United States and abroad. Recent solo exhibitions include public art installations, ‘Gulf Stream’ at the Boston Public Art Triennial's Lot Lab, Boston, MA (2024), ‘Huff and a Puff’, at the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum, Lincoln, MA (2023), and ‘Brier Patch’, at the Madison Square Park Conservancy in New York, NY, which later traveled to the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh, NC, and Dumbarton Oaks Gardens in Washington, DC. Other solo institutional and gallery exhibitions include ‘Hugh Hayden: American Vernacular’ at the Frye Art Museum, Seattle, WA; ‘Hugh Hayden: Home Work’ at the Rose Art Museum, Waltham, MA; ‘Hugh Hayden: Homecoming’ at the Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas, TX; ‘Hughmans’ at Lisson Gallery, NY; ‘Hugh Hayden: American Vernacular’, Laumeier Sculpture Park, St. Louis, MO, USA; ‘Hughman’ at Lisson Gallery, LA; ‘Boogey Men’ at Institute of Contemporary Art Miami, Miami, FL, which traveled to the Blaffer Art Museum, Houston, TX; ‘Huey’, Lisson Gallery, New York, NY; ‘Hues’, C L E A R I N G, Brussels, Belgium; ‘Hugh Hayden: American Food’, Lisson Gallery, London, UK; ‘Hugh Hayden: Creation Myths’, Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, NJ; and ‘Hugh Hayden’, White Columns, New York, NY. Recent group exhibitions include ‘Ground/work 2025’, Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, MA (2025); ‘Finding My Blue Sky’, Lisson Gallery, London, UK (2025); ‘resonance’, Anthony Gallery, Chicago, IL, USA (2025); ‘Sharjah Biennial 16: to carry’, Sharjah Art Foundation, Sharjah, UAE (2025); ‘Making Home—Smithsonian Design Triennial’, Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, New York, NY, (2024 - 2025); ‘Flowers of Romance – Act Two’, Lodovico Corsini, Brussels, Belgium (2024); ‘A Garden of Promise and Dissent’, The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, CT (2024 - 2025); ‘Get in the Game: Sports, Art, Culture’, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA (2024 - 2025); ‘Post Human’, Jeffrey Deitch, Los Angeles, CA (2024); ‘Objects: USA 2024’, R & Company, New York, NY (2024), ‘Forest of Dreams: Contemporary Tree Sculpture’, Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park, Grand Rapids, MI (2023) and ‘NGV Triennial’, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia (2023). 

He is the recipient of residencies at Glenfiddich in Dufftown, Scotland (2014); Abrons Art Center and Socrates Sculpture Park (both 2012), and Lower Manhattan Cultural Council (2011). Hayden holds positions on advisory councils at Columbia University School of the Arts, Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University and Cornell College of Architecture Art and Planning. His work is part of public collections at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY; Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Los Angeles, CA; The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY, USA; Institute of Contemporary Art Miami, Miami, FL, USA; deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum, Lincoln, MA; Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA; Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, NJ; Des Moines Art Center, Des Moines, IA; Smart Museum, Chicago, IL; Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, TX; Speed Art Museum, Louisville, KY, USA; Zuzeum Art Centre, Riga, Latvia; Tank Shanghai, Shanghai, China; X Museum, Beijing, China; Dib Bangkok Museum of Contemporary Art, Bangkok, Thailand; and more. 

LISSON GALLERY
27 Bell Street, London NW1 5BY

Maren Hassinger: Living Moving Growing @ BAMPFA - Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive + Catalogue

Maren Hassinger: Living Moving Growing
Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
June 6 - November 29, 2026

Maren Hassinger Photograph
Maren Hassinger
: Tree Duet I, 
5617 San Vicente Blvd, Los Angeles, c. 1977/2021 
Silver gelatin print, 20 x 30 in 
Photo: Adam Avila
Courtesy of Susan Inglett Gallery, NYC

Maren Hassinger Installation
Maren Hassinger
Love (Pyramid), 2008/2015 
Installation view, The Sondheim Finalists,
Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, MD. 
Pink plastic bags filled with air, breath, and
love notes, steelhead pushpins, Dimensions variable (unique) 
Courtesy of the Artist and Susan Inglett Gallery, NYC

The most comprehensive retrospective to date of MAREN HASSINGER will be on view at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA), featuring half a century of work by one of the most influential living artists in the United States. Maren Hassinger: Living Moving Growing encompasses the full scope of Hassinger’s output across an eclectic range of forms, including large-scale sculpture, site-specific installations, video, and performance. The exhibition displays more than twenty of Hassinger’s most notable works from the 1970s to the present, as well as participatory and performance elements executed in partnership with the artist. Maren Hassinger: Living Moving Growing is accompanied by an extensive exhibition catalogue, featuring new scholarly essays and previously unpublished documentation of Hassinger’s work.

