Showing posts with label Jeffrey Gibson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeffrey Gibson. Show all posts

12/09/25

Jeffrey Gibson @ The Met Facade, NYC - The Genesis Facade Commission: Jeffrey Gibson, The Animal That Therefore I Am

The Genesis Facade Commission: Jeffrey Gibson, The Animal That Therefore I Am
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
September 12, 2025 – June 9, 2026

Portrait of Jeffrey Gibson: Eileen Travell
Portrait of Jeffrey Gibson: Eileen Travell

Metropolitan Museum of Art - Jeffrey Gibson
Jeffrey Gibson
(American, born 1972)
Installation view of The Genesis Facade Commission:
Jeffrey Gibson, The Animal Therefore I Am, 2025
Courtesy the artist
Image credit: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 
Photo by Eugenia Burnett Tinsley

The acclaimed interdisciplinary artist JEFFREY GIBSON has transformed the iconic niches of the Museum’s Fifth Avenue facade with a series of four large-scale sculptures that explore the metamorphic relationships between all living beings and the environment. A member of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians and of Cherokee descent, Jeffrey Gibson draws from his distinctive style fusing worldviews and imagery with abstraction, text, and color to create these new figurative works cast in bronze. On view through June 9, 2026, The Genesis Facade Commission: Jeffrey Gibson, The Animal That Therefore I Am marks Gibson’s first major exploration of this material at a monumental scale.
"Jeffrey Gibson is one of the most remarkable artists of his generation and a pioneering figure within the field of native and Indigenous art," said Max Hollein, The Met’s Marina Kellen French Director and Chief Executive Officer. "These new works are based on his signature use of unconventional materials and reimagined forms, employing them to explore often-overlooked histories and the natural world. We’re thrilled to have his monumental sculptures installed on The Met’s iconic Fifth Avenue facade."

David Breslin, Leonard A. Lauder Curator in Charge, Modern and Contemporary Art, said, "Jeffrey Gibson is an artist brilliantly attuned to the varieties of life that our world holds—the human, the animal, the land itself. His art vibrates and bristles with that life, the histories that never leave us, and the futures that his vision makes possible."
Jeffrey Gibson - The Met Facade
Jeffrey Gibson
(American, born 1972)
Installation view of they carry messages between 
light and dark spaces biakak / dawodv / hawk,
for The Genesis Facade Commission: 
Jeffrey Gibson, The Animal Therefore I Am, 2025
Silicon bronze with patina finish
Courtesy the artist
Image credit: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 
Photo by Eugenia Burnett Tinsley

Jeffrey Gibson - The Met Facade
Jeffrey Gibson
(American, born 1972)
Installation view of they plan and prepare for 
the future fvni / sa lo li / squirrel,
for The Genesis Facade Commission: 
Jeffrey Gibson, The Animal Therefore I Am, 2025
Silicon bronze with patina finish
Courtesy the artist
Image credit: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 
Photo by Eugenia Burnett Tinsley

Titled The Animal That Therefore I Am, the installation transforms the Museum’s neoclassical facade into a dynamic stage for Gibson’s ambitious vision of figural presence and ecological kinship. Each 10-foot bronze sculpture takes the form of a regional animal: a hawk, a squirrel, a coyote, and a deer. Using cast elements such as wood, beads, and cloth to build texture, Jeffrey Gibson embraces a new process that expands his sculptural vocabulary. From these reproduced wood supports emerge referential animal forms, with each sculpture formally fusing the animate and the inanimate. Intricately bold, patinated abstract patterning evokes beadwork and textiles drawn from a range of Indigenous visual languages—motifs that are seamlessly integrated into the sculptures’ surfaces.

The works are inspired by the French philosopher Jacques Derrida’s book The Animal That Therefore I Am, which examines the violence inherent in the human domination of animals—a theme Gibson connects to broader cycles of conflict. By selecting species native to the New York area, he reflects on how these creatures have been forced to adapt to human environments, inviting us to consider what they endure and what they might teach us. The Animal That Therefore I Am flanks the Museum entrance, the zoomorphic forms remaining in dialogue with the surrounding landscape, from the natural environment of the Hudson River Valley, where Jeffrey Gibson lives and works, to the urban ecology of Central Park encircling The Met.

