Showing posts with label Chelsea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chelsea. Show all posts

03/09/25

Yuan Fang @ Skarstedt Gallery, NYC - "Spaying" Exhibition

Yuan Fang: Spaying
Skarstedt Gallery, New York
September 4 – October 25, 2025

Skarstedt Chelsea presents Spaying, Yuan Fang’s second solo exhibition with the gallery (the previous one was in London). In this deeply personal and formally rigorous body of work, Yuan Fang turns inward, offering a meditation on illness, identity, and the intricate architecture of womanhood. In addition to her large-scale canvases, Yuan Fang debuts a suite of smaller, more intimate paintings—what the artist refers to as “subplots,” fragments of a larger, lived narrative.

The exhibition’s title alludes to the medical and emotional ramifications of Fang’s recent breast cancer diagnosis and subsequent treatments, functioning as a reference not only to the potential biological consequences of her treatment, but also the literal act of cutting—a gesture central to her process. Through cycles of modification, layering, and erasure, Yuan Fang pares down each composition until a dominant “entity” emerges. These central forms, always abstract yet bodily, function as torsos, anchoring each painting with a visceral sense of presence. “I need my paintings to be confrontational,” Yuan Fang notes, and indeed, each image carries that charge, meeting the viewer with both the emotional weight of her experience and a visual strength that builds like a storm on the horizon. 

New to this body of work is Fang’s embrace of negative space. Informed by the tradition of “leaving blank” in Chinese painting, these compositional voids focus the viewer’s attention on what remains. Separately, the rhythm of her studio practice has slowed, inviting longer periods of contemplation and greater attention to detail. The resulting compositions feel more deliberate with each painting charged with quiet intensity.

Autobiographical threads run throughout. Several works incorporate the artist’s own medical imaging subtly embedded in the compositions, such as Accumulating, Breaking Through the Defense Line. Others channel the psychic toll of external expectation and all of the rage, pressure, and fatigue that accompany it. 

Throughout the show, Yuan Fang navigates the porous boundaries between vulnerability and strength, life and death. This emotional duality is echoed in the palette of deep burgundies, forest greens, and indigos, and in the evocative titles of works such as Standing, Injured Horse and Bloody Meteorite Falling from the Sky. In the ease of her oil transitions and the fluidity of her lines, there is a quiet but profound sense of release. The works in Spaying may emerge from pain, but they insist on clarity. Though anchored in personal experience, Spaying broadens Fang’s ongoing investigation into the construction of feminine identity and the quiet rebellions required to reclaim it. Confronting her own mortality has yielded a new lucidity, and with it, a sharpened resolve to live on her own terms.

SKARSTEDT NEW YORK CHELSEA
547 West 25th New York, NY 10001

25/08/25

Sliced Tropics & Cosmic Dancers @ Luhring Augustine Gallery, NYC - Lygia Clark, Sarah Crowner, Mark Handforth, Elizabeth Murray, Richard Rezac, Philip Taaffe

Sliced Tropics & Cosmic Dancers
Luhring Augustine Gallery, New York
September 12 – October 25, 2025

Luhring Augustine presents a group exhibition that highlights the work of Lygia Clark, Sarah Crowner, Mark Handforth, Elizabeth Murray, Richard Rezac, and Philip Taaffe. These six artists share a kindred interest in disrupting of familiar forms, employing unique strategies such as manipulations of lines and planes – folding, pinching, slicing, splicing – and radical shifts in scale to reshape and reimagine recognizable and quotidian motifs. 

ARTISTS BIOS

Lygia Clark (b. 1920, Belo Horizonte, Brazil – d.1988, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) is one of the preeminent artists of the twentieth century, whose pioneering body of work reimagined the relationship between audience and the art object. A founding member of the 1950s Brazilian Neoconcretist movement, Clark proposed a radical approach to thinking about painting by treating its pictorial surface as if it were a three-dimensional architectural space. Her iconic Bichos, or sculptures constructed out of hinged metal planes, allowed for the audience to exercise authorship through participation. Clark’s reliance on the viewer to steer her sculptures through many possible configurations not only jeopardized the autonomy of the art object itself, but also reconfigured her art as a performative, time-based event.

Sarah Crowner (b. 1974, Philadelphia, PA) explores the spaces where geometry abuts gesture, materiality merges with composition, and the graphic confronts the handmade. Her sewn canvases initially appear pristine in their composition, however closer inspection reveals the various slippages, imprints, and nuances of hand-painted surfaces constructed from separate yet related elements. Architecture plays a significant role in many of her works; her site-specific wall pieces transform spaces into three-dimensional experiences in which the viewer processes the environment as one autonomous artwork. The patterns in her work, drawn equally from the natural world and historic sources, create an entryway between the art object and the context, enabling the viewer to be enveloped and literally step inside her work.

Mark Handforth’s (b. 1969, Hong Kong) works are interventions in space: offering novel engagements within existing environments and asserting new perspectives on familiar fixtures. His sculptures displace quotidian objects and recontextualize their forms in unexpected articulations. In some of his iconic works, the bodies of stars, streetlamps, and traffic signs whimsically buckle, twist, and droop. The seemingly defunct and defeated contortions in these forms are countered by a gracefulness imparted by Handforth’s meticulous craftmanship; this incongruity imbues the works with a wry humor and an endearing pathos. His works reference a post-punk aesthetic and utilitarian minimalism, while the capricious scale and juxtapositions draw on the legacies of Surrealism and Dadaist absurdism.

Elizabeth Murray (b. 1940, Chicago, IL – d. 2007, Granville, NY) was an artist at the forefront of American painting for five decades and is considered one of the most important postmodern abstract artists of her time. Her drive and determination produced a singularly innovative body of work characterized by a Cubist-informed Minimalism and streetwise Surrealism. Throughout her career, she reveled in the physicality of paint and approached her work through the constructive vocabulary of sculpture, warping, twisting, splintering, and knotting her canvases. In the 1980s Murray introduced three-dimensionality to her canvases, bringing about a complete break from traditional, flat, rectilinear compositions. Muddied, moody, and gestural, these paintings blazed a course of international recognition and notoriety.

Richard Rezac’s (b. 1952, Lincoln, NE) abstract sculptures, rooted in a studious consideration of the history of art, architecture, and design, quietly connote everyday sources, leaving the viewer with a sense of familiarity and closeness. Exceptionally precise in their execution, with each decision carefully considered by the artist, the pieces are made to be looked at and thought of with absorption. Their human scale and careful placement (the height on the wall, the distance they hang from the ceiling, etc.) initiates a dialogue that demands time, the works revealing themselves slowly. This combination of exquisite craft and spatial intentionality imparts a knowing presence to the sculptures, lending an ostensible sense that they are full of concealed information. Taciturn, earnest, and magnetic, they toggle between congruence and dissonance, space and form, lightness and solidity.

Philip Taaffe’s (b. 1955, Elizabeth, NJ) practice is distinguished by its elaborate sampling of techniques and symbols that merge iconography, design, and art historical and cultural motifs to generate something authentically new. Celebrated for his ability to build intricate and contemplative compositions culled from this wide-ranging lexicon of imagery, Taaffe produces transfixing works rife with geometric forms and interwoven complex patterns that call into question traditionally accepted definitions of realism and abstraction. The visual vibrancy and dynamism that underlie his work reveals the convergence of the optical and the conceptual, the decorative and the narrative, the natural and the man-made, as well as the ancient and the modern. 

LUHRING AUGUSTINE CHELSEA
531 West 24th Street, New York, NY 10011

15/07/25

Claudette Schreuders: Genesis @ Jack Shainman Gallery, New York

Claudette Schreuders: Genesis
Jack Shainman Gallery, New York
Through August 1, 2025

Jack Shainman Gallery presents Genesis, an exhibition of new work by Claudette Schreuders, the artist’s eighth solo exhibition with the gallery. Bringing together figurative sculptures made in both wood and bronze, Genesis reimagines scenes and characters from the suburban landscape of Cape Town that Schreuders calls home. Using the raw material of her own life as the foundation to create portraits that are equally archetypal and idiosyncratic, Claudette Schreuders explores how specific forms can convey universal truths and how personal history remains fundamentally connected to social reality. 

For over thirty years, Claudette Schreuders has made sculptures about the human figure that express a deep understanding of human psychology. Working slowly and gradually, Schreuders carefully shapes her material to create uncannily familiar subjects that invite association and comparison while at the same time resisting any single link or reference. Though the poses and arrangements of her figures are often static, straightforward and direct, Claudette Schreuders pays great attention to the subtleties of each face, where slight inflections of shape and contour, or line and color, can provide viewers with the necessary detail to see humanity in figures that might otherwise appear impersonal. Looking at the historical examples of West African and Medieval sculpture, American folk and outsider art as well, Claudette Schreuders borrows the simplicity of form and composition found in those traditions as a way of sparking interpretation and emotional investment.