Maren Hassinger began her career in the 1970s and brought new perspectives to contemporary art, positioned in dialogue with a cohort of Black artists, feminist artists, and artists addressing ecological concerns. Known for constantly experimenting with impermanent and industrial materials as well as performance, she has worked at the intersection of dance, sculpture, video, and installation over the past five decades. While her work has been featured in solo and group exhibitions at leading museums across the country, the ephemerality of her practice requires that many of her sculptures and installations be recreated anew for each presentation. Maren Hassinger: Living Moving Growing is the most ambitious retrospective to date of the artist’s body of work, assembling major sculptures alongside temporary installations that will be recreated at BAMPFA. Notable examples include Love (2008), a site-specific sculpture composed of pink plastic bags inflated by human breath and filled with love notes; Beach (1980), a floor installation consisting of sand, plaster, and wooden dowels; and multiple sculptures that incorporate recently harvested tree branches, which BAMPFA will realize in partnership with the University of California Botanical Garden.

Over the course of Maren Hassinger: Living Moving Growing, BAMPFA will host a series of participatory workshops engaging visitors to co-create to a new work that will be incorporated into the retrospective. This has become a major aspect of Hassinger’s practice, extending her work in performance to engage directly with audiences. Hassinger will invite visitors to join her in twisting and knotting newspapers to create a new, large-scale installation. Assembled within the gallery, the installation will continue to grow throughout the run of the exhibition. The exhibition also features archival documentation, including video and photographs of many of Hassinger’s performances and ephemeral public art projects. BAMPFA is also working with Maren Hassinger to restage one of her most iconic performances, Pink Trash (1982) on UC Berkeley’s Crescent Lawn, across the street from the museum. 

Born in Los Angeles in 1947, Maren Hassinger studied dance and sculpture at Bennington College and received an MFA in Fiber Structure from UCLA. In the 1970s, she began collaborating with other artists as part of the collective Studio Z, including Senga Nengudi, Ulysses Jenkins, and David Hammons, among others. In 1980, Hassinger had her first solo exhibition at Just Above Midtown Gallery in New York; the following year, she became the first Black artist to have a solo exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Hassinger relocated to the East Coast in 1984 to participate in the artist-in-residence program at the Studio Museum in Harlem. After several years on Long Island, she moved to Baltimore, where she became Director of the Rinehart School of Sculpture at the Maryland Institute College of Art, a position she held for twenty years. She currently lives and works in Harlem, New York.

Maren Hassinger: Living Moving Growing marks the culmination of a renewed interest in Hassinger’s work in recent years, during which she has been featured in acclaimed group exhibitions at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Museum of Modern Art, and The Whitney Museum of American Art, among other leading art institutions. Her retrospective at BAMPFA will be co-curated by BAMPFA Chief Curator Margot Norton and Senior Curator Anthony Graham.

In conjunction with the retrospective, BAMPFA is partnering with DelMonico Books / D.A.P. to publish a fully illustrated catalogue on Maren Hassinger, the most extensive scholarly publication on this artist ever assembled. The catalogue will feature an introductory essay by Graham and a roundtable conversation moderated by Norton with Hassinger’s collaborators, including gallery owner, filmmaker, and activist Linda Goode Bryant, and artists Senga Nengudi and Ava Hassinger—Maren’s daughter and an accomplished artist in her own right. In addition, the catalogue will include an original interview with Hassinger conducted by the distinguished art historian Lowery Stokes Sims. Additional essays will be contributed by Robyn Farrell, Senior Curator and Director of Curatorial Affairs of The Kitchen; Kristen Juarez, Senior Research Specialist at the Getty Research Institute; and Hilton Als, UC Berkeley professor and longtime critic and essayist at The New Yorker.
“Maren Hassinger’s practice has been of great influence for generations of artists–from her early collaborative performances and experimental installations with Studio Z and JAM to her direct impact over decades as a teacher, and through her monumental sculptural installations in major museum collections across the United States,” said Margot Norton. “We are thrilled to finally bring her artworks and their stories from across her career together through our exhibition, and to showcase Hassinger’s profound contributions to contemporary art.”

