Showing posts with label MoMA PS1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MoMA PS1. Show all posts

17/08/25

Vaginal Davis: Magnificent Product @ MoMA PS1 - A major exhibition of the artist, spanning five decades of her practice

Vaginal Davis: Magnificent Product
MoMA PS1, Long Island City
October 9, 2025 – March 2, 2026

Portrait of Vaginal Davis
Portrait of Vaginal Davis. Downtown. 1993
Photo: Reynaldo Rivera

Vaginal Davis
Vaginal Davis 
The White to Be Angry. 1999 
Film still
Courtesy the artist and Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin

MoMA PS1 presents a major exhibition of Vaginal Davis, spanning five decades of her practice as a performer, visual artist, author, filmmaker, musician, educator, self-proclaimed “Blacktress,” and countercultural icon. Originating at the Moderna Museet in Stockholm, Vaginal Davis: Magnificent Product makes its US debut at PS1, opening October 9, 2025. Organized thematically, the exhibition includes major installations, video, paintings, zines, audio works, sculptures, and cross-disciplinary collaborations, as well as extensive archival materials. The presentation spotlights Ms. Davis’s role as an underground trailblazer in the overlapping realms of art, music, performance, and queer politics—as well as her uncompromising glamour.

An archival display focused on her early career in her hometown, Los Angeles, traces the tributaries of her early career in the 1980s and ‘90s. A founding mother of the city’s queercore scene, Vaginal Davis was, in her own words, “too gay for the punk scene and too punk for the gays.” Early videos, photographs, and ephemera detail her critical position at this nexus of the punk and queer worlds, highlighting her bands—¡Cholita! The Female Menudo; black fag; Pedro, Muriel, & Esther (PME); and the Afro Sisters, whose 1984 unreleased album gives the exhibition its title—as well as performances, photoshoots, and club nights. In a dedicated cinema room, films such as That Fertile Feeling (1983) and The White to Be Angry (1999) demonstrate Ms. Davis’s embodied pastiche of social mores and horrors, exposing cracks in the myth of a singular identity.

Vaginal Davis
Vaginal Davis 
HAG – small, contemporary, haggard. 2012 
Installation view of Vaginal Davis: Magnificent Product
on view at Gropius Bau from March 21 
through September 14, 2025 
Courtesy Gropius Bau
Photo: Frank Sperling

Vaginal Davis
Vaginal Davis
 
HAG – small, contemporary, haggard. 2012 
Installation view of Vaginal Davis: Magnificent Product
on view at Gropius Bau from March 21 
through September 14, 2025 
Courtesy Gropius Bau
Photo: Frank Sperling

Ms. Davis’s time in Los Angeles reappears in the installation HAG – small, contemporary, haggard (2012), a tribute to the eponymous gallery she ran out of her Sunset Boulevard apartment from 1982 to 1989. During its run, HAG Gallery featured the work of creatives such as actor John Drew Barrymore (who lived next door), designer Rick Owens, and vocalist Alice Bag, among many others. First realized in 2012 at PARTICIPANT INC. in New York, HAG recreates the footprint of the original Los Angeles gallery in the form of an Ames room, whose torqued architecture distorts the scale of viewers who enter it—rendering the small large and vice versa. Papered with a “lesbian domesticity” wallpaper, it houses sculptures made of bread baked in the likenesses of Mariah Carey and Justin Timberlake, as well as a series of portraits painted using discount makeup. Elsewhere, the exhibition brings together a broader selection of Ms. Davis’s paintings from the early 1990s through 2022, which, evocative of religious icon paintings, and painted with discontinued cosmetics, celebrate grande dames from courtesan Madame du Barry to actress Lillian Gish—”women trapped in the bodies of women,” as Vaginal Davis notes. This selection also features three of Ms. Davis’s largest paintingsto date, all from the collection of The Museum of Modern Art, exalting deities such as Oshun, African Goddess of Love and Sweet Water (2021). 

Vaginal Davis
Vaginal Davis 
HOFPFISTEREI (detail) 
Installation view of Vaginal Davis: Magnificent Product
on view at Gropius Bau from March 21 through 
September 14, 2025
Courtesy Gropius Bau 
Photo: Frank Sperling

The installation HOFPFISTEREI offers visitors the chance to explore a vast collection of Ms. Davis’s writing, including her iconoclastic zines filled with poetry, pornography, and LA gossip; the columns she penned for the LA Weekly; her ongoing blog “Speaking From the Diaphragm”; and works of self-published fiction. The installation highlights further channels through which Ms. Davis’s distinct voice circulated, such as audio works, “video zines,” and footage of live readings. As an active archive with a working photocopy machine, HOFPFISTEREI allows visitors to copy, compile, and collage their own editorial projects to take home with them. 