The works in Genesis were made after the conclusion of Claudette Schreuders’ previous exhibition with the gallery, Doubles, in 2022. In that exhibition, Schreuders investigated the universal experience of isolation that resulted from the lockdown during COVID-19 pandemic. Her sculptural figures were rendered in joined pairs in which each seemed to hauntingly, if not exactly, mirror the other. In Genesis Claudette Schreuders returned to the confines of her own home or studio and looked at the larger world of the suburbs as a kind of idyll in itself, one that can provide the time and space to contemplate the essential structures and forms of life around us.

Like its biblical reference, the exhibition title reflects Schreuders’ sustained emphasis on creating simplistic yet original forms as a way of pursuing profound truths. In the titular sculpture in the exhibition, her partner is shown supine while reading Robert Crumb’s The Book of Genesis. The muted and relatively restrained palette that Claudette Schreuders uses to describe the scene ultimately belies its subtlety of detail and psychological implication. This dynamic is present throughout the exhibition in works that are disarmingly approachable before revealing themselves to be materially complex and narratively open-ended. In School (Emil) (2024), made in bronze, Claudette Schreuders depicts her son sitting pensively in a chair too small for his body. Though it appears to depict an exaggerated yet familiar scene, the richly detailed texture and surface of the figure suggest depths of meaning. Like Genesis (2024), Work (2024) considers the act of creation itself, as Claudette Schreuders herself is shown fixed in a moment of contemplation while she holds a newly made sculpture in her hands.

The relationship between personal experience and collective history is explored in Crucible (2025), a work originally commissioned by the University of Stellenbosch, Schreuders’ alma mater. A park bench cast in bronze is home to a whole host of indigenous birds that create a delicate balance and equilibrium between them. Schreuders uses the park bench as a formal and conceptual foundation for the work because its history remains charged by the legacy of apartheid, which saw it function as a symbol of exclusion. Claudette Schreuders allows the bench to be a site of transformation and possible harmony—it can produce something new out of an original period of trial and tribulation.

Throughout Genesis, Schreuders’ sculptures return to the commonplace and the quotidian, as they ask for a heightened attention to the world of experience that might otherwise be overlooked. With these familiar characters, scenes and moments as her subject matter, she pursues what is universal in them and relevant to all.

ARTIST CLAUDETTE SCHREUDERS

Claudette Schreuders (b. 1973 in Pretoria, South Africa) lives and works in Cape Town, where she graduated with a Master’s degree from the Michaelis School of Fine Art in 1998. She was part of the Liberated Voices exhibition at the Museum for African Art in New York in 1999. From 2004-2005 her first solo museum exhibition toured the United States and in 2011 she had a solo exhibition at the LUX Art Institute in California. Claudette Schreuders has shown extensively in group exhibitions, including Impressions from South Africa, 1965 to Now, at the Museum of Modern Art, New York (2011), Since 2000: Printmaking Now, at the Museum of Modern Art in New York (2006) and Personal Affects: Power and Poetics in Contemporary South African Art at the Museum for African Art and the Cathedral of St John the Divine, New York (2004). Claudette Schreuders’ work is included in the permanent collections of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Johannesburg Art Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa and the Pretoria Art Museum, South Africa, among others.

JACK SHAINMAN GALLERY
513 West 20th Street, New York, NY

Claudette Schreuders: Genesis
Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, June 5 – August 1, 2025

28/06/25

Eric Dever @ Berry Campbell Gallery, NYC - "Points of Interest" Exhibition

Eric Dever: Points of Interest 
Berry Campbell Gallery, New York
3 July - 15 August 2025

Berry Campbell Gallery presents its fourth exhibition of paintings by contemporary artist ERIC DEVER. Eric Dever: Points of Interest is an exploration into the temporal dimensions of plant life and the ecological impact of climate change. Eric Dever lives and works in Water Mill, New York, and often looks to his studio garden for inspiration. His “points of interest” further extend to Water Mill’s surrounding watershed, regional travel to arboretums and botanical gardens, nature reserves, and notable historic vistas, reflecting a sustained engagement with natural and cultivated environments.

Eric Dever’s paintings teeter between representation and abstraction balancing these two modalities with ease. In some works, Eric Dever renders botanical forms in clear frontal depictions that are immediately recognizable; in others, plant forms dissolve into expansive abstractions that appear to spill over the edge of the canvas. This interplay of styles unfolds across the nineteen works in this exhibition, many of which are Dever’s largest and most ambitious paintings to date.
As Dr. Giovanni Aloi states in the exhibition catalogue: “In Eric Dever’s paintings, time is neither background nor metaphor: it is substance. Just as the garden stages a choreography of slow unfolding, Dever’s canvases are accumulations of temporal gestures, each brushstroke a pulse in the continuum of material and spiritual becomings.”
Eric Dever recently had a painting acquired by the Heckscher Museum of Art, Huntington, New York, which was included in The Rains are Changing Fast: Acquisitions in Context. He was also included in Seeing Red: From Renoir to Warhol at the Nassau County Museum of Art, Roslyn Harbor, New York, along with Parrish Perspectives curated by Alicia Longwell at the Parrish Art Museum, Water Mill, New York. Additionally, Eric Dever has participated in the United States Art and Embassies program loaning paintings to Hong Kong, Macau, and Helsinki. Dr. Gail Levin and Margery Gosnell-Qua have written about Dever’s paintings, and Helen Harrison and Patrick Christiano have interviewed the artist. In recent years, Eric Dever was the recipient of the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts residency in Montauk, New York. Eric Dever is preparing for a solo exhibition at the Greenville County Museum of Art, South Carolina, in 2026.

BERRY CAMPBELL GALLERY
524 W 26th Street, New York, NY 10001

Group Show @ Skoto Gallery, NYC. Artists including Uche Okeke, Lula Mae Blocton, Juliana Zevallos, Trokon Nagbe, Afi Nayo...

Group Show
Skoto Gallery, New York
May 29 – July 26, 2025

Afi Nayo, Ahmed Nosseir, Bernard Guillot, Bruce Onobrakpeya, Cathy Lebowitz, David Rich, Diako, Fathi Hassan, Katherine Taylor, Khalid Kodi, Lula Mae Blocton, Michael Marshall, Olu Amoda, Piniang, Rosemary Karuga SoHyun Bae, Sophie Leys, Trokon Nagbe, Uche Okeke, Wosene Kosrof, Juliana Zevallos 

Skoto Gallery presents Group Show, an exhibition that brings together works by a diverse group of established and emerging artists working in a variety of media including painting, drawing, photography and sculpture.

With a mix of abstraction and sensitive realism that combines technical accomplishment with strong aesthetic appeal, the artists in this exhibition work across different time-periods and styles. Each of the artists re-imagines history, inheritance and vast possibilities in their work through the lens of individual and collective experiences, offering fresh perspectives that reflect the complexities and realities of contemporary identity. Each artist utilizes a particular rigor and economy which encourages a clarity of intent and simplicity of execution.

Afi Nayo’s (b. 1969, Lome, Togo) work is intensely personal and displays a blend of fragility, modesty and refinement. She uses pyro gravure and mixed media technique on wood panel to create pictures that consist of fantastic dream images, wit and imagination as well as overtones of fantasy and satire. They are dense with sensual surfaces, formal rigors and color harmonies that demonstrate a playful openness to art historical influences, while simultaneously encouraging multiple layers of meanings. She uses a complex language of symbols and signs drawn from the unconscious to obtain a poetic amalgam of abstraction and reality. She presently divides her time between Paris, France and Lome, Togo.

Trokon Nagbe draws on themes of memory, migration, history and the passage of time through the filter of personal experience. Firmly rooted in a framework of references that reflect his African heritage, he strives to push the bounds of his aesthetic while exploring intricate, and often paradoxical, relationship between the material and the spiritual, collective and the individual identity as well as the interior and the exterior. The visual resonance in his work is undeniable, attesting to his ability to seamlessly fuse ancient and modern concepts and aesthetic on new and innovative modes of representation while still contesting the meanings of the post-modern encounter between tradition and modernity.

Juliana Zevallos uses a wide range of media including her background as a versatile printmaker to create complex and poetic works layered with meaning and surface texture where some overlapping forms are fully present while other forms are partially obscured. They are simple, serene and as mature as thought. Closely viewed, her work is an invitation for contemplation that strives to reconcile intelligence and sensibility, knowledge and intuition as well as matter and spirit.