“For decades, Maren Hassinger has created sculptures and installations that transcend disciplinary boundaries, transforming industrial and mass-produced materials into evocative abstractions,” said Anthony Graham. “This exhibition showcases how these innovative works have drawn attention to subtle movements and forms of our everyday lives, connecting us to one another and to the world around us.”

“Maren Hassinger’s work invites us to reflect on the beauty and complexity of human connection—through movement, material, and shared experience. Presenting this landmark retrospective at BAMPFA underscores our commitment to amplifying artists whose practices challenge conventions and inspire collective engagement across generations,” said BAMPFA’s Executive Director, Julie Rodrigues Widholm
Artist Maren Hassinger

Maren Hassinger (b. 1947) has spent the past five decades building an interdisciplinary practice that articulates the relationship between nature and humanity. Carefully choosing materials for their innate characteristics, Hassinger has explored the subjects of movement, family, love, nature, environment, consumerism, identity, and race. The artist uses her materials to mimic nature, whether bundling them to resemble a monolithic sheaf of wheat or planting them in cement to create an industrial garden. Over the past decade, Hassinger has been commissioned to make work for Sculpture Milwaukee (curated by Ugo Rondinone); The Art Institute of Chicago; Dia Bridgehampton; Socrates Sculpture Park, Queens; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; the Rockefeller Foundation, Tarrytown; and the Aspen Art Museum. Hassinger was recently honored with an exhibition focused on her collaborative performance work with Senga Nengudi at the Cooley Gallery, Reed College, Portland, OR traveling to the Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus, OH (2024), as well as a two-person survey alongside Nengudi at the Institut Valencià d'Art Modern, Valencia (2025). Hassinger is the recipient of the Women’s Caucus for the Arts Lifetime Achievement Award. Her work can be found in the permanent collections of the Art Institute of Chicago; the Guggenheim Museum; the Hirshhorn Museum; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the San Francisco Museum of Art; the Walker Art Center; and the Whitney Museum of American Art, among others.

Maren Hassinger: Living Moving Growing is curated by Margot Norton, Chief Curator, and Anthony Graham, Senior Curator.

BERKELEY ART MUSEUM AND PACIFIC FILM ARCHIVE - BAMPFA
2155 Center Street, Berkeley, CA 94720

Hans Josephsohn and Günther Förg – A Dialogue @ Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin

Hans Josephsohn and Günther Förg – A Dialogue
Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin
5 September – 25 October 2025

Galerie Max Hetzler presents Hans Josephsohn and Günther Förg – A Dialogue at Potsdamer Strasse 77-87, Berlin. In this first joint exhibition of the two artists, sculptures by Hans Josephsohn with their tactile surfaces are juxtaposed with Günther Förg’s grid paintings from the 1990s. Reliefs by both artists from different decades are on display on the upper floor of the gallery. 

Hans Josephsohn and Günther Förg came from different generations and only met a few times, but from the late 1990s onwards, Förg was familiar with Josephsohn’s sculptures. Following his usual practice, he studied his fellow artist's work and was especially fascinated by its materiality. Through Förg’s advocacy, Rudi Fuchs, then director of the Stedelijk Museum, became aware of the sculptor’s work, which led to Josephsohn's solo exhibition in Amsterdam in 2002. 

In contrast to Förg’s keen interest in his contemporaries, Josephsohn was more solitary in his working habits. His work is characterised by a fascination with mass and forms in space, which he repeatedly recalibrated using specific and recurring shapes over the course of six decades of his career as a sculptor. Since the 1950s, the artist sought to increase the volume of his figures by working with quick-drying plaster, which he had cast in brass or bronze. Traces of his search for the perfect expression of the human body can be seen in the additions and removals of material and in the imprints of his fingers on the finished works. The sculptures are characterised by an urgent physical materiality that combines the immediacy of technique with an aesthetic of timelessness in order to capture ‘réalité vivante’ (living reality). Working from the model, he created individual half-figures, such as the works shown in this exhibition, which were created between 1995 and 2002. Some of them are named, such as Untitled (Lola), 1996, or Untitled (Madeleine), 2000, yet it is only in viewing them that their portrait-like nature can be grasped from the blurring of their forms.

