Showing posts with label Loie Hollowell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Loie Hollowell. Show all posts

21/09/25

Modern & Contemporary Art Fall Auctions @ Phillips Hong Kong

Modern & Contemporary Art Fall Auctions
Phillips Hong Kong
Auctions: 27 and 28 September 2025
Preview: 22 - 28 September 2025

On 27 and 28 September, Phillips will present Modern & Contemporary Art Fall Auctions in Hong Kong, held in celebration of the company’s 10th anniversary in Asia. Taking place on 27 September, the Evening Sale features exceptional works by the most prominent international artists, including Yoshitomo Nara, Zao Wou-Ki, Tom Wesselmann, Yayoi Kusama, Georges Mathieu, Andy Warhol, and Ruth Asawa, alongside cutting-edge works by in-demand young talents such as Hao Liang, Loie Hollowell, Lucas Arruda and Jonathan Gardner. The Day Sale on 28 September features a dynamic range of works—from established modern masters and blue-chip contemporary artists to rising talents. A key highlight is two exceptional private collections of Asian Modern Art: one includes rare works by Zao Wou-Ki, preserved in a private collection for over 75 years and never before seen by the public; the other showcases a remarkable selection of Southeast Asian pieces by Mai Trung Thứ. Collectors and art enthusiasts are invited to explore the works in person at Phillips’ West Kowloon Galleries during the public preview, which will be open from 22-28 September.
Danielle So, Hong Kong Head of Auctions, Phillips, and Rebecca Hu, Head of Sale, Modern & Contemporary Art, Phillips Hong Kong, jointly said: “This season’s sales present an exceptional opportunity for collectors to acquire outstanding works by the most influential blue-chip contemporary artists and post-war masters. Nearly two-thirds of the Evening Sale will feature works making their auction debut, with only nine pieces having appeared publicly in the past 16 years. As we celebrate our 10-year anniversary in Asia, this season’s Evening and Day Sales in Hong Kong hold special significance for us and for the collectors who have shared this remarkable journey over the past decade. Highlights include signature pieces long held in distinguished private collections, works with notable exhibition histories, and works of exceptional provenance — from a fresh-to-market 2000 Yoshitomo Nara, to Tom Wesselmann’s iconic work that once set the artist’s auction record and has been preserved in the same collection for 18 years, to Zao Wou-Ki’s monumental canvas with exceptional international exposure. We are equally proud to highlight works by visionary women artists in this season’s sales, presented in parallel with our neighbor M+’s special exhibition ‘Dream Rooms: Environments by Women Artists 1950s–Now’.”
LEADING HIGHLIGHTS

Yoshitomo Nara, Pinki, 2000
Yoshitomo Nara
Pinky, 2000
acrylic on canvas, 160 x 145 cm.
Image courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$60,000,000-80,000,000/
US$7,690,000-10,260,000

The Evening Sale will be led by Yoshitomo Nara’s seminal work Pinky. Coming to the auction market for the very first time, this masterpiece was painted in the artist’s watershed year of 2000, the same year as Nara's two highest auction records. Out of 33 paintings the artist created in 2000, only 11 share Pinky’s arresting "head-and-shoulders" composition. Directly succeeding in Volume I of his most extensive catalogue raisonne, the present work is the first of only four Pinky subjects in Nara’s entire oeuvre and the purest distillation of his lifelong meditation on solitude.

Zao Wou-Ki, 1986
Zao Wou-Ki
27.01.86, 1986
oil on canvas, 200 x 162 cm.
Image courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$30,000,000 – 40,000,000/ 
US$3,850,000-5,130,000

Among the top lots of the Evening Sale is Zao Wou-Ki’s 27.01.86. In this work, he uses the attributes of ink—thickness, thinness, dryness, wetness—to construct a multi-dimensional composition of depth and expansiveness, symbolizing growth like a tree of life reaching into infinite space. Between 1985 and 1990, Zao produced several works in this vein, yet among these single-panel compositions, 27.01.86 stands out as one of the largest and most intricate. In 1988, he extended this vision in an abstract painting commissioned by the Seoul Olympic Committee to embody the Olympic spirit, a work that shares stylistic affinities with 27.01.86. The present work holds a rare place in Zao Wou-Ki’s oeuvre for its exceptional international exposure. Shortly after its completion, it was featured in the artist’s large-scale solo exhibition at Galerie Artcurial in Paris in 1988, and later, in 2004, in a major retrospective at Tokyo’s Bridgestone Museum of Art. It was also included in Art and Artists of 20th Century China, the collection of Oxford fellow and art historian Michael Sullivan. These recognitions underscore the painting’s power to transcend cultural and geographic boundaries.