Lula Mae Blocton is an African American artist and painter. Color is her passion. What she has been dealing with is the quality of color, looking at it and perceiving it as transparent. Throughout her career she has tried to identify herself through the use of color relationships and structure. Her work can be seen as specific stages of developing towards these goals. Lula’s early work consisted of overlapping geometric patterns creating transparent combinations of color, much like weaving cloth to create a pattern.

Uche Okeke (1933-2016) Renowned for his immense contribution to the development of modern Nigerian art and pioneering visual experimentations with traditional Igbo Uli mural and body design, Uche Okeke’s early drawings in graphite, charcoal or ink are pure meditations upon the nature of line itself. A master of lyrical and sensitive lines, he uses resplendent curves and fluid lines to convey the true harmonies of his artistic vision. His work is in several permanent collections including the National Gallery, Lagos, Nigeria, Museum of Modern Art, New York, Newark Museum, Newark, NJ; Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, MD; The High Museum, Atlanta, GA, Iwalewa Haus, Bayreuth, Germany. He was included in the exhibition Stranieri Ovunque-Foreigners Everywhere, curated by Adriano Pedrosa at the 2024 Venice Biennale, Venice Italy.

SKOTO GALLERY
529 W 20th Street, New York, NY, 100011

26/06/25

Marley Freeman @ Karma Gallery, NYC - "no when" Exhibition

Marley Freeman: no when
Karma Gallery, New York
Through July 18, 2025

no when presents a selection of intuitively generated and yet tightly composed paintings by Marley Freeman made in the past two years. The artist found her way to painting through a deep knowledge of pattern, texture, and color cultivated during early experiences with mosaic and textile production—the latter at her family business and then an archive connected to a jacquard and dobby mill. Building on the resulting knowledge that flat media have their own architectures, Freeman’s recent oil and acrylic paintings are at once process-based and concerned with the structural qualities of two-dimensionality. These works are driven by her investigation into, as the artist puts it, “how abstractions can act like images.”

Working simultaneously across an array of sizes in her studios in New York and Sheffield, Massachusetts, she moves fluidly from canvas to canvas. The viewer’s movements through the gallery spaces of no when echo this dance: intimate, jewel-like canvases pull us in  close, while larger, sweeping compositions reward another kind of embodied looking. Each work is both question and answer; she resolves her initial marks in a process of painterly call and response that takes place over the course of months. Augmented with passes of transparent, thinned-out oil, early layers of acrylic are nonetheless visible on the surface, like the warp threads that undergird every woven textile.

Despite her hand’s evidence in each composition, Marley Freeman’s paintings are not purely expressive. She also conceives of them as images, built up from an initial mark into whole visual systems. Though every stroke in give this sea a name (2024) is brushy, the transparency of Freeman’s oil allows them to intermingle, each color reacting to what is beside and beneath it. Hot pinks and turquoises distributed all over the surface are set off by ochres as the varied marks coalesce. Like Chicago Imagist Barbara Rossi, with whom Marley Freeman studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, the younger artist allows visual stimuli of all kinds to seep into her paintings, rendering them resolutely non-hierarchical. The lyrical forms of sublimely unempathetic (2025) evoke the Imagist’s tradition of off-kilter representation, but Freeman layers them into an abstract composition that verges on pattern while never actually repeating itself. Alongside textiles and twentieth-century painters, she looks to the old masters—Giotto, for the way his pastel tones set off his famous blue at Padua; El Greco, for his ability to create a mood through hue—in her conception of palette as a wordless conduit for the expression of emotional states.

For years, Marley Freeman has collaborated with friends such as Lukas Geronimas and Jared Buckhiester, relating to one another through making together. Freeman’s paintings shell crater with flowers, nocturnal encounter with a lunatic, and dead century in the trench (all 2025) are ringed with ceramics created by Buckhiester and framed in metal forms hewn by Geronimas. Her titles, borrowed from artists and writers like Otto Dix, Bernadette Mayer, Agnes Martin, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Susan Howe (the show is titled after a line from one of her poems), also evince the importance of engaging with the creations of others. “The only way to work through ideas,” she says, “is to paint through them.” Conspiring with other artists and with material and image histories alike, Marley Freeman paints her way through and arrives on the other side, creating one continuous fabric of entwined colors, forms, and references. Unlike textiles, however, her paintings are liberated from the constraints of functionality. Here, she finds the freedom to improvise.

KARMA
549 West 26th Street, New York City

Marley Freeman: no when
Karma Gallery, New York City, May 29 – July 18, 2025

09/05/25

Michael Armitage @ David Zwirner, NYC - "Crucible" Exhibition

Michael Armitage
Crucible
David Zwirner, New York
May 8 – June 27, 2025

Michael Armitage
MICHAEL ARMITAGE 
Don’t Worry There Will Be More, 2024. 
© Michael Armitage 
Courtesy the artist and David Zwirner

David Zwirner presents an exhibition of new work by Kenyan-British artist MICHAEL ARMITAGE, which inaugurates the gallery’s new Chelsea building at 533 West 19th Street. This is Armitage’s first solo show with David Zwirner since the announcement of his representation in 2022 and his first solo presentation in New York since Projects 110: Michael Ermitatge, organized by The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, and held at The Museum of Modern Art in 2019. The exhibition includes new paintings and bronze reliefs by the artist.

In Crucible, Michael Armitage reflects on the theme of migration. Painted on Lubugo bark cloth—a traditional Ugandan textile used in funerary rituals, which the artist has used as a support for more than a decade—these works are marked by a visceral directness that implicates the viewer in the migrant’s journey and the representation of migrants in wider society. The works in the exhibition incorporate elements of real-life imagery to present narratives that are imbued with a profound sense of humanity and pathos.

While some of the paintings evoke vignettes from a migration route that traverses the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean Sea to reach Europe, other works consider aspects of migration in a broader sense.

Michael Armitage was born in Nairobi in 1984. He received his BFA from Slade School of Art, London, in 2007, and a postgraduate diploma from the Royal Academy Schools, London, in 2010. The artist was the recipient of the Ruth Baumgarte Art Award in 2020, and in 2021, he was elected a Royal Academician of Painting by the Royal Academy of Art, London.

The artist’s work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at prominent institutions worldwide. In 2023, Michael Armitage: Pathos and the Twilight of the Idle, a solo presentation of the artist’s work, was on view at Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria. Michael Armitage: You, Who Are Still Alive, was on view at Kunsthalle Basel in 2022. In the same year, a solo presentation of the artist’s work curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist was on view at Calcografía Nacional, Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando, Madrid. In 2021, Michael Armitage: Account of an Illiterate Man was presented by Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen. The solo exhibition Michael Armitage: Paradise Edict debuted in 2020 at Haus der Kunst, Munich, and traveled to the Royal Academy of Arts, London, in 2021. 

Other monographic exhibitions have taken place at prominent venues internationally, such as the Norval Foundation, Cape Town (2020); Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin (2019); Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, Sydney (2019); The Museum of Modern Art, New York, in collaboration with The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York (2019); South London Gallery (2017); Turner Contemporary, Margate, England (2017); and the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, California (2016). 

Work by Michael Armitage has also been featured in significant group exhibitions. In 2024, Armitage was included in The Time is Always Now: Artists Reframe the Black Figure, a traveling group presentation, which originated at the National Portrait Gallery, London, then traveled to The Box, Plymouth, England, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and the North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, through 2025. Works by the artist were included in Drawing in the Continuous Present, a 2022 group exhibition at The Drawing Center, New York. Armitage’s work was included in the 2021 group exhibition British Art Show 9, organized by Hayward Gallery Touring, London, which traveled to numerous venues in the United Kingdom through 2022. In 2019, the artist participated in the 58th Venice Biennale.

In 2020, Michael Armitage founded the Nairobi Contemporary Art Institute (NCAI) to promote art by practitioners in East Africa. The groundbreaking nonprofit arts venue hosts exhibitions, curatorial research residencies, libraries, and archives, as well as other educational initiatives that enrich the discourse on contemporary creative practices in the region. In the future, NCAI has plans to develop a postgraduate fi ne arts program, among other wide-reaching resources. 

NCAI also collaborates with writers and artists from East Africa to publish original commissioned essays, interviews, articles, and reports. NCAI’s robust publications and artists books offer insight, research, and thought leadership that underscores its commitment to documentation of the artists’ creativity. David Zwirner Books proudly supports and distributes the NCAI titles Mwili, Akili Na Roho/Body, Mind, and Spirit and I Hope So: Sane Wadu internationally. 