Förg’s interest in Josephsohn’s sculptures related to their materiality, as well as to their uncompromising nature. When he encountered the other artist's work, he had begun to work on the shimmering grids of the paintings known in literature as ‘grid pictures.’ The proximity between painting and three-dimensionality, which Förg repeatedly explored, becomes apparent in the open, diffused structures of the grids. He was influenced by the Norwegian painter Edvard Munch (1863–1944) and his use of non-figurative elements and colour fields. These works are characterised by the painterly treatment of the canvas, the layered lines of the same colours, and the unorthodox way in which the distinction between negative and positive space threatens to dissolve. The green-black-blue cross-hatched Untitled, 1995 weaves vertical and horizontal brushstrokes into a dense pattern, forming an airy whole that appears almost like fabric when viewed from a distance. The large portrait Untitled, 1996, on the other hand, is dominated by impasto ochre grids that seem to block the view of a hidden green background close to the surface of the painting. Förg’s multifaceted approach to art is manifested in the two-dimensional works shown here through subtle allusions to structures and spaces beyond the pictorial plane, thus questioning the boundaries between the artistic disciplines of architecture, painting and sculpture.

While Josephsohn’s monumental sculptures on the lower floor of the exhibition form ‘the counterweight to our bodies,’ which Förg describes in conversation with Christoph Schenker [1] as a necessary corporeal counterpart to his painting, relief works by both artists are juxtaposed on the upper floor of the exhibition alongside a large half-figure Untitled (Ruth), 1968, and two grid paintings hanging parenthetically on each end of the room. Concrete reliefs such as Untitled, 1990 by Günther Förg hang alongside bronze reliefs of similar format such as Hans Josephsohn’s Untitled, 1974. Similarities become apparent in the dialogue between the works, in their emphasis on weight and presence. In the interplay of surface and light, the concept of the dialogical exhibition becomes tangible for the viewer.

[1] Günther Förg in conversation with Christoph Schenker, 1989, quoted in Günther Förg: Trunk Road and Branch Roads, exh. cat., Shanghai: Long Museum, 2023, p. 14.


Hans Josephsohn (1920–2012) lived and worked in Zurich. Solo exhibitions of his works have been held at international institutions, including the Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris (2024–2025); MASI – Museo d'arte della Svizzera Italiana, Lugano (2020–2021); Museum zu Allerheiligen, Schaffhausen (2020); ICA Milano (2019); Museum Folkwang, Essen (2018); Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Wakefield (2013); Lismore Castle Arts (2012); MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt am Main (2008); Kolumba - Kunstmuseum des Erzbistums Köln (2005); and Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (2002), among other major museums. Works by Hans Josephsohn were prominently featured at the 55th Venice Biennale (2013). 

Works by Hans Josephsohn can be found in the collections of the Aargauer Kunsthaus, Aarau; Kolumba – Art Museum of the Archdiocese of Cologne; Kunsthaus Zurich; Kunstmuseum St. Gallen; Museum Folkwang, Essen; Kunstmuseum Appenzell; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris; Museum zu Allerheiligen, Schaffhausen; MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt am Main; Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin; and Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam.


Günther Förg (1952–2013) was born in Füssen and died in Freiburg after living and working in Areuse, Switzerland. His work has been shown in numerous solo exhibitions at international institutions, including Fondation Le Corbusier, Paris; CAC Málaga (both 2024); Long Museum, Shanghai (2023); Palazzo Contarini Polignac, Venice (2019); Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Dallas Museum of Art (both 2018); Deichtorhallen, Hamburg (2015); Fundación Luis Seoane, A Coruña; Museum Brandhorst, Munich (both 2014); Museo Carlo Bilotti, Rome (2013); Essl Museum, Klosterneuburg (2008); Tokyo Museum of Contemporary Art; Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris (both 1991); and Secession, Vienna (1990), among others.

Works by Günther Förg are included in major public collections, including the Art Institute of Chicago; The Broad, Los Angeles; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Fondation Beyeler, Basel; Hamburger Bahnhof – Museum für Gegenwart, Berlin; Kunsthaus Zürich; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid; Museum Brandhorst, Munich; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; mumok, Vienna; Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin; Saint Louis Art Museum; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Städel Museum, Frankfurt am Main; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Tate, London; and Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, to name but a few.