Jeffrey Gibson - The Met Facade
Jeffrey Gibson
(American, born 1972)
Installation view of they are witty and transform themselves 
in order to guide us nashoba holba / wayaha / coyote
for The Genesis Facade Commission: 
Jeffrey Gibson, The Animal Therefore I Am, 2025
Silicon bronze with patina finish
Courtesy the artist
Image credit: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 
Photo by Eugenia Burnett Tinsley

Jeffrey Gibson - The Met Facade
Jeffrey Gibson
(American, born 1972)
Installation view of they teach us to be sensitive 
and to trust our instincts issi / awi / deer
for The Genesis Facade Commission: 
Jeffrey Gibson, The Animal Therefore I Am, 2025
Silicon bronze with patina finish
Courtesy the artist
Image credit: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 
Photo by Eugenia Burnett Tinsley

This project is the latest in The Met’s series of contemporary commissions in which the Museum invites artists to create new works of art, establishing a dialogue between the artist's practice, The Met collection, the physical Museum, and The Met's audiences.

Artist Jeffrey Gibson

Jeffry Gibson is an interdisciplinary artist who grew up in the United States, Germany, and Korea. His expansive body of work ranges from hard-edged abstract paintings to a rich practice of performance and filmmaking to significant work as artist convener and curator. Since the 2000s, Gibson’s work—which often incorporates Indigenous aesthetic and material traditions—has consistently revealed new modalities for abstraction, the use of text, and color, with the artist applying his formal mastery to concepts such as human connection and collective identity. Notably, Gibson’s work has introduced a broad range of recurring sources, material elements, and imagery while offering a critique of the reductive ways in which Indigenous culture has been historically flattened and misappropriated.

Recent solo exhibitions include Jeffrey Gibson: the space in which to place me (The Broad, 2025); Jeffrey Gibson: POWER FULL BECAUSE WE’RE DIFFERENT (MASS MoCA, 2024); This Burning World: Jeffrey Gibson (ICA San Francisco, 2022); Jeffrey Gibson: The Body Electric (SITE Santa Fe, 2022); Jeffrey Gibson: They Come From Fire (Portland Art Museum, 2022); Jeffrey Gibson: INFINITE INDIGENOUS QUEER LOVE (deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum, 2022); and Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer (Denver Art Museum, 2018). Jeffrey Gibson was selected to represent the United States at La Biennale di Venezia, the 60th International Art Exhibition, in 2024. Jeffrey Gibson also conceived of and co-edited the landmark volume An Indigenous Present (2023), which showcases diverse approaches to Indigenous concepts, forms, and media. His work is included in the permanent collections of the Denver Art Museum; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; National Gallery of Canada; National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Portland Art Museum; Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian; and the Whitney Museum of American Art, among others. Jeffrey Gibson has received many distinguished awards, including the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Fellowship Award (2019), and is currently an artist in residence at Bard College, in Annandale, New York. He lives and works in Hudson, New York.

The Genesis Facade Commission: Jeffrey Gibson, The Animal That Therefore I Am is conceived by the artist in consultation with Jane Panetta, the Aaron I. Fleischman Curator in the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art at The Met. The exhibition is presented by Genesis.

METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART
The Met Fifth Avenue Facade

03/05/25

Jeffrey Gibson @ The Broad, Los Angeles - "the space in which to place me" Exhibition

Jeffrey Gibson 
the space in which to place me
The Broad, Los Angeles
May 10 - September 28, 2025

Jeffrey Gibson
Jeffrey Gibson 
BIRDS FLYING HIGH YOU KNOW HOW I FEEL, 2024 
Mural, acrylic on Polytab, 
12 ft. 6 ¾ in. × 26 ft. 5 ¾ in. (382.9 × 807.1 cm)

The Broad presents Jeffrey Gibson: the space in which to place me, a special exhibition of the artist’s multidimensional work, adapted from its original presentation at the U.S. Pavilion at the 60th Venice Biennale in 2024, where Jeffrey Gibson was the first Indigenous artist to represent the United States with a solo exhibition. Gibson’s first single-artist museum exhibition in Southern California, The Broad’s presentation includes over thirty artworks joyously affirming the artist’s radically inclusive vision. The exhibition highlights Gibson’s distinct use of geometric design and saturated color alongside references to 19th and 20th century foundational American documents and modern music, critiquing systemic injustices and imagining a more equitable future.