Tom Wesselmann, Smoker
Tom Wesselmann
Smoker #17, 1975
oil on shaped canvas, 243.8 x 332.7 cm.
Image courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$ 20,000,000 - 30,000,000/
US$ 2,560,000 - 3,850,000

Also among the leading highlights of this season’s Evening Sale is Tom Wesselmann’s Smoker #17 from his iconic Smoker series — a work that, when last offered at auction in May 2007, set a world record for the artist. A central figure in the American Pop Art movement, Wesselmann began the Smoker series in 1967, marking a pivotal evolution in his exploration of sensuality, form, and painterly detail. With Smoker #1 now in MoMA’s permanent collection, the series remains a defining chapter in his oeuvre. Inspired by a spontaneous moment during his Mouth series studies, Wesselmann’s addition of a lit cigarette and curling smoke introduced heightened eroticism and visual complexity. Smoker #17 captures this shift with a meticulously balanced composition — voluptuous red lips, a poised hand, and languid smoke — evoking both cinematic allure and psychological intensity. 

VISIONARY WOMEN IN ART

In a market where works by women artists continue to command global attention, Phillips presents an extraordinary roster of the most celebrated female voices in contemporary art across its Evening and Day Sales. Highlights include a diverse range of works by Yayoi Kusama — from her iconic Infinity Nets canvas to a hand-painted denim jacket. Equally significant is the debut of Japanese-American artist Ruth Asawa’s work at auction in Hong Kong, building on the momentum of her acclaimed solo exhibition in the city last Fall. A transformative figure in the art world, Ruth Asawa has been the subject of celebrated museum retrospectives, and her influence will be further cemented with a landmark exhibition opening at New York’s MoMA in October 2025.

Ruth Asawa
Ruth Asawa
Untitled S.013 
(Hanging Single-Lobed, Five-Layer 
Continuous Form within a Form), 1987
hanging sculpture, woven oxidised copper wire, 
20 x 29 x 29 cm.
Image courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$ 2,200,000 - 4,200,000/
US$ 282,000 - 538,000

Ruth Asawa's metal wire weaving blurs the boundary between sculpture and craft, between refinement and popular appeal. During World War II, her Japanese heritage led to her internment in a detention camp; the shadow cast by barbed wire was entrapped within her childhood memories. In subsequent creations, she transformed this symbol of restraint into a metaphor of connection. In Untitled S.013 offered in this season’s Evening Sale, she uses weaving techniques inspired by Mexican traditions to create forms that balance transparency and density, inviting light and air into the sculptural experience.

Loie Hollowell
Loie Hollowell
Hung (down), 2016
oil and acrylic on linen mounted to panel, 
121.9 x 91.4 cm.
Image courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$ 4,500,000 - 6,500,000/
US$ 577,000 - 833,000

Loie Hollowell’s Hung (Down) is a pivotal work that showcases her distinctive fusion of geometric abstraction and corporeal symbolism. It uses vibrant colour and symmetrical form to evoke themes of femininity, sexuality, and political tension—particularly in response to the 2016 U.S. presidential election and the media’s treatment of Hillary Clinton. Presented in her sold-out solo show Mother Tongue, the painting marks the beginning of her hybrid approach, blending painting with sculptural elements. It also draws on the legacy of pioneering female artists like Agnes Pelton and Georgia O’Keeffe, incorporating spiritual symbolism and sensual forms that echo their iconic visual languages.

20TH CENTURY MODERN MASTERS

In addition to Zao Wou-Ki’s 27.01.86, this season’s Hong Kong Sales presents an exceptional selection of Modern works by 20th-century masters from both East and West. Highlights include pieces by Georg Baselitz, Pierre Soulages, Salvador Dalí, and Georges Mathieu, Chu Teh-Chun, alongside two outstanding private collections of Asian Modern Art, featuring rare and important works by Zao Wou-Ki and Mai Trung Thứ.