GALERIE MAX HETZLER
Potsdamer Strasse 77-87, Berlin

10/10/25

Il Color Exhibition @ THE POOL NYC, Palazzo Fagnani Ronzoni, Milan - First chapter of the exhibition "Times of the Gaze. 90 Years of Italian Photography in Two Acts"

Il Color
First chapter of the exhibition "Times of the Gaze. 90 Years of Italian Photography in Two Acts"
THE POOL NYC at Palazzo Fagnani Ronzoni, Milan
October 8 – December 20, 2025 

Mario Cresci Photograph
Mario Cresci
From the serie A Tutto Tondo, 2007

Vincenzo Castella Photograph
Vincenzo Castella
Monte San Giacomo Salerno, 1982

THE POOL NYC at Palazzo Fagnani Ronzoni in the heart of Milan's historic center (Via Santa Maria Fulcorina, 20) presents the exhibition Il Colore, the first chapter of the series I tempi dello sguardo. 90 anni di fotografia italiana in due atti (Times of the Gaze. 90 Years of Italian Photography in Two Acts), which features two exhibitions at different but consecutive times, bringing together a total of 194 works by 55 Italian and international artists who have shaped the history of 20th-century photography.

The project's title alludes to the artists' ability to mark an era, a "time" in our history, with their gaze, and at the same time invites us to rediscover the time—away from the excesses of today's visual production—to rediscover the extraordinary talents that have made Italian photography unique, even internationally.

The first event, curated by THE POOL NYC, presents the experiences of those masters who have made the use of color one of their most characteristic features.

Luigi Ghirri Photograph
Luigi Ghirri
Olanda - Otterlo, 2009

Luigi Ghirri Photograph
Luigi Ghirri
Parma, 1984

Franco Fontana Photograph
Franco Fontana
Paesaggio - Italia, 1995

The exhibition, comprising 115 photographs, features, among others, works by Luigi Ghirri, master of light and quiet, by Giovanni Chiaramonte who travels to Venice to capture the city's most hidden corners, and by Franco Fontana who shapes the landscape through colour, from the geometric urban visions of the 1970s to the abstract sensuality of the Piscina series, to Italian landscapes transfigured into fields of colour.

Guido Guidi Photograph
Guido Guidi
Pomposa, 1983

Mario Schifano Photograph
Mario Schifano
"Arte istantanea – 3000 fotografie di Mario Schifano" 
22 Aprile - 19 Giugno. Foto-n 2403, 1994

Mario Schifano Photograph
Mario Schifano
"Arte istantanea – 3000 fotografie di Mario Schifano" 
22 Aprile - 19 Giugno. Foto-n 2413, 1994

The exhibition continues with Guido Guidi who makes photography an act of waiting, with Mario Schifano, irreverent and experimental, who works with the same creative freedom with which he interpreted painting, while Paolo Gioli , the alchemist, although starting from sensitive photographic material, considers it a "material" to be shaped and manipulated.

If on the one hand, Leonardo Genovese captures fragments of dreams through a fierce and revealing light, the Lucanian “controra”, which cuts into bodies and deforms appearances, Rita Lintz, on the other hand, transforms waste into relics: rags become carpets and waste becomes beauty.

Jiang Zhi Photograph
Jiang Zhi 蒋志
Rainbow n 2, 2006

The first act of the exhibition is completed with photographs by international artists, including Denis Brihat, Wim Delvoye, Claus Goedicke, Béatrice Helg, John Hilliard, Tracey Moffatt, Jiang Zhi, Wang Qingsong .

During the exhibition period, Palazzo Fagnani Ronzoni hosts a series of collateral events, such as meetings, talks, book presentations, and themed evenings with artists, historians, and photography critics.

Artists : Denis Brihat, Vincenzo Castella, Giovanni Chiaramonte, Mario Cresci, Wim Delvoye, Cosimo Di Leo Ricatto, Franco Fontana, Vittore Fossati, Andrea Galvani, Leonardo Genovese, Luigi Ghirri, Luca Gilli, Paolo Gioli, Claudio Gobbi, Claus Goedicke, Guido Guidi, Béatrice Helg, John Hilliard, Jiang Zhi, Luisa Lambri, Rita Lintz, Marcello Mariana, Tracey Moffatt, Brigitte Niedermair, Wang Qingsong, Mario Schifano, Davide Tranchina, Luigi Veronesi, Cuchi White, Silvio Wolf, Marco Zanta.

The second episode, scheduled from January 16 to February 28, 2026 , will be dedicated to Black and White , with works by authors such as Renato Di Bosso, Alfredo Camisa, Mario De Biasi, Mario Giacomelli, Antonio Biasiucci, Franco Vaccari, Mario Cresci, Luigi Erba, Andrea Galvani, in dialogue with international photographers, including Elliott Erwitt, Jan Groover, Horst P. Horst, Michael Kenna, William Klein, Minor White.