Vaginal Davis
Vaginal Davis
The Wicked Pavillion. 2021
Installation view of Vaginal Davis: Magnificent Product,
on view at Moderna Museet from May 15 
through October 13, 2024
Courtesy Moderna Museet 
Photo: My Matson

Vaginal Davis
Vaginal Davis
Memorabilia and ephemera as part of The Wicked Pavillion. 2021 
Installation view, Vaginal Davis, The Wicked Pavilion
Eden Eden, Berlin, 2021 
Courtesy the artist and Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin
© Vaginal Davis. Photo: GRAYS

Vaginal Davis
Vaginal Davis
Memorabilia and ephemera as part of The Wicked Pavillion. 2021 
Installation view, Vaginal Davis, The Wicked Pavilion, 
Eden Eden, Berlin, 2021 
Courtesy the artist and Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin
© Vaginal Davis. Photo: GRAYS

The work The Wicked Pavilion (2021) comprises two installations: The Fantasia Library and The Tween Bedroom, which allow visitors to delve further into lineages of artistic influence and the political potency of desire. The “tween bedroom” is replete with a vanity, magazine clippings of crushes, movie posters, and an oversized papier-mâché phallus on a rotating bed. The Fantasia Library holds five hundred pink books that Vaginal Davis has started writing but “never quite finished,” or aspires to write, with titles like “Semi Detached Bungalow” and “The Fiscal Clit.” It also features a selection of titles influential to Vaginal Davis, from Kathy Acker’s novel Empire of the Senseless (1988) to Liz Renay’s self-help classic How to Attract Men (1966). 

Central to Magnificent Product are Ms. Davis’s enduring collaborations with influential artists and collectives in the United States and abroad. Naked on my Ozgoad — Anal Deep Throat (2024–25) is a new multimedia installation made in collaboration with New York-based artist Jonathan Berger that materializes Ms. Davis’s life-long love for L. Frank Baum’s Oz books through sculpture, sound, and prints made directly on the museum’s walls. The installation recalls her first art exhibition—an earlier reimaging of Baum’s children’s novels—at the Pio Pico Library in Los Angeles at age eight.

In 2005, Vaginal Davis relocated from Los Angeles to Berlin. Shortly prior to her move, she had begun collaborating with the Berlin-based artist collective CHEAP. Founded by Susanne Sachsse, Marc Siegel, and Daniel Hendrickson in 2001, the group creates performances, videos, installations, and other discursive forms that combine theory and pleasure, politics and whimsy, aesthetics and sex. The sound, object, and moving image installation Choose Mutation, with Photographs by Annette Frick (2024), presented in MoMA PS1’s double-height gallery, features a dystopian video about paranoia and the resonance of political control over the body, projected onto a motorized billboard. The work, conceived by Susanne Sachsse, Marc Siegel, and Martin Siemann, also includes a series of black-and-white photographs by Annette Frick depicting the CHEAP collective members in early performances.

Vaginal Davis: Magnificent Product marks the first career-spanning institutional exhibition of Ms. Davis’s work in the United States. Originally exhibited across six venues in Stockholm, the MoMA PS1 iteration showcases the full breadth of her expansive, unruly, and ever-relevant practice under one roof.

Vaginal Davis: Magnificent Product is accompanied by a major publication, comprising commissioned essays by authors including Hendrik Folkerts, Lia Gangitano, Bojana Kunst, Elisabeth Lebovici, and Troizel. The catalogue also includes twenty letters to Vaginal Davis from former collaborators, friends, and co-conspirators, including Jonathan Berger, Darby English, Sheldon Gooch, Lisa Teasley, Wu Tsang, and band members of Xiu Xiu, among many others.

The exhibition is organized by Hendrik Folkerts, Curator of International Contemporary Art and Head of Exhibitions, Moderna Museet, Stockholm. The chapters at partner institutions were organized in collaboration with Eva-Lena Bergström (Nationalmuseum), Anna Efraimsson (MDT), Richard Julin and Therese Kellner (Accelerator), Marti Manen and Isabella Tjäder (Index – The Swedish Contemporary Art Foundation), and Cecilia Widenheim (Tensta Konsthall).