Georges Mathieu
Georges Mathieu
Air de France, 1967
oil on canvas, 175.7 x 451 cm.
Image courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$ 3,000,000 - 5,000,000/ 
US$ 385,000 - 641,000

Georges Mathieu stands as a defining force of post-war abstraction, credited with pioneering the movement he named “lyrical abstraction.” Rejecting geometric rigidity, he championed pure, unrestrained gesture — sweeping calligraphic lines executed with long brushes or paint applied directly from the tube in bursts of immediacy and velocity. Celebrated through major retrospectives and public commissions in the 1960s–70s, Georges Mathieu expanded his influence into tapestry, sculpture, architecture, and design. This monumental canvas offered in this season’s Evening Sale, created on commission for Air France and unveiled at an exhibition inaugurated by French cultural minister André Malraux. It encapsulates his philosophy of “no preconceived form” and the ecstatic, Dionysian energy that defined his most iconic works. 

Zao Wou-Ki, 1948
 Zao Wou-Ki
Untitled, 1948
oil on cardboard, 37 x 46 cm.
Image courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$ 2,000,000 - 3,000,000/
US$ 256,000 - 385,000

In the Day Sale, Phillips presents six rare works by Zao Wou-Ki from the Bottemer family collection. Upon arriving in Paris in 1948, Zao formed a close friendship with Claude Bottemer, a French sculptor, and his wife, an early bond that profoundly shaped his formative years in France. The works in this collection bear intimate witness to that friendship, offering a glimpse of Zao’s artistic journey during his first years abroad. Carefully preserved in the family’s private collection for more than 75 years and never before seen by the public, these pieces reveal a rich spectrum of creative exploration. A highlight of the collection is Untitled, a standout from 1948 in which Zao begins to depart from figurative and traditional perspective.

Chu Teh-Chun
Chu Teh-Chun
Transparence voil, 2003
1920-2014
oil on canvas, 130 x 96.5 cm.
Image courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$ 2,000,000 - 3,000,000/
US$ 256,000 - 385,000

Presented in Day Sale, Transparence voilée exemplifies Chu Teh-Chun’s lyrical abstraction, with translucent layers of oil pigment and fluid, calligraphic brushwork that evokes movement, memory, and dreamlike serenity. Featured prominently in the 2004 exhibition Chu Teh-Chun and His Universe at the University Museum and Art Gallery in Hong Kong, the work highlights Chu’s mastery of light and his unique ability to bridge Eastern and Western artistic traditions, solidifying his legacy in both French and Chinese art history.

Mai Trung Thu
Mai Trung Thứ
Walk in the Garden, 1971
gouache on silk, in artist’s frame, work 57.5 x 31 cm.
Estimate: HK$ 800,000 - 1,200,000/ 
US$ 103,000 - 154,000

Mai Trung Thu was a pioneering figure in Vietnam’s progressive art movement of the 1930s, among the first to receive formal Western art training at the School of Fine Arts of Indochina alongside peers such as Le Pho, Vu Cao Dam, and Le Thi Luu, and one of the earliest Vietnamese painters to build a successful career in Paris. Renowned for his refined silk paintings that blended Eastern and Western aesthetics, he captured the poetic essence of everyday life through images of graceful women, children, and intimate family scenes, helping to shape the identity of modern Vietnamese art. Walk in the Garden offered in this season’s Day Sale epitomises this vision, combining folk-inspired imagery with modernist abstraction in a balanced composition of flat planes, elegant silhouettes, and delicate contours, evoking a nostalgic, idealised vision of Vietnam.

POP ART PIONEERS, FROM WARHOL TO MURAKAMI

Andy Warhol, Hearts Pink
Andy Warhol
Hearts Pink, 1982
acrylic, silkscreen ink and diamond dust on canvas, 
38 x 38 cm.
Image courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$ 1,600,000 - 2,400,000/
US$ 205,000 - 308,000

In early 1979, Andy Warhol produced a series of small-scale heart paintings inspired by Valentine’s Day motifs, originally conceived as gifts for friends at Studio 54. Although Warhol had occasionally incorporated heart imagery as early as the 1950s, it wasn’t until the early 1980s that he revisited the theme in a more systematic and sustained way, creating multiple series. Hearts Pink offered in the Evening Sale belongs to his later period, distinguished by the use of universal symbols—such as skulls and dollar signs—rendered in bold colours and visually arresting compositions. More than a simple portrayal of a heart, Hearts Pink exemplifies Warhol’s quintessential Pop Art strategy: the deconstruction and reinvention of emotional symbols through a lens of cultural critique and aesthetic innovation.