Michael Armitage’s works are represented in distinguished institutional collections worldwide, including the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney; Art Institute of Chicago; Arts Council Collection, Southbank Centre, London; Astrup Fearnley Museet, Oslo; Berkeley Art Museum and Pacifi c Film Archive, California; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Dallas Museum of Art; Fondation Beyeler, Basel/Riehen, Switzerland; Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin; Government Art Collection, London; Guggenheim Abu Dhabi; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC; Kistefos Museum, Jevnaker, Norway; Kunstmuseum Basel; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Museum Voorlinden, Wassenaar, Netherlands; Nasher Museum of Art, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina; National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh; National Gallery of Australia, Parkes; National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; National Portrait Gallery, London; Norval Foundation Collection, Cape Town; Pinault Collection, Paris; The Roberts Institute of Art, London; Samdani Art Foundation, Dhaka; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Tate, United Kingdom; Victor Pinchuk Contemporary Art Foundation, Kyiv; and Yuz Foundation Collection, Shanghai. 

Michael Armitage has been represented by David Zwirner since 2022. He lives and works in Indonesia and Nairobi.

DAVID ZWIRNER
533 West 19th Street, New York City

08/04/25

André Butzer @ Skarstedt, NYC - Chelsea

André Butzer
Skarstedt, New York
Through April 26, 2025

Skarstedt presents the first solo exhibition with acclaimed German painter André Butzer. Made specifically for the gallery’s new Chelsea space, he has created 10 large-scale paintings as well as 15 works on paper.

Since 1994, in direct succession to Georg Baselitz and Albert Oehlen, André Butzer’s fundamental fusion of European Expressionism and American ready-made pop culture, the conceptual repetition and apparent seriality of his iconic characters as well as his insistence on bare human dignity have been testament to his courageous and continuous inquiry into societal contradictions and social non-conformity.

Butzer’s Synthetic Paintings appear to be blasted and contorted, atomized into countless abstract particles. No painting can rely on any prefabricated compositional order. Enormous discharges of colors, forms and patches, ornamental bands, framework and planes—placeless and unstable.

The huge, solitary figures, as austere as ludicrous, are a challenge to our image of man. Their towering, composite bodies are industrialized, permeated by technology, maltreated by devices and pieces of apparatus, distorted, destroyed from within.

But at that precarious moment, in which the human figure is completely negated, dissolved, broken, and hollowed out, André Butzer begins. In the face of absolute annihilation, nothing remains but mere existence. An enduring basis for living. Vibrant and vital. From there, he builds his figures and thus the entire image anew.

For a figure is nothing that ever was a given in painting. Unique and inimitable, it incorporates both creation and destruction, permanent obliteration and renewal. André Butzer decisively realizes the substantial coherence of these opposites. "I want to be right in the middle of these destructive and redemptive contradictions", he says. In every image, opposites such as placing and dispersion, disruption and solidity, affirmation and negation reunite and therefore converge into a balanced, all-encompassing wholeness.

Each painting establishes its own, fragile stance from within itself. The straightening up of the figures, their presence and posture, their foothold and powerless composure, all this corresponds to the pervasive verticality of the canvases like an echo. A painterly totality, in which color transfigures every form and body.

The entire painting becomes a coloristically built “pictorial figure,” which “has no validity outside the picture and which is only potent in this one image and on this specific plane.” A trembling, truthful image of man, made whole again amidst fracturing and dissolving. Just as Butzer’s figures suddenly fit into the image, it is as if, even we, might fit into the world again.

André Butzer confronts our frail existence. His paintings reveal with utmost urgency that a dignified life, the integrity of body and soul, must be preserved not only in painting, but everywhere all at once.

SKARSTEDT NEW YORK - CHELSEA
547 West 25th Street, New York, NY 10001

André Butzer @ Skarstedt, New York, February 13 - April 26, 2025

30/03/24

Joan Thorne @ David Richard Gallery, NYC - "An Odyssey of Color" Exhibition

Joan Thorne: An Odyssey of Color
David Richard Gallery, New York
March 20 – April 18, 2024

Joan Thorne
JOAN THORNE 
Odyssey, 2024 
Oil on canvas, 66 x 56”
Copyright © Joan Thorne
Photographs by David Eichholtz
Courtesy David Richard Gallery

David Richard Gallery presents, An Odyssey of Color, a solo exhibition by New York artist, Joan Thorne, that includes eleven recent paintings from 2022 through 2024. This presentation, her first solo exhibition with the Gallery, focuses on her recent paintings but in the context of the colors, marks, and compositions as they organically evolved throughout her six-decade career. This curation is apropos given the artist’s painting retrospective in 2020 at the Barry Art Museum in Norfolk, Virginia and her inclusion during summer 2023 in, It Happened in SoHo, a  three-artist (Joan Thorne, Thornton Willis, and Dean Fleming) presentation of early paintings from the 1970s and 1980s at David Richard Gallery.

Joan Thorne has not used a grid nor any other all-over organizing structure to define and contain her compositions. Instead, she uses gestures combined with defined shapes or referential forms that emerge out of her long-standing ability to produce rhythmic strokes and marks that seem carefree yet effortlessly contained within imaginary or fixed boundaries. Thorne’s compositions are not templated nor purposely replicated. They are each organically derived from her thinking about the marks and colors combined with conveying space and depth within each composition while also unifying the emerging shapes that must be in dialog with one another.

The title of the exhibition highlights color, which is central to everything in Thorne’s studio practice, but probably no more so than mark making. Looking at Thorne’s compositions throughout her career, at first glance, one generally sees color and geometric shapes. Other than a few paintings in the early 1970s, rarely, if ever, are the geometric shapes filled in with flat, solid colors. Instead, Thorne’s geometric forms are either bounded by a solid or zig-zag line and interiors filled with marks, ranging from circular brush swirls, juicy lush swaths of vivid hues, or writhing, wiggling, and waving parallel marks of colorful pigment. Often and especially earlier in her career, the boundaries of the geometric shapes were loose and not always outlined with a single edge or border, instead they were bounded by the truncation of the individual linear marks at roughly the same length and location such that it looked like fringe. Thus, her mark making has spanned from lines, translucent swaths, and gestural textured strokes to jagged, solid, and soft imaginary borders.

Joan Thorne’s color palettes have ranged from dilute washes of translucent pigment early in the 1970s to fully saturated hues through most of her career that range from primary to secondary, tertiary, and dichroic color combinations. A student of color and understanding theory, she is mostly intuitive as to how the colors and compositions work together—the temperature and push/pull effects create vibrant, kinetic visual activity as well as dimensional space in combination with the geometric planar shapes. The tipping point and profound change in how Joan Thorne experiences and uses color occurred after a trip she made to Mexico in the early 1970s. She said the trip was “mystical” and “forever changed her life and painting”. One can argue that color and mark making are in Joan Thorne’s DNA, they are at the core of every series, the constant and hallmark in every decade, intertwined and being the double helical backbone of her genetic material.

Besides color and mark making, the other elements incorporated in Joan Thorne’s paintings become picturing elements and compositional devices that vary between series and over time. The residue or hint of many of these elements and formal operations from the past still show up in her most recent paintings, which is the curatorial focus of this exhibition. One can readily map in Thorne’s recent artworks her ever evolving compositional trends since the 1970s, including: geometric shapes, as noted above; her compositions in terms of more or less “open space” (more comments on Thorne’s handling this “maximal minimal” concept later); the layering of jagged, open perimeters functioning as framing devices and overlapping patterns to provide spatial depth and define pictorial space; and detailed, complex grounds. As the compositions evolved with every series since the early 1970s, so have her marks and motifs, making each painting and series fresh, dynamic, and forever challenging the viewer’s visual perception.

Looking at the detail of Joan Thorne’s mark making is noteworthy in two ways. First, zeroing in on a small section of her paintings and isolating a particular square or rectangular area reads like an impasto, action painting right out of Abstract Expressionism. As such, Thorne’s gestures and compositions have been noted by Barbara Rose in a studio visit with Joan Thorne in 1979 as she was curating the exhibition, American Paintings: The Eighties. Rose told Joan Thorne that she ”understood Jackson Pollock . . . [and] used what he did to make it [her] own” [1]. Kay Larson, a critic for the Village Voice, also referenced the same Abstract Expressionist icon in 1981 regarding Thorne having “a bright overallness that synthesiz[es] Pollock’s arm with postconceptual brashness and an iconoclast’s attention to her forbears.”[2]

Second, and on the opposite end of the scale (literally) from micro to macro and aesthetically from gesture to optics, Joan Thorne’s frequent use of all-over brush motifs across the canvas as the last addition of marks and color to her paintings (specifically referencing, Oseah, 1981, oil on canvas, 64 x 67 in), also function as activation elements, a method used by Op Artists such as Julian Stanczak. The small, repetitive shape across the canvas activates the viewer’s eye, challenging visual perception. Thus, the viewer is more susceptible to suggestion so that the push and pull of colors combined with color interactions and planes of geometric shapes suggest spatial depth and illusory dimensional volume on a two-dimensional canvas. This is an example of how Joan Thorne knows art history, but more important, how to take that knowledge, expand and deploy it in her own aesthetic way.