The presentation at MoMA PS1 is organized by Jody Graf, Assistant Curator, and Sheldon Gooch, Curatorial Assistant.

Exhibition Tour
Moderna Museet, Stockholm, May 18, 2024 – October 13, 2024
Gropius Bau, Berlin, March 21, 2025 – September 13, 2025
MoMA PS1 New York, October 9, 2025 – March 2, 2026

MoMA PS1
22-25 Jackson Avenue at 46th Avenue, Long Island City, Queens, NY

14/07/25

The Gatherers @ MoMA PS1, Long Island City

The Gatherers
MoMA PS1, Long Island City
April 24 — October 6, 2025

Emilija Skarnulyte Art
Emilija Škarnulyté 
Burial. 2022
Single-channel video (color, sound), 60 min. 
Installation view of The Gatherers, on view at MoMA PS1 
from April 24 through October 6, 2025 
Courtesy MoMA PS1 
Photo: Kris Graves

Andro Eradze Art
Andro Eradze 
Flowering and Fading. 2024 
4K video. 16 min., 22 sec.
Installation view of The Gatherers, on view at MoMA PS1 
from April 24 through October 6, 2025 
Courtesy MoMA PS1 
Photo: Kris Graves

MoMA PS1 presents The Gatherers, a major exhibition that brings into focus current artistic practices mining the ruins of excess production, failing infrastructure, and political instability. The presentation spans the entirety of the Museum’s third-floor galleries and features over a dozen international artists—many exhibiting for the first time in a US museum—and includes sculptural installation, assemblage, painting, video, and performance. Revealing and retooling detritus and ideas that have emerged out of the geopolitics of the last thirty years, the works surface histories embedded in discarded materials and imbued with new meaning. While rummaging has served as a critical artistic methodology for decades, the exhibition underscores the concerns of a generation of artists who are grappling with the impacts of recent world orders, such as the fallouts from globalization and neoliberalism. Artists in The Gatherers make visible the spatialized politics of memory as constructed within the built environment, drawing attention to how histories reverberate into the future. 

ARTISTS: Karimah Ashadu (British-born Nigerian, b. 1985), Tolia Astakhishvili (Georgian, b. 1974), Miho Dohi (Japanese, b. 1974), Andro Eradze (Georgian, b. 1993), He Xiangyu (Chinese, b. 1986), Samuel Hindolo (American, b. 1990), Geumhyung Jeong (Korean, b. 1980), Klara Liden (Swedish, b. 1979), Jean Katambayi Mukendi (Congolese, b. 1974), Nick Relph (British, b. 1979), Selma Selman (Bosnian, b. 1991), Ser Serpas (American, b. 1995), Emilija Škarnulytė (Lithuanian, b. 1987), Zhou Tao (Chinese, b. 1976)

Selma Selman
Selma Selman
Flower of Life, 2024 
Construction grabs, acrylic on steel, metal, 
electric motor, engine oil, tubes, and cables
Installation view of The Gatherers, on view at MoMA PS1 
from April 24 through October 6, 2025 
Courtesy MoMA PS1 
Photo: Kris Graves

Tolia Astakhishvili
Tolia Astakhishvili
Wicked Plans, 2025
Mixed-media installation 
with works by Maka Sanadze 
and Zurab Astakhishvil
Installation view of The Gatherers, on view at MoMA PS1 
from April 24 through October 6, 2025 
Courtesy MoMA PS1 
Photo: Kris Graves

Tolia Astakhishvili
Tolia Astakhishvili
dark days (detail), 2025
Mixed-media installation
Installation view of The Gatherers, on view at MoMA PS1 
from April 24 through October 6, 2025 
Courtesy MoMA PS1 
Photo: Kris Graves

Tolia Astakhishvili
Tolia Astakhishvili
and Dylan Peirce
so many things I’d like to tell you, 2025 
Two–channel video (color, sound), 48 min
Installation view of The Gatherers, on view at MoMA PS1 
from April 24 through October 6, 2025 
Courtesy MoMA PS1 
Photo: Kris Graves

Ser Serpas
Ser Serpas 
tube of brief cadavers made sadder still, 2025 
Mixed media
Installation view of The Gatherers, on view at MoMA PS1 
from April 24 through October 6, 2025 
Courtesy MoMA PS1 
Photo: Kris Graves