Takashi Murakami
Takashi Murakami
I stare into your eye, 2020
acrylic on canvas, diameter 150 cm.
Image courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$ 3,500,000 - 5,500,000/
US$ 449,000 - 705,000

Takashi Murakami, a pioneering figure of the Superflat Movement at the turn of the millennium, is renowned for merging fine art with pop culture through vibrant, anime- and manga-inspired works that critique consumerism, history, and identity. His playful yet incisive aesthetic was exemplified in I stare into your eyes, a standout piece offered in this season’s Day Sale, which explored the layered visual language of Superflat and the enduring influence of Japanese ceramic arts. With its vividly coloured concentric circles, the work invites viewers into a paradoxical realm of superficiality that demands deeper reflection.

CHINESE CONTEMPORARY ART

Chinese contemporary art — particularly works by artists born between the 1970s and 1990s — has attracted strong interest and spirited bidding at Phillips’ Hong Kong Auctions in recent seasons, achieving impressive sell-through rates. This season, Phillips is delighted to present a compelling selection of Chinese contemporary works, including Zeng Fanzhi, Huang Yuxing, Hao Liang, Yue Minjun, Fang Yuan, Chen Fei, Xiyao Wang, and more.

Hao Liang, Butterfly City
Hao Liang
Butterfly City, 2010
ink and colour on silk, 166 x 98 cm.
Image courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: HK$ 3,800,000 - 5,800,000
US$ 487,000 - 744,000

Offered in the Evening Sale, Hao Liang’s Butterfly City unfolds from a bird’s‑eye view, revealing a silent classical city where butterflies alone drift through the air, their wings casting shadows like ghosts of history or flames of life. Inspired by the metamorphic vision of “Clarice” in Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities, the work transforms literary allegory into a dreamlike rebirth of the ancient city, poised between lightness and weight, the fleeting and the eternal. Painted on silk with meticulous gongbi brushwork, Hao inherits the precision of Song and Yuan boundary painting yet breaks from traditional spatial logic to create a surreal symbolic order. The butterflies infuse the scene with cyclical renewal, awakening classical technique with the vitality of a contemporary fable. Bridging Eastern and Western perspectives, ancient and modern aesthetics, the work hovers between reality and illusion — a cross‑cultural love poem to memory.

Modern & Contemporary Art Hong Kong Evening Sale
Date: 7pm HKT, 27 September 2025

Modern & Contemporary Art Hong Kong Day Sale
Date: 2pm HKT, 28 September 2025

Hong Kong Preview: 22-28 September 11:00-19:00| G/F, WKCDA Tower, West Kowloon Cultural District, No. 8 Austin Road West

Location: G/F, WKCDA Tower, West Kowloon Cultural District, No. 8 Austin Road West, Kowloon, Hong Kong

PHILLIPS HONG KONG

Phillips Asia


19/01/24

Loie Hollowell @ The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield - "Space Between, A survey of ten years" Exhibition

Loie Hollowell: Space Between, 
A survey of ten years
The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield 
January 21 - August 11, 2024

Loie Hollowell
LOIE HOLLOWELL
Point of Entry (blue green mounds over yellow sky), 2017 
Courtesy of Carolina Zapf & John Josephson

The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum presents LOIE HOLLOWELL’s first museum survey and first museum presentation on the East Coast, which includes paintings and works on paper made over a decade, the debut of new pastel drawings and paintings that incorporate life casts of pregnant breasts and bellies, as well as never before exhibited works on paper from the artist’s archive.

Space Between tracks the development of Loie Hollowell’s visual language over ten years; a vocabulary that bridges abstraction with figuration, autobiography with art history, and biology with emotion. Orbiting two centuries of pioneering women artists that span generations and movements from Abstraction to Surrealism to 1960s Light and Space art, including Hilma af Klint, Agnes Pelton, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Judy Chicago, Loie Hollowell also cites Neo-Tantric painting as an important influence. Hollowell’s approach always begins with her own body as a guide to appraise seismic issues from sexual freedom to feminism, and reproductive rights and motherhood.

This survey’s focus considers time as material and theme. Loie Hollowell turns the body into a metaphorical clock, documenting extreme intervals of change through dramatic chiaroscuro, saturated color, and charged light. Her labor-intensive process begins with a pastel drawing. She makes notes in the margins indicating how to translate her vision into painting. Her sentient compositions are then built with geometric and biomorphic forms, evocative of bellies, breasts, vulva, and buttocks that abstract the physical and emotional transformations she experienced throughout conception, birth, and postpartum with her two children. 