Joan Thorne is an expressionistic painter all the way through, exuding passion with each gesture and layering intense emotions with every color choice. She was influenced by late Abstract Expressionism in the late 1960s and 70s during her studies and early career as well as the influences of many other overlapping forms of expressionism from Art Informel, Art Brut, and German Expressionism. It is also interesting to note that shapes in Joan Thorne’s paintings are not grounded, they float and are independent structures. There are no horizon lines or landscape references. Her interest in mysticism is probably more at play than any strong reference to Surrealism or geometry and Modernism. The point in noting the ungrounding of the shapes and forms is that Joan Thorne’s paintings are pure abstractions, emerging out of her interpretation of art historical movements as well as her memories, dreams, travels, and life experiences including psychological and transcendent experiences inspired by movies, poetry and synesthesia.

Vittorio Colaizzi has written extensively about Thorne’s artwork. In 2016 he noted she had a “career-long engagement with the problems of mark, composition, and pictorial space”. Further, he commented that the artist is comfortable straddling the “divide that pits expression against analysis.”[3] These are keen observations about the history and continued trajectory of Thorne’s work which allowed her to remain focused solely on painting the past six decades and never being at a loss for something new to paint. Her paintings continue to present viewers with such exuberance and a conundrum at the same time. Clearly, Thorne sees no need to decide one over the other and as much as possible serves both up in a single serving. Her paintings are maximal and high impact, highly reflective of Thorne’s personality and presence. 

JOAN THORNE

Joan Thorne received a B.S. degree from New York University with a major in painting in 1965. Then earned an M.A. degree in 1968 from Hunter College, completing her thesis with Tony Smith which was a series of paintings.

In 1972 her work was included in the Whitney Museum of American Art’s Biennial Exhibition. Several solo exhibitions followed: 1973 at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.; 1974 the Fischbach Gallery in New York City; 1977 the Art Fair in Cologne, Germany; 1979 The Clocktower in New York City in May. In 1979 she received a National Endowment Grant and invited to join the Willard Gallery in New York City with a debut exhibition in 1980. Barbara Rose included Thorne in the exhibition American Paintings: The Eighties, at the Grey Art Gallery in New York University, which was reviewed by Hilton Kramer for the Sunday Edition of the New York Times. A solo exhibition with the Dart Gallery in Chicago followed and paintings at the Grand Palais in Paris in a group exhibition organized by the Société des Artistes Indépendants.

In 1981 Joan Thorne’s works were included in another edition of the Whitney Museum’s Biennial Exhibition. In 1982, a solo show at the Willard Gallery and a drawing show at the Nina Freudenheim Gallery in Buffalo, New York. In 1983 she had a solo show at the Dart Gallery in Chicago; John, Yau wrote an article that was published in Arts Magazine; and received a National Endowment Grant in Painting. In 1985 she had a one-person exhibition at the Graham Modern Gallery in New York with a catalog and essay by John Yau. Stephen Westfall wrote about her work in Art in America Magazine in December 1985.

The American Academy of Arts and Letters selected Joan Thorne to participate in the “Invitational Exhibition of Visual Arts” in 2020. In 2021 she had a four-decade retrospective at the Barry Art Museum in Norfolk VA with a 54-page catalog and essay by Richard Vine the Managing Editor of Art In America Magazine. Another essay was written by Vittorio Colaizzi, art historian.

Joan Thorne was a recipient of the Prix de Rome Fellowship to paint at the American Academy in Rome, the Pollock Krasner Grant for painting (twice) and the Gottlieb Grant among others.

Joan Thorne’s artworks are in the permanent collections of the Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY, Albright Knox Gallery of Art in Buffalo, Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, Texas and the Cincinnati Art Museum Cincinnati, Ohio, Barry Art Museum, Norfolk, VA among others.

[1] Vittorio Colaizzi, Joan Thorne and the Mirror of Modern Painting, in Barry Art Museum, Light, Layers, Insight, 2019. p. 12.
[2] Vittorio Colaizzi, Joan Thorne, Analytic Ecstasy, in Woman’s Art Journal, Spring/Summer 2016, p. 40.
[3] Vittorio Colaizzi, Joan Thorne, Analytic Ecstasy, in Woman’s Art Journal, Spring/Summer 2016, p. 38.

DAVID RICHARD GALLERY
508 West 26 ST, Suite 9F, New York, NY 10001

14/02/24

Laura Watt @ David Richard Gallery, NYC - "Time Lapse" Exhibition

Laura Watt: Time Lapse
David Richard Gallery, New York
February 14 – March 14, 2024

Laura Watt
LAURA WATT
Announcement, 2023
Acrylic and oil on canvas  
44 x 48 in / 112 x 122 cm
© Laura Watt
Photograph by David Eichholtz
Courtesy David Richard Gallery

David Richard Gallery presents Laura Watt, Time Lapse, all new paintings created mostly in 2023 and her third solo exhibition with the gallery. There are several new and important aspects in this newest body of work that sets the mood and underlying thesis at this point in her career. Some aspects were process driven and others conscious decisions regarding the formal properties and resulting compositions. The combinations culminated in a subconscious and conceptual underpinning that evolved in Laura Watt’s thinking as the work unfolded over the course of the prior 18 to 24 months. The presentation includes 8 of the dozen or so paintings in the series at this point.

Patterning and layering patterns one on top of the other has been an important aspect of Laura Watt’s painting process and compositions. Such patterns, until now, provided both the forms in and subjects of Laura Watt’s compositions as well as the grounds. However, in this new body of work, Watt has disrupted that approach by focusing on one pattern at a time, confined within a single passage of the composition, thereby fragmenting the patterns. The artist states, “Pattern has become patches of nets and multi-colored rays announcing nothing.” Yet, the new approach yields 2 significant results.

First, Laura Watt has altered her process and the starting point for this body of work which is staining the canvas with mostly dark moody hues. This crucial first step provides both the grounds and suggests the placement of the patterns, which become the focal points and vessels for most of the vivid colors in the paintings. Thus, the paintings have a more organic approach and quality as the artist responds to each prior mark before laying down the next.

Second, by moving away from the canvas filling and overlapping patterns, several things now happen simultaneously. The patterning becomes fragmented as dictated by the initial staining and opens the paintings, providing spatial depth and multiple points of entry into the compositions. The initial staining frequently becomes a prominent feature in the final compositions. In fact, the staining often creates a horizon line suggesting a landscape reference, which later becomes important from a conceptual standpoint. The other important result is the patterns are not tethered to a singular perspectival point nor the entirety of the canvas. The patterns are ungrounded and floating. This last effect is what creates the conceptual underpinning and interpretation of this body of work, particularly in the context of her last painting series and solo exhibition at the gallery, Horizon Event.

Laura Watt conceived of and painted the works in Horizon Event during the latter half of the pandemic while spending a great deal of her time outdoors enjoying nature in upstate New York. She viewed the paintings as “optimistic” and “exuberant”, stating, “they [were] paintings about orientation and becoming, of things coalescing and forming.” By contrast, in a post-pandemic world, that positivity from finally emerging out of the pandemic has been traded for a country and world more divided than ever politically with two tragic international wars and an environmental situation that often feels apocalyptic. Watt said, “[she feels] the paintings that make up Time Lapse speak to disorientation, of things falling apart, moving away.”

A couple of paintings in particular reference the political, cultural, and ecological dismays noted above. Announcement, 2023 is comprised of hot colored rays of red and yellow situated in the upper and lower halves of the nearly square painting, splitting the canvas roughly in half and speaking to binaries and polarization. The composition, Foreign Shores, 2023, is subversive with the engaging warm colorful palette as it creates a powerful divide with red hues on the top and greens on the bottom. The dense swath of yellow in the center with lozenge-shaped patterns within patterns evokes minions doing as instructed, following orders and not one's heart or conscience. Weather Report, 2023 and the pair of smaller 18 x 24-inch related canvases, Weather Pattern #2 and #4, were inspired by weather maps on her phone's watch app. These paintings comment on the abundance of data that is used to explain the current extreme weather events on one hand, while on the other hand and conversely, selectively using the data to discount the global situation by distorting the same data for the purpose of disinformation.
Laura Watt wrote in a statement, “Initially I was interested in making a group of paintings in which poured and stained grounds dictated how the pattern behaved, where it could go. So, in a sense, the resulting paintings are a time lapse of that original intent. How that intent survives over a year of being looked at and periodically acted upon. By early summer it was becoming clear that the paintings might be about orientation and disorientation; about spaces that speak to a world getting stranger, an alien [and] less hospitable world than what we have known. An ambiguous world that pattern attempts to make sense of.”
Aside from the conceptual under currents and news-induced disappointments with mankind and sadness as noted above, these paintings are wild based solely on the formal properties! The vibrantly colored vector rays, the contrast of soft matte-stained canvases and overlays of lush, seductive colors, with bubble clouds and optical patterns, one (at least of a certain age) cannot help but be reminded of psychedelia, optical rock posters, and liquid light shows at the Fillmore East and Winterland Arena concert halls in New York and San Francisco, respectively. Psychedelia and the 1960s rock posters often brought together seeming disparate images and references such as Surrealism, Art Nouveau, paisley patterns, and Op Art. Maybe the disaggregation that Laura Watt experiences and portrays in her paintings as well as her tilt toward psychedelia are two sides of the same coin when it comes to the formal approaches for picturing turbulent times and a fractured populous, whether in the 1960s or today in our media laden, image saturated, and pluralistic world.