The Pool NYC | Palazzo Fagnani Ronzoni 
Via Santa Maria Fulcorina, 20, Milano

Albert Oehlen @ Gagosian Gallery, Paris - 'Endless Summer'

Albert Oehlen: Endless Summer
Gagosian, Paris
October 20 – December 20, 2025

Texte en français ci-dessous


Albert Oehlen
Albert Oehlen
Endless Summer, 2021
Oil on canvas
35 1/2 x 27 5/8 inches (90 x 70 cm)
© Albert Oehlen
Photo: Simon Vogel
Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

Albert Oehlen
Albert Oehlen
Untitled, 2021
Oil on canvas
35 1/2 x 27 5/8 inches (90 x 70 cm)
© Albert Oehlen
Photo: Stefan Rohner
Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

Albert Oehlen
Albert Oehlen
Untitled, 2022
Acrylic, oil and lacquer on canvas
62 7/8 x 72 1/4 inches (159.5 x 183.5 cm)
© Albert Oehlen
Photo: Simon Vogel
Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

Gagosian will present Endless Summer, an exhibition of new paintings by Albert Oehlen in Paris. The paintings explore the theme of the bather, a motif deeply embedded in French art history that captivated such artists as Pierre Bonnard, Paul Cézanne, Edouard Manet, and Pablo Picasso.

The bather has maintained a significant and diverse presence throughout the history of art, and in Endless Summer, Albert Oehlen contributes to the tradition in characteristically expressive style. Presenting variations on a dark-haired female nude, he sometimes approaches, sometimes retreats from his ostensible subject, using it as a template for unbounded experimentation. While the woman’s shape is clearly legible in some paintings, in others it dissolves into pure gesture, shifting Oehlen’s project continually between representation and abstraction.

Neither directly observed nor wholly improvised, Oehlen’s recurring figure originates in Tramonto Spaventoso (Terrifying Sunset, 1940–49) by the Russian-born American modernist painter John Graham, whose work Albert Oehlen discovered in the 1990s. Embellishing, reworking, and recontextualizing Graham’s image, the artist combines graphic gestures and “painterly” drips with surprising color combinations and textural obfuscations. The density of the compositions also varies—some are packed with formal incident, while others appear relatively sparse.

In Endless Summer, Albert Oehlen again tests the limits of coherence, reinventing a long-established motif while rejecting the quest for stable form and meaning.

Endless Summer is presented in the Paris gallerie of Gagosian and Galerie Max Hetzler, and is accompanied by a copublished catalogue featuring an essay by Jean-Pierre Criqui and an interview with Max Dax about Albert Oehlen’s filmmaking.


Texte en français

Gagosian va présenter Endless Summer, une exposition de nouvelles peintures d’Albert Oehlen qui explorent le thème de la baigneuse, un motif profondément ancré dans l’histoire de l’art français qui a captivé des artistes tels que Pierre Bonnard, Paul Cézanne, Edouard Manet et Pablo Picasso. 

La baigneuse a maintenu une présence significative et variée tout au long de l’histoire de l’art, et dans Endless Summer, Albert Oehlen s’incrit dans cette tradition avec un style expressif caractéristique de son travail. Présentant des variations sur un nu féminin aux cheveux noirs, il s’approche de son sujet et parfois s’en éloigne, l’utilisant comme modèle pour une expérimentation sans limite. Si la forme de la femme est clairement lisible dans certaines peintures, dans d’autres elle se dissout dans un geste pur, faisant continuellement osciller le projet d’Oehlen entre représentation et abstraction.

Ni directement observée ni totalement improvisée, la figure récurrente d’Albert Oehlen trouve son origine dans Tramonto Spaventoso (Coucher de soleil terrifiant, 1940–49) du peintre moderniste américain d’origine russe John Graham, qu’Albert Oehlen a découvert dans les années 1990. En embellissant, retravaillant et recontextualisant l’image de John Graham, l’artiste mêle des gestes graphiques, des drips « picturaux », des combinaisons de couleurs surprenantes et des obstructions texturales. La densité des compositions varie également : certaines foisonnent d’incidents formels, tandis que d’autres paraissent relativement éparses.