Jeffrey Gibson: the space in which to place me borrows its title from the Oglala Lakota poet Layli Long Soldier’s poem “Ȟe Sápa,” which contemplates Indigeneity using a playful geometric format. Like Long Soldier, Gibson probes the visceral feeling of belonging. Across ten paintings, seven sculptures, eight flags, three murals, and one video installation, Jeffrey Gibson honors the multiplicity of identity. Museum galleries morph into kaleidoscopic environments of Gibson’s paintings.

Jeffrey Gibson
Jeffrey Gibson 
THE RETURNED MALE STUDENT FAR TOO FREQUENTLY 
GOES BACK TO THE RESERVATION AND FALLS INTO THE 
OLD CUSTOM OF LETTING HIS HAIR GROW LONG, 2024 
Acrylic on canvas, glass beads, plastic beads, 
inset in a custom wood frame
244.8 x 194cm (96 3/8 x 76 3/8in)

The Broad has acquired Gibson’s 2024 painting THE RETURNED MALE STUDENT FAR TOO FREQUENTLY GOES BACK TO THE RESERVATION AND FALLS INTO THE OLD CUSTOM OF LETTING HIS HAIR GROW LONG, which was first presented at the Venice Biennale. Incorporating his signature use of patterned text, radiating color, and glass beads, the painting directly quotes a letter written in 1902 by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs to a school superintendent in Central California, urging Native school children to cut their hair and assimilate into white Eurocentric modes of dress and appearance. The painting transforms historical oppression into both an opposition to tyranny and a celebration of cultural identity.

The Broad’s presentation includes two additional artworks first displayed together in Gibson’s 2020 Brooklyn Museum exhibition, When Fire Is Applied to a Stone It Cracks. A monumental bronze from the museum’s collection by Charles Cary Rumsey titled The Dying Indian (1900s) wears newly commissioned moccasins by John Little Sun Murie titled I’M GONNA RUN WITH EVERY MINUTE I CAN BORROW (2019). The Roberta Flack lyrics featured from the 1971 song See You Then are also spelled in the beadwork on the moccasins. These works speak to overarching themes in the space in which to place me, whether directly engaging in America’s past and present, paying tribute to histories of resistance, and boldly celebrating belonging, while bringing into this dialogue the topic of monumental sculpture as a mode of US historytelling.
“Jeffrey Gibson imbues unabashed radiant color into his paintings, murals, sculpture and video installations, signaling through his art that frank examination of difficult truths can be affirmative expressions of hope, identity and beauty,” said Joanne Heyler, Founding Director of The Broad. She added, “We are proud to be bringing this groundbreaking work to Los Angeles, directly from the Venice Biennale, where for the first time an Indigenous artist represented the United States, and we hope our audiences will be dazzled by the joy they convey and the belief in the resilience of community the works represent.”
Gibson’s practice celebrates individuals and communities who have maintained their dignity and traditions in impossible circumstances. His work reflects his admiration and respect for the generations of Indigenous makers who have come before him, situating his work within art histories that have previously excluded Native artists, and in the footsteps of postwar painters and printmakers such as Corita Kent, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, and Andy Warhol. Jeffrey Gibson uses recognizable language and images and unsettles the beliefs that might typically be associated with them.
“Developing this project for the Venice Biennale made me interrogate my relationship with the United States as an Indigenous person,” said Jeffrey Gibson. "I wanted to showcase that complexity while celebrating the resilience and joy present in the liberation stories and legacies of Indigenous makers. The show is about turning margin and center inside out, putting topics and people who have been pushed aside in the spotlight. I’m excited for the project to reach audiences in Los Angeles—in a way it’s coming home, from representing the country on an international stage to speaking to histories that are part of our lived experiences here in the U.S.”