LAURA WATT was born in Lancaster PA and currently lives and works in Garrison, NY. She studied at Bennington College and earned her MFA from Yale University. Laura Watt”s paintings and drawings have been shown nationally and internationally including exhibitions at: MACA, Philadelphia; St. Joseph’s University, Philadelphia; Phillips Museum at Franklin & Marshall College, Lancaster; State Museum of Pennsylvania; and Lancaster Museum of Art, Lancaster all in Pennsylvania; and Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, Ridgefield; New Haven Museum, New Haven; and Stamford Museum, Stamford all in Connecticut. Watt has also exhibited at McKenzie Fine Art, Bridgette Mayer Gallery, Lesley Heller Workshop, Locks Gallery and numerous other galleries and institutions. Her artworks are in the collections of Lancaster Museum of Art and many private collections. Watt taught at Tyler School of Art for 5 years and presently sits on the board of the Vermont Studio Center.

DAVID RICHARD GALLERY
508 West 26th Street, New York, NY 10001

Sanford Wurmfeld @ David Richard Gallery, NYC - "Corona Variations" Exhibition

Sanford Wurmfeld: Corona Variations
David Richard Gallery, New York
February 14 - March 14, 2024

Sanford Wurmfeld
SANFORD WURMFELD 
II-51 B/2 (V-Y) - (12), 2021 
Acrylic on canvas, 72 x 144.75 inches 
Artworks Copyright © Sanford Wurmfeld 
Images by Yao Zu Lu 
Courtesy David Richard Gallery 

David Richard Gallery debuts Sanford Wurmfeld’s newest compositions and color palette in his newest series of 25 canvases, Corona Variations, conceived and created during the pandemic from 2020 through 2023. The new paintings, all acrylic on canvas, range in size from 18 x 36 inches up to the panoramic full spectrum centerpiece of the series measuring 72 x 144 inches. This is Sanford Wurmfeld’s second solo exhibition with the gallery and his first in the gallery’s New York location.

The new formal element introduced by Sanford Wurmfeld in the Corona Variations series is dividing the composition into two halves, either vertically or horizontally. This allows the artist to explore simultaneously the interaction of two different aspects of the color spectrum using a range of hues and values. The palette for the new series includes 61 colors utilizing gray to mute and desaturate the hues. Juxtaposing in a single canvas distinct ranges of the spectrum creates a dramatic contrast between the two halves of the canvas rather than focusing only on the subtle transition from one color to the next across a single surface.

Always using a complex layering of grid structures as his compositional architecture of choice, Sanford Wurmfeld focuses on color and its impact in a space and on the viewer. The new Corona Variationsseries is comprised of the large centerpiece (noted above) and a corresponding smaller 21 x 42-inch version. It is further anchored with four subseries comprised of 4 paintings each that explore two different compositional formats in two different sizes: the smaller series of each measure 30 x 22 and 42 x 22 inches while the larger series are 61 x 42 and 90 x 46 inches. Within each subseries Sanford Wurmfeld systematically expands on specific segments of the color spectrum with gradations of values of each hue that maps the gradual transition from one color to the next, including: red to orange, blue to green, Light yellow, and dark violet.

Further exploring the new divided compositions, the artist has created a large horizontal canvas measuring 31 x 90 inches, splitting the canvas into two equal sized horizontal bands that explores simultaneously the spectral transitions from blue-green to red-orange and contrasting valuations, one above the other.

Similarly, a new smaller scaled variation measuring 42 x 21 inches looks at a vertical variation where the composition is divided into 2 square blocks where the transitions of dark violet and light yellow are one above the other.

Another dramatic variation introduces a pair of triptych compositions, each 42 x 64 inches in size, where three vertical bands explore transitions of colors from blue to orange or red to green with side-by-side value shifts from dark to light in each.

These paintings have another interesting feature that is somewhat conceptual and is manifest chromatically. In particular, these paintings have a visual rhythm and nod to musical influences. The opposing grid structures and layered subtle variations of values become gradients of color ranging vertically or horizontally from desaturated to fully saturated hues. Such value transitions and chromatic intensities are evocative of volume in music with passages containing crescendos. Maybe a form of synesthesia, but given the similarity between the mathematical structure of music and Sanford Wurmfeld’s grids, it is not surprising. Looking at the new large 72 x 144-inch canvas it looks like a musical score. In many ways the painting also could be a visualization of an orchestra or choir, so a visualization of a musical composition is not really a stretch.

SANFORD WURMFELD - SHORT BIBLIOGRAPHY

Sanford Wurmfeld (b. 1942 in Bronx, NY) has exhibited his work in solo and group exhibitions since the late 1960s. His work is included in collections worldwide, including the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Brooklyn Museum, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Karl Ernst Osthaus-Museum, Sprengel Museum, and Espace de l’Art Concret, and the City of Hannover Germany.

In 2013, he was the subject of a major 45-year survey exhibition entitled Sanford Wurmfeld: Color Visions, 1966-2013 curated by William C. Agee at Hunter College/Times Square Gallery, NYC. He has also presented solo exhibitions at Neuberger Museum of Art, Tibor de Nagy Gallery, Galerie Denise Rene, Susan Caldwell Gallery, David Richards Gallery, Minus Space, Bard College, Maxwell Davidson Gallery, Karl Ernst Osthaus-Museum (Germany), Mucsarnok Kunsthalle (Hungary), Talbot-Rice Gallery (Scotland), and Ewing Museum Gallery (Knoxville, TN).

After graduating from Dartmouth College in 1964 with a BA in Art History, Wurmfeld moved to Rome and spent two years painting before returning to New York where he has lived and worked ever since. In 1968, he was the youngest artist included in the landmark exhibition Art of the Real 1948-68 curated by Eugene Goossen at the Museum of Modern Art, NY. The exhibition traveled for the next two years to the Grand Palais (France), Kunsthaus (Switzerland), and The Tate Gallery (London, England). Wurmfeld’s other museum group exhibitions include the Carnegie International, American Academy of Arts and Letters, National Academy Museum, Visual Arts Center of New Jersey, Dayton Art Museum, Akron Art Museum, Allentown Art Museum, Long Beach Museum of Art, New Bedford Art Museum, Karl Ernst Osthaus-Museum (Germany), and Espace de l’Art Concret (France), and Museo de Arte Contemporaneo de Buenos Aires (Argentina).

Complementing his studio practice, Sanford Wurmfeld has lectured and written extensively on the history of color, painting, and abstraction. He has received awards from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, City University of New York, and Dartmouth College.

In addition to his artistic work, Sanford Wurmfeld taught in the Department of Art at Hunter College from 1967-2012, where he educated and mentored countless generations of artists. Originally invited to join the faculty by artists Tony Smith, Ray Parker and critic Eugene Goossen, Sanford Wurmfeld was Chairman of the department from 1978-2006 and founded the renowned Hunter MFA program in 1981.

DAVID RICHARD GALLERY
508 West 26th Street, New York, NY, 10001

12/11/23

Pipilotti Rist @ Hauser & Wirth + Luhring Augustine, New York - "Prickling Goosebumps & A Humming Horizon" Exhibition

Pipilotti Rist 
Prickling Goosebumps & A Humming Horizon
Hauser & Wirth, New York
9 November 2023 – 13 January 2024
Luhring Augustine Chelsea, New York
18 November 2023 – 3 February 2024

Self-described ‘wild and friendly’ Swiss artist PIPILOTTI RIST presents a selection of new and recent sculptural works and projections in ‘Prickling Goosebumps & a Humming Horizon,’ a major two part exhibition opening in Chelsea. The exhibition, which takes place simultaneously at Hauser & Wirth’s 22nd Street location and Luhring Augustine’s 24th Street location, has been conceived by the artist as a multisensory experience for visitors. In these complementary presentations, Pipilotti Rist explores interior and exterior—internal and external physical and psychological spaces—with Luhring Augustine reimagined as an expansive, shared ‘backyard’ and Hauser & Wirth transformed into a whimsical ‘collective living room.’