A central facet of the exhibition examines artists who touch on the wide-reaching impacts of post-Soviet global reconfigurations. Drawing from the issues faced by Roma communities and her own family’s scrap metal business, Selma Selman (Bosnian, b. 1991) transforms salvaged parts—including cars, construction equipment, and hard drives—into painted canvases and motorized machines, such as Flower of Life (2024). Tolia Astakhishvili (Georgian, b. 1974) creates unraveling installations and domestic architectures whose anxieties evoke the social and political ruptures in the Caucasus region, as opposing visions of the future remain in contest. In a newly commissioned installation, Ser Serpas (American, b. 1995) reconfigures used and discarded materials gathered throughout New York into composed, and often precarious, situations that emphasizes the incoherence of the urban landscape

Emilija Skarnulyte Art
Emilija Škarnulyté 
Burial. 2022 
Single-channel video (color, sound), 60 min
Installation view of The Gatherers, on view at MoMA PS1 
from April 24 through October 6, 2025 
Courtesy MoMA PS1 
Photo: Kris Graves

Karimah Ashadu
Karimah Ashadu 
Brown Goods, 2020 
Single channel HD digital video (color, sound), 12 min
Installation view of The Gatherers, on view at MoMA PS1 
from April 24 through October 6, 2025 
Courtesy MoMA PS1 
Photo: Kris Graves

Refuting erasures of the recent past across transnational contexts, artists in The Gatherers materialize shared concerns for resource utility, labor, and environmental dangers that persist in the wake of global crises. Unpacking planetary threats from Cold War energy structures, Emilija Škarnulytė’s (Lithuanian, b. 1987) video Burial (2022) draws attention to Lithuania’s Ignalina Nuclear Power Plant—once the most powerful nuclear structure in the world, now undergoing a long decommissioning process. Nick Relph (British, b. 1979) scans flyers offering cash for junked cars in New York City, indexing the city’s vernacular surfaces to manifest its invisible circulation. Shot in continuous motion, Zhou Tao’s (Chinese, b. 1976) film The Axis of Big Data (2024) portrays the evolving relationship between laborers and a data center cradled in the Guizhou mountains, illustrating the shifting landscapes wrought by industry. Trained as an electrician, Jean Katambayi Mukendi (Congolese, b. 1974) articulates New York’s complex energy systems in a monumental work on paper, Doors (2023), which spans nearly the length of a train car and depicts interconnected flows between extraction, production, and destruction in the city. Unraveling how individuals transmute urban structures, Klara Liden (Swedish, b. 1979) removes objects critical to the functioning of urban life—such as street signage and electrical boxes—from regular use and repositions them as readymade sculpture. Karimah Ashadu’s (British-born Nigerian, b. 1985) film Brown Goods follows informal trade through the story of Nigerian migrants who, without the ability to work legally in Germany, earn a living through circuitous labor, collecting used goods in Hamburg and selling them to consumers in Africa. With a focus on the systems embedded in urban structures and systems, these artists reveal the impacts of everyday detritus, junked infrastructures, and resource extraction on precarious ecologies and alternative economies.

Geumhyung Jeong
Geumhyung Jeong 
Removed Parts: Restored, 2025 
Mixed media
Installation view of The Gatherers, on view at MoMA PS1 
from April 24 through October 6, 2025 
Courtesy MoMA PS1 
Photo: Kris Graves

As the increasing commodification of daily life brings forth ontological shifts, many artists work in the psychic threshold between surplus and waste, grappling with dissociative impacts accelerated by new technologies. Blurring the dichotomy between human and machine in a newly commissioned work, Geumhyung Jeong (Korean, b. 1980) collects and arranges tools, electronics, and abstracted anatomical models into orderly grids that destabilize prescribed functions, mirroring the endless stream of goods both on store shelves and in landfills. The US premiere of Andro Eradze’s (Georgian, b. 1993) film Flowering and Fading (2024) charts the hauntology of domestic spaces as a dream sequence, with objects and environments disobeying semblances of order. Featuring stones collected from a river in China and strung on undulating rods, He Xiangyu’s (Chinese, b.1986) works Opaque Loop and Rock Tongue (both 2024) generate a tension between erosion and accumulation in the natural world. Samuel Hindolo’s (American, b. 1990) psychological paintings give rise to figures wrought by the dystopian collapse of urban infrastructure. From discarded objects on the streets of Kanagawa, Miho Dohi (Japanese, b. 1974) creates enchanting buttai, objects reassembled into microcosmic proposals of worlds to come made from refuse. The Gatherers offers a novel framework for understanding how artists use refuse to examine the relationships between growth and collapse within global urban landscapes.