“Across the exhibition’s diverse media, Jeffrey Gibson engages a wide range of texts, from foundational legal documents to quotes from civil rights activists, poems by Indigenous authors, and pop song lyrics,” said Sarah Loyer, Curator and Exhibitions Manager. “Kaleidoscopic colors and geometric forms are combined with these references to create an installation that at once pays tribute to histories of resistance in the United States and expresses the relational nature of identity and belonging, all articulated in a style that is vivacious and optimistic.”
On view are towering ceramic sculptures like WE WANT TO BE FREE (2024), made with colorful nylon fringe, tin jingles, and steel. Standing at nine-feet tall, the figure’s torso spells out its title in beads as a political demand, referencing the Civil Rights Act of 1866, the first federal law to define citizenship and claim all citizens equal under the law. Alongside its companion sculpture The Enforcer (2024), the two figures possess an ancestral presence to serve as protective guardians.

The Broad’s exhibition also includes geometric mixed-media paintings in Gibson’s distinct and internationally celebrated style. The large-scale mixed media painting ACTION NOW ACTION IS ELOQUENCE (2024) references Congressman Emmanuel Celler’s words to his fellow representatives during a session of Congress in 1964 when they were voting on the Civil Rights Act. The landmark civil rights legislation was signed into law that day, and outlaws discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, and national origin in the United States. The surface is adorned with a beaded, heart-shaped bag and sash made by an Indigenous Columbia River Plateau or Crow artist, acknowledging a lineage of unnamed Indigenous makers and extending a living Native art history.

The mural BIRDS FLYING HIGH YOU KNOW HOW I FEEL (2024) borrows lyrics from the song Feeling Good, originally composed by Anthony Newley and Leslie Bricusse and made famous by the American singer Nina Simone in 1965, an anthem for freedom and justice during the Civil Rights era. Synchronized, abstract avian shapes are centered between the title’s geometric text and a glowing yellow sun in the background. This mural exemplifies Gibson’s ability to demonstrate how history informs our present, locating significant moments of collective power, persistence, and strength amidst oppression.

Jeffrey Gibson collaborates with The Broad on a dynamic slate of programming. The relationship between art and community is central to Gibson’s practice. These performances, talks, and workshops create spaces for recognition and response, inviting audiences to engage more deeply with his work. 

Born in Colorado in 1972, interdisciplinary artist JEFFREY GIBSON is a member of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians and of Cherokee descent. Gibson received a Bachelor of Fine Arts in painting from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1995 and his Master of Arts in painting from the Royal College of Art, London, in 1998. Throughout his career, Jeffrey Gibson has centered Indigenous and LGBTQ+ perspectives, exploring cultural authenticity, stereotypes of Native people, and how aesthetics circulate amongst different groups. Vibrant colors, geometric patterns and found objects are common throughout his art, resulting in a distinct visual language that celebrates interconnectedness and assemblage.

Jeffrey Gibson: the space in which to place me was first presented by Portland Art Museum, Oregon, and SITE Santa Fe, New Mexico at the United States Pavilion of La Biennale di Venezia, the 60th International Art Exhibition (April 20, 2024 through November 24, 2024); commissioned by Louis Grachos, Phillips Executive Director, SITE Santa Fe; commissioned and curated by Kathleen Ash-Milby, Curator of Native American Art, Portland Art Museum and Abigail Winograd, Independent Curator. 

The Broad’s presentation is organized by Sarah Loyer, Curator and Exhibitions Manager, with the participation of Abigail Winograd.