Albert Oehlen
Albert Oehlen
Untitled, 2024
Oil on canvas
74 7/8 x 50 3/8 inches (190 x 128 cm)
© Albert Oehlen
Photo: Simon Vogel
Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

Albert Oehlen
Albert Oehlen
Untitled, 2024
Oil on canvas
74 7/8 x 63 inches (190 x 160 cm)
© Albert Oehlen
Photo: Simon Vogel
Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

Albert Oehlen
Albert Oehlen
Untitled, 2024
Oil on canvas
11 7/8 x 9 1/2 inches (30 x 24 cm)
© Albert Oehlen
Photo: Simon Vogel
Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

Albert Oehlen
Albert Oehlen
Untitled, 2025
Acrylic, oil and lacquer on canvas
108 x 90 inches (274.3 x 228.6 cm)
© Albert Oehlen
Photo: Simon Vogel
Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

Dans Endless Summer, Albert Oehlen teste à nouveau les limites de la cohérence, réinventant un motif établi de longue date tout en rejetant toute quête de forme et de signification stable.

Endless Summer est présentée dans la galerie Gagosian et la galerie Max Hetzler à Paris, et est accompagnée d’un catalogue coédité comprenant un essai de Jean-Pierre Criqui ainsi qu’un entretien avec Max Dax au sujet du travail cinématographique d’Albert Oehlen.

GAGOSIAN PARIS
4 rue de Ponthieu, 75008 Paris

Richard Prince: Posters Exhibition @ Galerie Max Hetzler, Marfa, Texas

Richard Prince: Posters
Galerie Max Hetzler, Marfa, Texas
Through 7 December 2025

Richard Prince Poster
Richard Prince 
Untitled, 2016 
Courtesy of Richard Prince Studio

Hetzler presents Posters, a solo exhibition of works by Richard Prince, for the gallery’s annual presentation in Marfa, Texas, through December 7, 2025.

One of the foremost representatives of appropriation art, Richard Prince has been recontextualising images and ideas from mass media, advertising and entertainment since the 1970s. Often based on products of everyday American culture, his practice is one of ‘post-production’, which reworks cultural phenomena and their attributes to rewrite received narratives and our understanding of history.

The present exhibition brings together a large body of Richard Prince’s Poster works on canvas and on paper, created between 2014 and 2024. The large canvases show reproductions of advertisements for mail-order posters, as were often found at the back of magazines in the second half of the 20th century. Hugely popular at the time, these printed images represent touchstones of early counter-cultural magazines, which are among Richard Prince’s long-term interests. The motifs of political slogans and far-out art in the form of cheap posters are singled out and chosen by the artist. They find their origins in the hippie head-shop culture of the late ’60s, which also encompassed magazines, music and comedy records. Taped-off and blocked-out from the pages where they were listed, the images have been blown up so that the resulting works are far larger than the original posters.

In their seemingly arbitrary selection, the poster images combine anti-war slogans, reproductions of Modern art, graphic-design interpretations of nude couples, and pictures of cats in sometimes humorously disparate compilations. The revolutionary attitude of the late ’60s student protests is juxtaposed against the self-indulgence of hippie culture in this side-by-side illustration of popular visual language.

If cultural attitudes are transported through everyday imagery, then  Richard Prince makes them transparent by applying the focus of his artistic practice to these source materials. Method and implication are translated into different contexts and, with his meticulous attention to detail, the artist decodes the communication of contemporary visual language and the ideas which are concealed within it.

Artist Richard Prince

Richard Prince (b. 1949, Panama Canal Zone) lives and works in Upstate New York. Prince’s work has been the subject of numerous solo exhibitions in international institutions, including Georgia Museum of Art, Athens (2024); Louisiana Museum of Art, Humblebaek; The Karpidas Collection (both 2022–2023); Museum for Modern Art, Weserburg (2021); Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit (2019–2020); Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires Malba; Espace Louis Vuitton, Beijing; Astrup Fearnley Museet, Oslo (all 2018); Los Angeles County Museum of Art (2017–2018); Kunsthaus Bregenz (2014); Picasso Museum, Malaga (2012); Le Consortium, Dijon (2011); Serpentine Gallery, London; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (both 2008); Guggenheim Museum, New York (2007–2008); Kunsthalle Zürich (2002); Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Basel (2001); and MAK, Vienna (2000), among others. The artist participated in the Venice Biennale in 2007 and 2003, as well as the Whitney Biennial in 2004, 1997, 1987 and 1985.