Her paintings are endowed with dimensional relief, achieved by adhering CNC-milled high-density foam or cast-resin appendages to the surfaces to impersonate fleshy bulges and curves. These protrusions, which vary in depth, soften the works’ rigid two-dimensionality, and evade the line between painting and sculpture to confront the viewer with visceral beauty. She uses a palette that glows, throbs, and blazes, a luminescent progression of reds, blues, yellows, oranges, greens, pinks, and purples, that vaunt a mercurial tempo from tender to explosive. Applying a rigorous symmetry in reference to the human body, she choreographs the energies and emotions that come from the mental and physical with an emphasis on the birthing body; the epicenter of the universe, where the heavens connect with the earth.

The exhibition is accompanied by the artist’s first museum monograph, co-published by Gregory R. Miller & Co., featuring an essay by the curator Amy Smith-Stewart, Chief Curator.

LOIE HOLLOWELL was born in 1983 and raised in Woodland, California. She currently lives and works in New York City. She received a BFA at University of California Santa Barbara in 2005 and an MFA in painting from Virginia Commonwealth University in 2012. Her work has been exhibited at museums and galleries worldwide including Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art, University of California, Davis; Pace Gallery; Long Museum West Bund, Shanghai; Feuer/Mesler, New York; White Cube Gallery, Paris; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles; The Flag Art Foundation, New York; Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas; Victoria Miro, London; and Ballroom Marfa, Texas. Her work is in public collections including the Albertina Museum, Vienna; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; ICA, Miami; Long Museum, Shanghai; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles; M+ Museum, Hong Kong; Stedjelijk Museum, Amsterdam; and Zentrum Paul Klee, Switzerland.

Loie Hollowell: Space Between, A Survey of Ten Years is curated by Amy Smith-Stewart, Chief Curator.

THE ALDRICH CONTEMPORARY ART MUSEUM 
258 Main Street Ridgefield, CT 06877 

07/06/19

Pace Gallery's Inaugural Exhibitions at New Chelsea Gallery, NYC

Pace Announces Inaugural Exhibition
Program for New Flagship Chelsea Gallery Opening September 2019

PACE GALLERY'S NEW CHELSEA BUILDING
Architectural rendering of the southeast façade 
of 540 West 25th Street, New York
Courtesy of Bonetti / Kozerksi Architecture

Pace Gallery announces its inaugural season of programming for its new flagship gallery in New York City, located at 540 West 25th Street. After almost six decades of history in Manhattan, Pace will cement its commitment to Chelsea with a new global headquarters in the heart of the neighborhood. Open to the public on September 14, 2019, Pace will present a series of exhibitions throughout the new building, including: an exhibition dedicated to twentieth century master Alexander Calder occupying the first floor gallery; a show of new paintings by celebrated New York-based artist Loie Hollowell on the second floor; an installation of new work by David Hockney on the third floor; and a presentation charting the evolution of Fred Wilson’s chandelier sculptures installed on the seventh floor. The inaugural exhibition represents several firsts, including Loie Hollowell’s premiere exhibition with Pace in New York. Additional details on each exhibition, accompanying publications, and related programming will be announced over the course of the summer.
“For nearly six decades, Pace has celebrated and advanced the work of creative pioneers,” said Marc Glimcher, Pace Gallery President and CEO. “They are our inspiration, mission, and the source of our vision. Pace has designed and crafted every element of our new global headquarters to provide a vehicle for artists to tell their stories as richly as they deserve to be told and as dynamically as our communities deserve to experience them. It is an honor to inaugurate this gallery with the work of artists who have been so instrumental in creating the fabric of our program; representing both our vibrant history and our exciting future.”
Pace’s new global headquarters is being developed by Weinberg Properties and designed by Bonetti / Kozerski Architecture, in close collaboration with Marc Glimcher. Spanning eight stories and measuring approximately 75,000 square feet, Pace’s new building more than doubles its current exhibition space in New York and features five distinct galleries, including both indoor and outdoor spaces. Each gallery allows for a broad range of installation styles and artistic media, with features such as an entirely column-free design, high loading capacities, and flexible lighting plans creating extraordinarily nimble galleries that can support a diverse approach to exhibition programming.

Inaugural Exhibitions

First Floor:
Alexander Calder

In close collaboration with the Calder Foundation, New York, Pace will inaugurate the 3,600-square-foot first-floor gallery with a focused exhibition dedicated to Alexander Calder. The exhibition will examine the breadth of the artist’s practice beginning in the mid-1920s and leading up to his creation in 1931 of the mobile—an unprecedented form of kinetic sculpture that created a true rupture in the trajectory of art. From his gestural Animal Sketchings and massless wire portraits of the 1920s to his abstract oil paintings of 1930 and the swift progression to motorized objects and hanging mobiles, this exhibition will capture the remarkable transition from potential to actual energy in Calder’s work and underscore his relentless pursuit of the vitality and life force in art.