THE BROAD
221 S. Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90012

25/10/23

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

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

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

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

WOMEN IN PRINT

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

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

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

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

José Clemente Orozco
José Clemente Orozco 
Image courtesy of Childs Gallery

MODERNISTS AND THEIR CONTEMPORARIES

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

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

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

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

OLD MASTERS FROM DÜRER TO REMBRANDT

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

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

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

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

AFRICAN ARTISTS AND ARTISTS OF THE DIASPORA

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

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

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

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

INDIGENOUS PERSPECTIVES

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

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

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

LEGACY AND INFLUENCE: LIVING LEGENDS OF PRINTMAKING

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

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

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

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

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

HAIRY WHO & THE CHICAGO IMAGISTS

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

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

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

MUSES, FEMALE FORM, AND REPRESENTATION ACROSS THE CENTURIES

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

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

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

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

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

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

THE NEXT GENERATION OF PRINTMAKERS

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

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

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

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

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

DRAWINGS FOR PRINTS: PROCESS AND INFLUENCE

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

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

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

IFPDA Print Fair 2023 Exhibitor List

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

*Invitational Exhibitors

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

24/05/19

Jeffrey Gibson @ Madison Museum of Contemporary Art - Like a Hammer

Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer
Madison Museum of Contemporary Art
June 8 - September 15, 2019

Jeffrey Gibson
JEFFREY GIBSON (Mississippi Band Choctaw/ Cherokee) 
AMERICAN HISTORY (JB), 2015
Wool, steel studs, glass beads, artificial sinew, 
metal jingles, acrylic yarn, nylon fringe, and canvas
89 × 66 × 5 in. 
Lent by the Lewis Family
Image courtesy of Jeffrey Gibson Studio and 
Roberts Projects, Los Angeles, California 
Photograph by Peter Mauney

The Madison Museum of Contemporary Art (MMoCA) presents the 2019 presentation of artist JEFFREY GIBSON’s first major museum exhibition. Organized by the Denver Art Museum (DAM), Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer showcases the artist’s highly acclaimed multi-disciplinary work and chronicles a pivotal moment in the artist’s career when his contemporary artistic practice converged with his Native American heritage. The exhibition features about 65 objects comprising large and mid-sized figurative works, text-based wall hangings, a significant selection of his illustrious Everlast beaded punching bags, painted works on rawhide and canvas, as well as videos.

“Jeffrey Gibson’s work is vibrant and bold, yet its layering conveys ideas that reward close viewing. His distinctive voice and visual language have drawn well-earned accolades,” stated Stephen Fleischman, MMoCA director. “We are fortunate to bring this exhibition to Madison and to continue our ongoing dialogue with the community and other museum visitors.”

Jeffrey Gibson
JEFFREY GIBSON (Mississippi Band Choctaw/ Cherokee) 
I PUT A SPELL ON YOU, 2015 
Repurposed punching bag, glass beads, artificial sinew, and steel
40 × 14 × 14 in. 
Collection of the Nasher Museum of Art 
at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina
Museum purchase, 2015.11.1. 
Image courtesy of Jeffrey Gibson Studio and 
Roberts Projects, Los Angeles, California
Photograph by Peter Mauney

Jeffrey Gibson
JEFFREY GIBSON (Mississippi Band Choctaw/Cherokee)
OUR FREEDOM IS WORTH MORE THAN OUR PAIN, 2017
Repurposed punching bags, glass beads, artificial sinew, acrylic felt, steel, and brass
114 × 71 × 42 in
Collection of Vicki and Kent Logan
Image courtesy of Jeffrey Gibson Studio and
Roberts Projects, Los Angeles, California
Photograph by Peter Mauney

Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer reveals how the artist draws upon his heritage and remixes his older works to create a distinct visual vocabulary in artworks that explore his multi-faceted identity and the history of modernism. Jeffrey Gibson derives inspiration from a multitude of sources, ranging from pan-Native American visual culture to his involvement as a young adult in the queer club scene. His interests and life experiences inform his vision of exuberant hybridity, in which glass beads and metal jingles merge with abstract geometric patterns and passages of text from song lyrics, poems, and the artist’s own voice.

"Like a Hammer will feature works from one of the most important periods of my career so far,” said Jeffrey Gibson. “The exhibition begins with artworks that I made just after nearly giving up making art altogether due to feeling misunderstood as an artist and struggling to establish a personal language that describes my experience without compromising it. The objects, sculptures and paintings I've made since 2011 document this journey of establishing my own forward-looking voice influenced by all that has come before me."