A full-color publication accompanies the exhibition and includes a curatorial essay by Katrib, as well as newly commissioned texts by Kristy Bell, Amber Esseiva, Anette Freudenberger, Sheldon Gooch, Summer Guthery, Estelle Hoy, Quinn Latimer, Laura McLean-Ferris, Camila Palomino, Filipa Ramos, Nadim Samman, Fabian Schöneich, and Jeppe Ugelvig. The publication is distributed by Artbook | D.A.P. / Distributed Art Publishers and available for $30. 

The Gatherers is organized by Ruba Katrib, Chief Curator and Director of Curatorial Affairs, with Sheldon Gooch, Curatorial Assistant. Exhibition research and support is provided by Serena Moscardelli, NYU Curatorial Fellow.

MoMA PS1
22-25 Jackson Avenue, Long Island City, Queens, NY 11101

14/04/24

Pacita Abad Retrospective @ MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY

Pacita Abad 
MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY
April 4 - September 2, 2024

Pacita Abad
Portrait of Pacita Abad 
taken during the opening of 
At Home And Abroad: 20 Contemporary Filipino Artists 
at the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco. 1998 
Courtesy Pacita Abad Art Estate

Pacita Abad
Pacita Abad 
L.A. Liberty, 1992 
Acrylic, cotton yarn, plastic buttons, mirrors, gold thread, 
painted cloth on stitched and padded canvas. 
Collection Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; 
T.B. Walker Acquisition Fund, 2022. 
Courtesy Pacita Abad Art Estate and Spike Island, Bristol 
Photo: Max McClure

Pacita Abad
Pacita Abad 
Marcos and His Cronies (detail). 1985–95 
Mixed-media painting 
Installation view of Pacita Abad, on view at MoMA PS1 
from April 4 through September 2, 2024
Photo: Kris Graves 

Pacita Abad
Pacita Abad 
Old Dhaka, 1978 
Oil on canvas 
Courtesy Pacita Abad Art Estate 
Photo: Rik Sferra for Walker Art Center

MoMA PS1 presents the first major retrospective dedicated to artist PACITA ABAD (b. Philippines, 1946–2004), organized by the Walker Art Center. The exhibition Pacita Abad spans the artist’s 32-year career and features over 50 works, most of which have never been on public view, drawn from private and public collections across Asia, Europe, and the United States. The presentation includes vibrant paintings, works on paper, and trapuntos—the painted, stitched, and stuffed canvases she began making in the 1980s and for which the artist is best known. While engaged with artistic and political dialogues during her life, the depth, range, and inventiveness of her work is only now coming to prominence. Commemorating the extensive contributions of an innovative yet under-recognized figure, Pacita Abad celebrates the artist’s multifaceted visual, material, and conceptual concerns that push forward salient conversations today around globalization, power, and resilience.

In 1970, Pacita Abad migrated to the United States to escape political persecution in the Philippines, after she led a student demonstration against the authoritarian Ferdinand Marcos regime (1972–1986). Driven by this experience, she centered political refugees and those who were oppressed in her work. In 1977, Pacita Abad enrolled in the Art Students League in New York for a year to study anatomy, still life, and figurative painting. Although she became a US citizen in 1994, she lived an itinerant lifestyle in various countries—including Bangladesh, Yemen, Sudan, Papua New Guinea, and Indonesia—where she encountered local makers across the globe who furnished her with a wealth of ideas, techniques, and materials to draw upon when creating her trapuntos. Her works were designed to be portable, and she often used textiles, demonstrating her appreciation for the female and non-Western labor associated with the craft, which has been historically undervalued. The exhibition highlights the significance of her immigrant experience and the development of her practice celebrating non-Western art forms.

The works in the exhibition are organized in loosely chronological order with overlapping themes that span decades. On display are powerful 1970s Social Realist works, which depict people escaping persecution and poverty. In the Immigrant Experience series (1983–95) of mixed media trapunto paintings, she depicted diasporic communities from Asia, Africa, and Latin America, reflecting her conviction that artists have a “special obligation to remind society of its social responsibility.” Also on view are works inspired by Indigenous masking traditions, including Masks from Six Continents (1990–93), installed for the first time in 30 years. Pacita Abad’s engagement with patterned abstraction was inspired by jazz and blues music, and her works capture the unique spontaneity of the musical styles, showcasing her energetic interplay between figuration and abstraction as well as her engagement with people, places, and critical issues of her time.