Second Floor:
Loie Hollowell

The artist’s premiere exhibition with Pace in New York will take place in the new building’s second floor gallery. The exhibition will showcase a series of new large-scale paintings that continue Loie Hollowell’s investigation of bodily landscapes and sacred iconography through allusions to the human form. Drawing inspiration from artists like Agnes Pelton, Georgie O’Keefe, and Judy Chicago, Hollowell’s works abstract the most intimate parts of the human body into primal shapes, such as the mandora and the lingam, in an examination of sexuality, conception, birth, and motherhood. In each work, the artist utilizes color and dimensionality—at times manipulating the canvas with three-dimensional forms—to amplify the phenomenological presence of her corporeal compositions.

Third Floor:
David Hockney

The third-floor gallery will be dedicated to an exhibition of new work by David Hockney. This exhibition will present a 24-panel panoramic drawing and four additional individual drawings. Capturing the arrival of spring in Normandy, these works emphasize Hockney’s ability to unite multiple spatial and temporal experiences of a place into a single image. Influenced by such disparate sources as traditional Chinese scroll painting, contemporary time-based art, and the medieval Bayeux Tapestry, produced in England and housed nearby in Normandy, these new works showcase Hockney’s continued experimentation with the representation of space.

Sixth Floor:
Alexander Calder, Joel Shapiro, and Tony Smith

Offering panoramic views of the Manhattan skyline, the entire sixth floor is devoted to a 4,800 square-foot outdoor exhibition space that can accommodate large-scale sculptural installations. Partially covered by the seventh floor, the design of this space creates the sense of an outdoor room. Exhibitions on the sixth floor will rotate two to three times per year, and for the inaugural installation, Pace will present three monumental outdoor sculptures by three generations of sculptors: Alexander Calder, Joel Shapiro, and Tony Smith. 

Seventh Floor:
Fred Wilson

The seventh-floor exhibition will showcase the evolution of Fred Wilson’s celebrated chandelier sculptures, which the artist began in 2003 when he represented the United States at the 50th Venice Biennale with Speak of Me as I Am. Since then, Wilson’s Murano glass chandeliers, with their evolving shifts in scale, materials, and complexity, have become vehicles for the artist’s meditations on blackness, death, and beauty. Installed hanging from the gallery’s 19-foot-high ceilings, the presentation will include five chandelier sculptures from the artist’s first to his most recent, conceived for the 15th Istanbul Biennial in Fall of 2017.

Looking Ahead to 2019 and 2020

Taking full advantage of the dynamic programming the new building will support, Pace is planning a robust series of exhibitions over the course of 2019 and 2020 and will launch a new interdisciplinary series of live and moving-image programming.

In the late fall of 2019, Pace will present exhibitions dedicated to Mary Corse on the first floor; Chinese painter Li Songsong on the second; and longstanding gallery artist Richard Tuttle on the third. Corse’s exhibition of new paintings will be her first with the gallery in New York since joining Pace in 2018.

Looking ahead to 2020—the 60th anniversary of the gallery—Pace’s new headquarters will host major exhibitions by a diverse range of the gallery’s artists, including debut New York shows for new additions to Pace, such as Lynda Benglis and Arlene Shechet, as well as exhibitions dedicated to pioneers of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, such as Jean Dubuffet, Isamu Noguchi, and Robert Ryman.

Pace is a leading contemporary art gallery representing many of the most significant international artists and estates of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Under the leadership of President and CEO Marc Glimcher, Pace is a vital force within the art world and plays a critical role in shaping the history, creation, and engagement with modern and contemporary art. Since its founding by Arne Glimcher in 1960, Pace has developed a distinguished legacy for vibrant and dedicated relationships with renowned artists. As the gallery approaches the start of its seventh decade, Pace’s mission continues to be inspired by our drive to support the world’s most influential and innovative artists and to share their visionary work with people around the world.

Pace advances this mission through its dynamic global program, comprising ambitious exhibitions, artist projects, public installations, institutional collaborations, and curatorial research and writing. Today, Pace has nine locations worldwide: two galleries in New York; one in London; one in Geneva; one in Palo Alto, California; one in Beijing; two in Hong Kong; and one in Seoul. 

PACE GALLERY
www.pacegallery.com