At each location visitors are greeted with an artistic gesture on the façade: the work ‘Textile Simultaneity’ at Luhring Augustine and ‘Innocent Collection’ at Hauser & Wirth. 

At Luhring Augustine Chelsea on West 24th Street, visitors are taken on a journey through an expansive ‘backyard’ environment animated by sounds, colors and textures. In the entrance gallery they encounter new small-scale works—a landscape painting, ‘Visual Cortex Dolomites,’ and a rock sculpture, ‘Respect Scholarly Rock’—each of which is activated by hypnotic video projections. The main gallery is dominated by Pipilotti Rist’s spellbinding ‘Neighbors Without Fences’ (2020), a full-scale façade of a clapboard house, which is surrounded by a ‘courtyard’ filled with outdoor patio furniture and anchored by ‘The Patience’ (2016), a massive 1.5-ton boulder awash in the colors of a dynamic projection. A version of ‘Neighbors Without Fences’ debuted as a highlight in ‘Big Heartedness, Be My Neighbor,’ Pipilotti Rist’s 2021-22 survey exhibition at The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. Each window of the clapboard façade contains a glowing screen displaying new videos made specifically for this exhibition; the works are from Pipilotti Rist’s ‘Peeping Freedom Shutters’ series (2020-2023), a group of unique video sculptures that pay homage to women’s rights activists whose fearless advocacy has opened windows onto the possibility of a more equitable world. 

The back gallery presents ‘Big Skin’ (2022), a version of which was first included in Pipilotti Rist’s solo exhibition ‘Behind Your Eyelid’ at Tai Kwun Contemporary, Hong Kong. The installation’s undulating, semi-translucent resin panels, or ‘skins,’ float cloud-like from the ceiling with video projections of real and animated galaxies and natural landscapes dancing across their surfaces. The resin material of these skins simultaneously absorbs and emits light, creating ghostly shadows across the walls and floor, transporting viewers into another dimension. 

At Hauser & Wirth’s West 22nd Street building, Pipilotti Rist transforms the entire street level space into a ‘living room’ painted in lush reds and vegetal greens. Here guests discover single-channel sculptural video works, including many presented publicly for the first time. For each of these works, Pipilotti Rist has embedded a video into a found domestic object or piece of furniture—from ‘Ich brenne für dich (I burn for you)’ (2018), fashioned from an antique marble fireplace mantle to ‘Über Stock und Stein (Over Hill and Dale)’ (2023), which animates the interior of a vintage toy horse stable with different oscillating forms and colors. A new group of sculptures, together titled ‘Metal Flake Milk Tooth’ (2023), punctuates the space in an arrangement laying low across the gallery floor. With their furniture-like qualities—each form evokes yet subverts the familiar geometries of a chair or coffee table—these objects hew to Pipilotti Rist’s longstanding fascination with the reflective and emotive potentials of light: constructed from fiberglass composite, the sculptures have been coated with metal flakes, airbrushed candy colors and clear lacquer that yield glittery, optically dynamic surfaces which defy capture by photography. ‘Metal Flake Milk Tooth’ thus happily demands that we experience it in three dimensions and be present in its space in order to engage its pleasures. Two new major video projections—‘Welling Color Island East’ (2023) and ‘Welling Color Island West’ (2023)—and the new moving light installation ‘Petting Colors’ (2023) complete Pipilotti Rist’s interior adventure at Hauser & Wirth. Her richly colored projections swirl down from the ceiling onto carpet ‘islands’ occupied by cushioned seating areas for communal occupancy and immersion. The gently moving lights of ‘Petting Colors’ dance across the room to land upon visitors and connect them to one another as well as Pipilotti Rist’s other works in situ, making members of the public active participants in her enchantments.

PIPILOTTI RIST, a pioneer of spatial video art, was born in 1962 in Grabs in the Swiss Rhine Valley on the Austrian border and has been a central figure within the international art scene since the mid-1980s. Astounding the art world with the energetic exorcistic statement of her now-famous single channel videos, such as ‘I’m Not The Girl Who Misses Much’ (1986) and ‘Pickelporno’ (1992), her artistic work has co-developed with technical advancements and in playful exploration of its new possibilities to propose footage resembling a collective brain. Through large video projections and digital manipulation, she has developed immersive installations that draw life from slow caressing showers of vivid color tones, like her works ‘Sip My Ocean’ (1996) and ‘Worry Will Vanish’ (2014).

For Pipilotti Rist, showing vulnerability is a sign of strength on which she draws for inspiration. With her curious and lavish recordings of nature (to which humans belong as an animal), and her investigative editing, Pipilotti Rist seeks to justify the privileged position we are born with, simply by being human. Her installations and exhibition concepts are expansive, finding within the mind, senses and body the possibility for endless discovery and poetical invention. ‘Pixel Forest’ (2016), made from 3,000 LEDs hung on strings, resembles a movie screen that has exploded into the room, allowing viewers an immersive walk through 3-dimensional video. As she herself puts it, ‘beside the energy-intensive exploration of the geographical world, pictures, films and sounds have been and are the spaces into which we can escape... The projector is the flamethrower, the space is the vortex and you are the pearl within.’

Since 1984, Pipilotti Rist has had countless solo and group exhibitions, and video screenings worldwide. Her recent solo exhibitions include the site-specific installation Hand Me Your Trust on the M+ Facade, Hong Kong (2023); Behind Your Eyelid at Tai Kwun Contemporary, Hong Kong (2022); Big Heartedness, Be My Neighbor at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA (The Museum of Contemporary Art), Los Angeles (2021–2022); Your Eye Is My Island at MoMAK (The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto) and Art Tower Mito (2021); Åbn min Lysning (Open my Glade) at Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebæk (2019); Sip My Ocean at the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, Sydney (2017–2018); Pixel Forest at New Museum, New York (2016 – 2017); and Your Saliva is My Diving Suit of the Ocean of Pain at Kunsthaus Zürich (2016), all resulted in record-breaking attendance numbers for each institution. 

HAUSER & WIRTH

LUHRING AUGUSTINE

10/06/23

Gilbert & George Exhibition @ Lehmann Maupin, NYC - THE CORPSING PICTURES

Gilbert & George
THE CORPSING PICTURES
Lehmann Maupin, New York
June 22 – August 18, 2023

Lehmann Maupin presents THE CORPSING PICTURES, a new group of pictures by Gilbert & George. The exhibition marks their tenth solo presentation at the gallery. The exhibition comprises a suite of richly colored pictures starring the artists themselves in various poses of alarm and resignation as bones encroach in intricate patterns over their faces and bodies. Masterfully employing their signature use of bold color and symmetrical composition, Gilbert & George confront the subject of mortality and life itself with winking gallows humor, leaving each picture open to multiple interpretations.

Gilbert & George met as art students in 1967 at Saint Martin’s School of Art, where they developed the concept of “living sculptures.” Meticulously groomed and dressed in suits, the artists’ legendary promenades through the streets of London, heads and hands coated in metallic powders, formed the blueprint for future art that centered on the performative and sculptural potential of the body. Since then, they have lived and worked together in London’s East End, their individual identities subsumed into a vision of animate sculpture. Gilbert & George have long been beloved fixtures and keen observers of their changing world. As attentive to the detritus in the gutters of London as they are to the shifting social mores of the citizens who walk its streets, the artists have provoked strong reactions and critical thinking on subjects ranging from sex, violence, identity, and death.

From its title, THE CORPSING PICTURES promises to elaborate these long running thematic concerns through a destabilizing play on words. “Corpsing” is a term that comes from theater. It refers to the instant an actor breaks character by doing something unprofessional such as accidentally laughing or moving when they are supposed to be playing dead. In such moments, the character is revealed as an actor, the illusion broken, and the scene killed. In many of THE CORPSING PICTURES, Gilbert & George stare out at the viewer, breaking the fourth wall through direct address and deliberately embracing the cardinal mistake of rookie actors by “corpsing” death.

Each picture is richly colored in a red and gold palette that features Gilbert & George alternately ensconced, entombed, and enclosed behind a lively formation of bones. Skeletons of various origins make a sepulchral appearance. Many are human (BONE BOX and HA HA have a distinctly archeological character); some are vegetal (RIB TIES and TIES include the delicate fringes of desiccated flora); other bones are implied, as in CHAINS, which features no visible bones at all but simply Gilbert & George–still enfleshed–whose skeletons provide the armature for their signature suits. 