Pacita Abad is organized by the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis. The exhibition is curated by Victoria Sung, Phyllis C. Wattis Senior Curator at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive and former Associate Curator, Visual Arts, Walker Art Center, with Matthew Villar Miranda, curatorial fellow, Visual Arts, Walker Art Center. MoMA PS1's presentation organized by Ruba Katrib, Curator and Director of Curatorial Affairs, MoMA PS1, with Sheldon Gooch, Curatorial Assistant, MoMA PS1.

Pacita Abad embarks on a major North American tour to several prominent institutions, beginning at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis followed by presentations at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), MoMA PS1, and concluding at the Art Gallery of Ontario. 

PACITA ABAD 
- Exhibition Catalogue
The exhibition is accompanied by a 352-page catalog, the first major publication on Pacita Abad’s work, produced by the Walker. In addition to the most comprehensive documentation of the artist’s work to date, the volume is edited with text by Victoria Sung, and includes contributions from Julia Bryan-Wilson, Professor of LGBTQ Art History at Columbia University; Ruba Katrib; Nancy Lim, Associate Curator of Painting and Sculpture at SFMOMA; Xiaoyu Weng, former Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the AGO; and Matthew Villar Miranda as well as a comprehensive oral history edited by Pio Abad and Sung with 20 contributors, including artists, curators, family members, and friends. 
MoMA PS1
22-25 Jackson Avenue, Long Island City, NY 11101

15/12/23

Leslie Martinez Exhibition @ MoMA PS1, Long Island City, Queens, NY - "The Fault of Formation"

Leslie Martinez:
The Fault of Formation
MoMA PS1, Long Island City, Queens 
November 16, 2023 - April 8, 2024

Leslie Martinez
LESLIE MARTINEZ 
Untitled. 2021 
Acrylic, fabric, paper, fine ballast, pumice, 
and iron oxide on canvas. 
Image courtesy MoMA PS1
Photo: Kris Graves

Leslie Martinez
LESLIE MARTINEZ
The Decorum of this Body. 2023 
Acrylic, painting rags, studio clothes, 
dried paint chips, charcoal, coarse sawdust, 
pumice on canvas, 60 × 75 × 8″ (152 × 191 × 20 cm) 
Courtesy Commonwealth and Council. 
Photo: Paul Salveson

Leslie Martinez
LESLIE MARTINEZ
The Foam of a Violent Shake (Don’t Tread on Me) (detail). 2023 
Acrylic, used studio rags, canvas scraps, used studio clothing, 
hand towel margins, plastic film stuffing, paper fragments, 
crushed charcoal, saw dust, pumice, paint chips, modeling paste, 
wood ashes, mica flakes, mica powder, and iron oxide on canvas. 
Image courtesy MoMA PS1. 
Photo: Kris Graves

MoMA PS1 presents the first New York museum exhibition of artist LESLIE MARTINEZ (b. 1985, McAllen, Texas). the presentation debuts new and recent works by Martinez, who lived in New York City for fifteen years before returning to Texas in 2019. The exhibition showcases a selection of paintings that range in scale and burst with color, alongside a new series that explores the politics and poetics of the color gray as a boundless state of possibility.

Using a cosmic palette based on the CMYK (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Black) color model, Leslie Martinez dyes and pleats canvases of pooled paint, an approach that explores place and ancestry in relation to the handmade and draws on formal legacies of abstraction. Born in the Rio Grande Valley near the US-Mexico border, Leslie Martinez wields an embodied way of painting that resists colonial notions of “good taste” and instead embraces the concept of rasquachismo, a resourcefulness embraced out of necessity. Leslie Martinez builds on and celebrates generational practices of survival and sustenance learned from their family—who have lived in Texas for generations and worked as farmers, ranchers, seamstresses, and construction workers—by implicating their labor and pride in craft through corporeal paintings brimming with gestural mark making.

Both alluring and abject, the works incorporate remains from the studio—including rags and dried acrylics—combining a no-waste approach with methodologies of rasquachismo. Transforming common and often discarded objects into dynamic compositions, Leslie Martinez’s paintings reject disposability and invoke a politics of care—one that embraces histories of painting, labor, queerness, and refusal—defying borders and categorization.