Works by Richard Prince are in the collections of international museums including the Art Institute of Chicago; Astrup Fearnley Museet, Oslo; The Broad, Los Angeles; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris; Institute of Contemporary Arts, Boston; Kunstmuseum Basel; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Palazzo Grassi, Pinault Collection, Venice; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Tate, London; Victoria and Albert Museum, London; and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, among others.

GALERIE MAX HETZLER
1976 Antelope Hills Road, Marfa, Texas

Richard Prince: Posters
Galerie Max Hetzler, Marfa, Texas, 17 May – 7 December 2025

Annerose Riedl @ Schlossmuseum Linz / Castell Museum Linz, Austria - Zwischen-Räume / In-Between Spaces Exhibition Curated by Inga Kleinknecht

Annerose Riedl 
Zwischen-Räume / In-Between Spaces
Schlossmuseum Linz / Castell Museum Linz, Austria
October 9, 2025 - February 8, 2026

Annerose Riedle
Annerose Riedl
Ohne Titel [Untitled], 2025 
Acryl, Ölkreide auf Schullandkarte, 161 x 222 cm
Photograph by Thomas Radlwimmer © The Artist

Annerose Riedl - Exhibition View
Exhibition View, Annerose Riedl. Zwischen-Räume 
08.10.25 – 08.02.26, Schlossmuseum Linz
© OÖLKG, Michael Maritsch

Annerose Riedl
Annerose Riedl 
Ohne Titel [Untitled], 2005 
Holz bemalt, 108 x 70 x 110 cm
Photograph by Thomas Radlwimmer © The Artist

Annerose Riedl - Exhibition View
Exhibition View, Annerose Riedl. Zwischen-Räume 
08.10.25 – 08.02.26, Schlossmuseum Linz
© OÖLKG, Michael Maritsch

Annerose Riedl - In-between spaces

In her exhibition Zwischen-Räume (In-Between Spaces), Austrian artist Annerose Riedl juxtaposes images of spatial situations with sculptures. In the images she paints on discarded school maps, she creates nearly empty spaces defined by the placement of a few perspective lines. Both the sculptures and the painted figures give the impression that she is transcending the boundaries between image and reality, moving into or out of the space.

Annerose Riedl
Annerose Riedl
 
Leiter für Alois, 2000
Birnenholz bemalt, 164 x 50 cm 
Photograph by Thomas Radlwimmer © The Artist

Annerose Riedl
Annerose Riedl
Ohne Titel [Untitled], 2025
H 26 cm, Holz, Ton, Glassturz
Photograph by Thomas Radlwimmer © The Artist

Annerose Riedl - Exhibition View
Exhibition View, Annerose Riedl. Zwischen-Räume  
08.10.25 – 08.02.26, Schlossmuseum Linz
© OÖLKG, Michael Maritsch

Annerose Riedl - Between levels

In her spatial images, Annerose Riedl also combines the main motifs of her work, which include human figures and ladders. Her painted and wooden figures stand in groups in front of doorways or windows, or individually climb ladders from one spatial level to another. Some ladders lead upwards, others downwards, lean against the wall or lie on the floor. They at least offer the possibility of leaving a room or moving to other levels. In contrast, there are real, wooden ladders, on whose rungs the artist positions individual figures. These ladders lead nowhere and do not meet any safety standards. For Annerose Riedl, the "Ladders Without a Goal" take on the function of shelves for the storage of emotions, attitudes, or gestures.

Annerose Riedl
Annerose Riedl 
Berührung, 1995
Holz bemalt, 117 x 15 x 30 cm 
© OÖ Landes-Kultur GmbH, Land Oberösterreich

Annerose Riedl - Exhibition View
Exhibition View, Annerose Riedl. Zwischen-Räume  
08.10.25 – 08.02.26, Schlossmuseum Linz
© OÖLKG, Michael Maritsch

Annerose Riedl - Female figures

Another sculptural focus of the exhibition is a series of works from Annerose Riedl's continuous creative phase. These primarily depict female figures who appear grounded, self-confident, and self-ironic.

Annerose Riedl, born in 1949 in Passau, lives and works in Brunnenthal near Schärding, Austria.

A bilingual catalogue in German and English will be published by Distanz Verlag to accompany the exhibition Annerose Riedl: Zwischen-Räume (In-Between Spaces) with a foreword by Alfred Weidinger and texts by Andrea Bina, Marion Bornscheuer, and Inga Kleinknecht.

Curated by Inga Kleinknecht

SCHLOSSMUSEUM / CASTEL MUSEUM LINZ
Schlossberg 1, 4020 Linz, Austria