Jeffrey Gibson
JEFFREY GIBSON (Mississippi Band Choctaw/Cherokee)
All Things Big and Small, 2016
Acrylic paint and graphite on canvas
70 × 57 1/8 in. 
Collection of Lisa and Stuart Ginsberg
Image courtesy of Jeffrey Gibson Studio and 
Roberts Projects, Los Angeles, California
Photograph by Peter Mauney

Jeffrey Gibson
JEFFREY GIBSON (Mississippi Band Choctaw/Cherokee)
Thinking of You, 2015
Graphite and acrylic paint on rawhide over wood panel
18 x 32 x 2.5 in. 
Private collection, courtesy of Marc Straus Gallery, New York
Image courtesy of Jeffrey Gibson Studio and 
Roberts Projects, Los Angeles, California
Photograph by Peter Mauney

Jeffrey Gibson frequently explores colonialism and the post-colonial mindset, reflecting on how American Indian experiences parallel other civil rights movements. His work also revolves around universal themes of love, community, strength, vulnerability and survival. Through videos featuring interviews with the artist and related programming, visitors will be able to gain an enhanced understanding of Jeffrey Gibson’s distinctive and complex creative practice, as well as how it has evolved from series to series.

Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer is organized by the Denver Art Museum and curated by John Lukavic, Andrew W. Mellon Curator of Native Arts. The exhibition travelled to just two additional venues (the Mississippi Museum of Art and the Seattle Art Museum). 

Exhibition Sponsors: Generous funding for MMoCA’s presentation of Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer has been provided by the Pleasant T. Rowland Foundation; The DeAtley Family Foundation; The David and Paula Kraemer Fund; Mary Ellyn and Joe Sensenbrenner; Ellen Rosner and Paul J. Reckwerdt; Gina and Michael Carter; maiahaus; Betty Jane Perego Fund at the Madison Community Foundation; National Guardian Life Insurance Company; Sara Guyer and Scott Straus; Mark and Judy Bednar; Dan and Natalie Erdman; a grant from the Wisconsin Arts Board with funds from the State of Wisconsin and the National Endowment for the Arts; and MMoCA Volunteers.

MADISON MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART
227 State Street, Madison, WI 53703
www.mmoca.org

12/02/19

Jeffrey Gibson @ Seattle Art Museum - Like a Hammer

Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer
Seattle Art Museum
February 28 – May 12, 2019

Jeffrey Gibson
JEFFREY GIBSON
Like A Hammer, 2014
Jeffrey Gibson, Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians/Cherokee, b. 1972 
Elk hide, glass beads, artificial sinew, wool blanket, metal studs, steel, found pinewood block, and fur, 56 × 24 × 11 in.
Collection of Tracy Richelle High and Roman Johnson, courtesy of Marc Straus Gallery, New York.
Image courtesy of Jeffrey Gibson Studio and Roberts Projects, Los Angeles, California.
Photo: Peter Mauney.

The Seattle Art Museum presents Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer, a major survey of works from 2011 to the present that reflects the artist’s deepening exploration of his Indigenous heritage, legacies of abstraction, and popular and alternative cultures. Organized by the Denver Art Museum, the exhibition features over 65 works produced during a pivotal time in the Jeffrey Gibson’s career, including abstract geometric paintings on rawhide and canvas, beaded punching bags, sculptures, wall hangings, and video. Reflecting the complexity of modern identity, Jeffrey Gibson’s work envisions a more inclusive future.

A contemporary artist of Cherokee heritage and a citizen of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians, Jeffrey Gibson grew up in the US and urban centers in Europe and South Korea. As a young adult, he was involved in queer club culture and interested in popular music, fashion, and design. These experiences inform his vision of exuberant hybridity, in which glass beads, metal jingles, ribbons, song lyrics, and abstract geometric patterns come together. Gibson’s use of materials and references that resonate in modern and contemporary Western art, as well as Indigenous and ancient cultures, establishes a unique visual vocabulary that gives rise to new possibilities and points of connection.

A highlight of the exhibition is 15 punching bags, most of which are from the Everlast series that marked an artistic breakthrough for Jeffrey Gibson. Intricately adorned in beads, fringe, and jingles, and often incorporating text, the punching bags shift gender associations between the masculine and the feminine. They also prompt reflection about the history of violence against Indigenous cultures and signal a call for resilience and perseverance. Like a Hammer also features IF I RULED THE WORLD (2018), which was recently acquired by the Seattle Art Museum for its permanent collection.