Leslie Martinez
LESLIE MARTINEZ
Out of the Gap Where Darkness Echos, Mustangs Took Off Running (detail). 2023. 
Acrylic, sumi ink, modeling paste, used studio rags, canvas scraps, 
used studio clothing, plastic film stuffing, polyester sewing threads, 
paper fragments, mop head fibers, paint chips, buckwheat hull, iron silicate, 
pumice, and glass beads on canvas. 
Image courtesy MoMA PS1. 
Photo: Kris Graves

Leslie Martinez
LESLIE MARTINEZ
The Reconstitution of Rejected and Refracted Voids (detail). 2023.
Acrylic, sumi ink, used studio rags, canvas scraps, 
used studio clothing,  plastic film stuffing, polyester sewing threads, 
paper fragments,  mylar balloons, iron silicate, iridescent cellophane, 
crushed charcoal, paint chips, saw dust, pumice, modeling paste, 
mica flakes, mica powder, and iron oxide on canvas. 
Image courtesy MoMA PS1. 
Photo: Kris Graves


Leslie Martinez Portrait
Portrait of LESLIE MARTINEZ  
Photo: Tony Krash

LESLIE MARTINEZ (b. 1985, McAllen, Texas) received an MFA from Yale University in 2018 and a BFA from The Cooper Union in 2008. They have had solo exhibitions at Commonwealth and Council, Los Angeles (2023), Blaffer Art Museum, Houston (2023) and And Now, Dallas (2021, 2020). Leslie Martinez has participated in residencies at venues including Museum of Contemporary Art, Tucson (2019) and is a recipient of the United States Latinx Art Forum’s Latinx Artist Fellowship (2022). Their work is in the collections of Dallas Museum of Art; Pérez Art Museum Miami; High Museum of Art, Atlanta; and Speed Art Museum, Louisville.

The exhibition is organized by Elena Ketelsen González, Assistant Curator, MoMA PS1.

MoMA PS1
22-25 Jackson Avenue, Long Island City, Queens, NY 11101

16/05/21

Gregg Bordowitz @ MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY - I Wanna Be Well

Gregg Bordowitz: I Wanna Be Well 
MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY 
May 13 – October 11, 2021 

Gregg Bordowitz
Gregg Bordowitz addressing AIDS Activists during protest in NYC. 1988
Gelatin silver print 8 x 10 in. 
Courtesy of the artist 
Photo: Lee Snider

MoMA PS1 presents Gregg Bordowitz: I Wanna Be Well, the first comprehensive overview of the New York artist’s prodigious and influential career. Born in Brooklyn and raised primarily in Queens, Gregg Bordowitz (American, b. 1964) has been living with HIV for more than half of his adult life, and transformed his art practice in the mid-1980s in response to the AIDS public health crisis. Working with New York’s ACT UP (AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power) and several video collectives that he co-founded, he organized and documented protests against government inaction, advocating for health education and harm reduction. During this time, Gregg Bordowitz created remarkable video portraits of himself and others living with the disease, often using his “personal history as a way to tell a story shared by many.”

I Wanna Be Well surveys 30 years of Gregg Bordowitz’s practice alongside the coalitions of activists, artists, writers, thinkers, and friends who have shaped his life—and among whom he continues to find sustenance. The relationship between art and activism is critical to Gregg Bordowitz’s sustained investigations of identity, illness, and desire. While developing a visual language in his collaborative works capable of communicating harm-reduction models to a broad public, he made videos and television broadcasts that juxtaposed performance documentation, archival footage, role play, and recordings of protest demonstrations, drawing influence from feminist conceptual art.

Named after a 1977 Ramones song, I Wanna Be Well raises broad questions about how we define health, community, and care in the context of the urgency of the continuing AIDS epidemic and COVID-19 pandemic. In a new large-scale sculpture created on-site for the PS1 exhibition, Gregg Bordowitz explores parallels between COVID-19 and aspects of the enormous loss and resilience experienced by many communities affected by AIDS. Modeled on Vienna’s Pestsäule (Plague Column), which commemorates those lost to the Great Plague in 1679, Gregg Bordowitz’s sculpture integrates historic religious iconography with contemporary protest symbols, speaking to the uprisings for racial justice that gripped the world last summer after the murder of George Floyd, and advocacy demanding health equity in the treatment of COVID-19.

Long active as a poet, writer, and teacher, Gregg Bordowitz has more recently engaged in live and recorded performances that explore the nexus of religious, sexual, political, and cultural identities with which he affiliates. The exhibition features these performances alongside his foundational videos and films, as well as drawings, poems, sculptures, ephemera, and works by artist friends. Tracing the artist’s own experiences and evolving views in tandem with the development of AIDS activism around the world, I Wanna Be Well draws connections between Gregg Bordowitz’s intimate depictions of living with AIDS and the continuing global AIDS crisis.