The heft and character of the bones play out a drama of memento mori told in visually striking vignettes. EQUALS centers two large bones across the bodies of Gilbert & George, playfully recalling the adage that death is the great equalizer. KISS BONE anoints the pair with the kiss of death or life–a hulking X formed by two massive femurs. BONE WHEEL, on the other hand, features delicate patterns of bones arranged in pleasing ornaments across the picture plane. Indeed, THE CORPSING PICTURES are insistently horizontal, signaling the position of final repose by references to pavement, litter, vegetation, prone bodies, and upturned shoe soles. Many of these bones are no longer held in vertical alignment by ligaments and muscles, but clattered to the floor–perhaps the result of a divining incantation or a diverting game such as pick up sticks. As Shakespeare’s Hamlet put it to the gravedigger: 

“Did these bones cost no more the
breeding but to play at loggets with them?”

THE CORPSING PICTURES debut as the Gilbert & George Centre opens its doors in London’s East End. An important addition to the London museum landscape, the Centre will provide dedicated exhibition space for Gilbert & George, ensuring that the arc of their singular career remains publicly accessible. Museums have long been analogized to mausoleums. Ever alive to the power of language and the language of power, the artists’ CORPSING PICTURES might be understood as a characteristically sideways gloss on the enshrinement of their legacy. Like Shakespeare’s wise fool, Gilbert & George embrace the comedic role of the gravedigger, entombing themselves while asserting that they have never been more alive. 

LEHMANN MAUPIN
501 West 24th Street, New York, NY 10011

01/11/22

Minoru Niizuma @ Tina Kim Gallery, NYC - Waterfall in Autumn Wind

Minoru Niizuma
Waterfall in Autumn Wind
Tina Kim Gallery, New York
November 10 — December 10, 2022

Minoru Niizuma
Minoru Niizuma
Windy Wind, 1969
Portuguese black granite, 120 x 22.2 x 28.6 cm
Courtesy of the artist’s estate and Tina Kim Gallery
Photo by Dario Lasagni

Tina Kim Gallery presents its first exhibition dedicated to the practice of Japanese-American sculptor and educator MINORU NIIZUMA (b. 1930, Tokyo; d. 1998, New York). Recognized for his abstract marble sculptures in the postwar period, Minoru Niizuma exhibited widely in the United States and Europe, and was an active organizer of public sculpture exhibitions across both continents. Although a lifelong artist and educator whose works entered multiple institutional and private collections, Minoru Niizuma’s legacy has rarely been acknowledged since his passing at the age of 67, in part due to a lack of formal representation. Marking the first attempt to introduce a deeper understanding of the artist’s practice, the exhibition brings together works from two key decades of his practice—the 1970s and 80s. In addition, on view are a range of rare archival material that contextualizes his efforts to promote broader cross-cultural understandings between the US, Europe, and Japan through his stone-carving symposiums, exhibitions, and public sculpture parks. Accompanying this exhibition will also be an illustrated exhibition catalog, featuring an extended introduction of the artist written by art historian and curator Reiko Tomii.

Born in Tokyo in 1930 and educated at the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, Minoru Niizuma immigrated to New York in 1959 and joined the Brooklyn Museum Art School as an instructor in 1964. Upon establishing his studio practice in New York, Minoru Niizuma attained the space needed to develop larger-scale sculptures; soon after, his work was included in both the 1966 and 1968 Whitney Annuals, as well as a landmark survey of Japanese Art that traveled through five institutions across the US, including the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Throughout his life, Minoru Niizuma worked in series, focusing on refining and iterating a single form over the course of several years.

Although affiliated with the emerging artistic cluster that came to become known as “Minimalism,” Minoru Niizuma’s artistic development remained intrinsically indebted to the properties of his oft-chosen mediums: marble and granite. Beginning from the 1970s and 80s onwards, Minoru Niizuma increasingly chose to execute his works in ways that revealed—rather than obviated—the natural appearance of stone, reacting against the prevailing emphasis on industrial material and processes dominating sculptural practice during that time. In contrast with his earlier work from the 1960s, which are often characterized by highly polished surfaces and geometric forms, the works included in the exhibition bear evidence of the artist’s intention to restrain his own hand. As exemplified by works such as Windy Wind (c.1970s), the surfaces of the sculptures are marked by grooves, crags, and furrows. Yet, the rough-hewn appearance of Minoru Niizuma’s works is contrasted with the organic, fluid forms that the artist employed. Harboring a love of mountain climbing, many of the forms of Minoru Niizuma’s sculptures are inspired by his own encounters with natural environments, which he alludes to in the title of each respective work.

Apart from key works, the exhibition also includes select archival material that contextualizes Minoru Niizuma’s efforts to promote artistic exchange during these key decades. Minoru Niizuma established significant relationships with artists and art professionals, including Isamu Noguchi, George Segal, and Yoko Ono, amongst others. In addition, he played an integral role in organizing exhibitions that introduced Japanese sculptors to New York in various venues, including the Sculpture Center. Earlier in 1971, Minoru Niizuma had also organized a symposium of stone sculpture in New York City, commissioning new works from artists and displaying them in outdoor, public sites across the city. Over the course of the next two decades, Minoru Niizuma would go on to organize and participate in multiple “stone symposiums” across various locations including Vermont, Portugal, Ireland, and Austria. Often, he and other participants would draw on the local marble and granite quarries to create new works that were then exhibited to the public. In the 1980s, Minoru Niizuma began traveling to Portugal extensively because of the immense array of marble and stone available, eventually resulting in a partnership with Portuguese President Mario Soares to build artistic exchange between Portugal and Japan. Today, many of Minoru Niizuma’s large-scale public sculptures can still be seen throughout the United States, Europe, and Japan. They reflect his own artistic development but also stand as a testament to his passion for promoting stone carving across these continents.

Arata Niizuma and the Estate of Minoru Niizuma collaborated on this exhibition.

TINA KIM GALLERY
525 West 21st Street, New York, NY 10011

01/10/22

Chidinma Nnoli @ Marianne Boesky Gallery, NYC - When will my feet catch fire?

Chidinma Nnoli
When will my feet catch fire?
Marianne Boesky Gallery, New York
September 8 – October 8, 2022

Chidinma Nnoli
CHINDINMA NNOLI
The pains of growing, 2022
Oil and acrylic on canvas, 62 x 54 inches
© Chidinma Nnoli, courtesy Marianne Boesky Gallery

Marianne Boesky Gallery presents When will my feet catch fire?, a solo presentation of five new paintings and a sculptural work by Lagos, Nigeria-based artist CHINDINMA NNOLI. The works on view explore various modes of processing trauma and healing, and delve into the ways in which stigma, dissociation, and dominant societal narratives limit  discourses around traumatic events. For Chidinma Nnoli, the works pose the question: “When will the things I am going through be ‘big’ enough for me to speak about?”
 
Chidinma Nnoli situates seemingly silent feminine  figures within  otherworldly, sparsely populated terrains. Deploying a thick, pastel-hued impasto, Chidinma Nnoli creates landscapes that are as fleshy and tangible as they are ethereal and mysterious. The balance between the earthly and the celestial continues in Chidinma Nnoli’s debut sculptural work Is there a God beyond the sky? in which a pair of hands reach upwards from a brick-like, earthy base.
 
The exhibition’s title is derived from Lavender, lavender, when will my feet catch fire? a poem Chidinma Nnoli wrote in 2017. Since 2020, Chidinma Nnoli’s work has referenced her poetry, much of it written in late adolescence, with each series in her oeuvre referencing a separate poem.
 
This latest body of work marks a transition in Chidinma Nnoli’s compositions, away from interior spaces, familial subjects, and Romanesque architecture, and towards obliquely evocative landscapes centered on iterations of a feminine figure. In this way, the new paintings insist on the importance––the human value––of a single subject’s embodied experience and spiritual existence. Philosophically and spiritually, When will my feet catch fire? explores the emotions––liberating as well as daunting––born of claiming one’s independence.

CHINDINMA NNOLI (b. 1998, Nigeria) is a visual artist with a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Benin. In 2020, she was selected for the Rele Arts Foundation Young Contemporaries exhibition. Select group exhibitions include: The Invincible Hands (2021), Shyllon Museum, Lagos, Orita Meta (2021), Rele Gallery, Los Angeles, and In Situ (2021), Marianne Boesky Gallery, New York. Nnoli held her debut solo exhibition To Wander Untamed in 2020 at Rele Gallery, Lagos and had a solo presentation at the Armory Show in 2021. Her works have been featured in Vogue, The New York Times, Hyperallergic, and ColossalChidinma Nnoli currently lives and works in Lagos.

MARIANNE BOESKY GALLERY
509 West 24th Street, New York, NY 10011