Jeffrey Gibson
JEFFREY GIBSON
I PUT A SPELL ON YOU, 2015 
Jeffrey Gibson, Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians/Cherokee, b. 1972
Repurposed punching bag, glass beads, artificial sinew, and steel; 40 × 14 × 14 in.
Collection of the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. 
Museum purchase, 2015.11.1.
Image courtesy of Jeffrey Gibson Studio and Roberts Projects, Los Angeles, California.
Photo: Peter Mauney

Language plays an important role in Jeffrey Gibson's work, with lines from pop songs and other sources adorning vibrant woven and patterned wall hangings and punching bags. Taken from such diverse sources as James Baldwin, Pete Seeger, Culture Club, and Public Enemy, among others, the phrases take on multiple meanings and speak to resistance, reclamation, and celebration.

Like a Hammer features many of Jeffrey Gibson’s abstract geometric paintings on canvas and rawhide, in which he explores pattern, light, and color, prompting the viewer to see abstraction through the lens of Indigeneity. Also on view are midsize and large figurative sculptures. The colorful “club kid” figures are inspired by his experiences in the queer club scenes of South Korea, London, and New York in the 1980s and ’90s and connect to his interest in performance, theatricality, and communal experiences. By contrast, his “ancestor” figures are draped with elaborately ornamented cloaks and topped with clay heads reminiscent of skulls or ancient Mississippian culture effigy heads. While visually fierce, these works are seen by the artist as teachers and culture-bearers.

Jeffrey Gibson
JEFFREY GIBSON
Someone Great Is Gone, 2013 
Jeffrey Gibson, Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians/Cherokee, b. 1972 
Elk hide, acrylic paint, and graphite, 91 x 59 in.
Private collection, New York, courtesy of Marc Straus Gallery, New York 
Image courtesy of Jeffrey Gibson Studio and Roberts Projects, Los Angeles, California.
Photo: Peter Mauney.

One gallery is dedicated to the West Coast debut of DON’T MAKE ME OVER, a multimedia installation consisting of cascades of diaphanous rainbow-colored curtains embedded with lyrics from Burt Bacharach’s 1962 song about love and acceptance, made legendary by Dionne Warwick. The curtains encircle an oversized garment adorned with bells and jingles, and a nearby projection plays a video of Jeffrey Gibson wearing the garment, chanting and drumming as he moves within the enclosed curtained space. A series of irregularly shaped diptych paintings on rawhide complete this installation.

At the end of the exhibition is a reading room, where visitors can reflect and read books—including selections for children and young adults—related to the topics explored in Jeffrey Gibson’s work, such as history, politics, culture, and music.

“Jeffrey Gibson’s art is fearless yet playful. His wide-ranging mind transforms myriad influences into provocative work that defies categorization,” says Barbara Brotherton, Curator of Native American Art. “With Gibson, more is more,” adds Catharina Manchanda, Jon & Mary Shirley Curator of Modern & Contemporary Art. “His work is visually and conceptually exhilarating, full of nuance and complexity. Be prepared for a mind-altering experience.”

A 144-page exhibition catalogue (including 106 color illustrations) published by Denver Art Museum and Prestel will be available for purchase in SAM Shop ($39.95). Also titled Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer (ISBN: 978-3-7913-5733-1), it presents six essays on themes found in the artist’s work by Glenn Adamson, Roy Boney Jr., Anne Ellegood, America Meredith, Sara Raza, and John P. Lukavic, the Andrew W. Mellon Curator of Native Arts at the Denver Art Museum, who curated the exhibition and also edited the catalogue. Like a Hammer also features an interview with the artist by Jen Mergel.

Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer is organized by the Denver Art Museum. The exhibition premiered at the Denver Art Museum (May 13, 2018–August 12, 2018) and then traveled to the Mississippi Museum of Art (September 8, 2018 – January 20, 2019). After SAM, its heads to the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art (June 7–September 14, 2019).

SAM - SEATTLE ART MUSEUM
1300 First Avenue, Seattle, WA 98101
www.seattleartmuseum.org