I Wanna Be Well features the fourth iteration of the artist’s performance-lecture Some Styles of Masculinity, a three-part event in which Gregg Bordowitz explores the concept of masculinity and its entanglement with ethnicity, sexuality, religion, humor, and national identity.

Gregg Bordowitz: I Wanna Be Well was organized by the Douglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gallery, Reed College. The exhibition is curated by Stephanie Snyder and organized at MoMA PS1 by Peter Eleey, former Chief Curator, with Josephine Graf, Assistant Curator.

The exhibition was previously presented at the Art Institute of Chicago, where it was organized by Robyn Farrell and Solveig Nelson.

MoMA PS1
22-25 Jackson Avenue, Long Island City, NY 11101

26/12/18

Simone Fattal @ MoMA PS1, Long Island City, New York

Simone Fattal
MoMA PS1, Long Island City, New York
March 31 – September 2, 2019

MoMA PS1 presents the first solo museum exhibition in the United States of the work of Simone Fattal (Lebanese and American, b.1942). The retrospective will bring together a selection of over 100 works created over the last 40 years, featuring abstract and figurative ceramic sculptures, paintings, and collages that draw from a range of sources including war narratives, landscape painting, ancient history, mythology, and Sufi poetry. The exhibition will explore the impact of displacement, as well as the politics of archeology and excavation, as these themes resonate across Fattal’s multifaceted artistic practice.

SIMONE FATTAL was born in Damascus, Syria and raised in Lebanon, where she studied philosophy at the Ecole des Lettres in Beirut. She then moved to Paris where she continued her philosophical pursuits at the Sorbonne. In 1969, she returned to Beirut and began working as a visual artist, exhibiting her paintings locally until the start of the Lebanese Civil War. She fled Lebanon in 1980 and settled in California, where she founded the Post-Apollo Press, a publishing house dedicated to innovative and experimental literary work. In 1988, she enrolled in a course at the Art Institute of San Francisco, which prompted a return to her artistic practice and a newfound dedication to sculpture and ceramics. Simone Fattal currently lives in Paris and has had recent exhibitions at the Musée Yves Saint Laurent Marrakech (2018), the Rochechouart Departmental Museum of Contemporary Art (2017), and the Sharjah Art Foundation (2016).

Simone Fattal is organized by Ruba Katrib, Curator, MoMA PS1.

Major support for Simone Fattal is provided by The Contemporary Arts Council of The Museum of Modern Art. Additional funding is provided by the MoMA PS1 Annual Exhibition Fund.

MoMA PS1 

02/12/10

The Talent Show at MoMA PS1 features works by 18 artists

The Talent Show
MoMA PS1, Long Island City
December 12, 2010 - April 4, 2011

The Talent Show at MoMA PS1 featuring works by 18 artists in the First Floor Main Galleries beginning on December 12, 2010. The exhibition is curated by MoMA PS1 Curator Peter Eleey. The artists featured in Talent Show are:  Stanley Brouwn, Chris Burden, Sophie Calle, Peter Campus, Graciela Carnevale, Phil Collins, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Tehching Hsieh, David Lamelas, Piero Manzoni, Adrian Piper, Amie Siegel, John Smith, Andy Warhol, Gillian Wearing, Hannah Wilke, Shizuka Yokomizo, Carey Young.

 

GILLIAN WEARING. Collection Walker Art Center

GILLIAN WEARING, I Signed On and They Would Not Give Me Nothing from Signs that say what you want them to say and not Signs that say what someone else wants you to say, 1992-1993
chromogenic print mounted to aluminum. 16-1/2 x 11-3/4 in.
Collection Walker Art Center. Gift of Richard Flood, 2006
Image reproduced courtesy Maureen Paley, London and Regen Projects, Los Angeles


CHRIS BURDEN photograph with ski mask: You’ll Never See My Face in Kansas City
CHRIS BURDEN
You’ll Never See My Face in Kansas City
Morgan Gallery, Kansas City, Missouri, U.S.A; November 6, 1971
Relic: ski mask
Collection: Gilbert and Lila Silverman, Southfield, Michigan

 

In recent years, television’s reality shows and talent competitions have offered participants a chance at fame, while various kinds of Web-based social media have pioneered new forms of communication that increasingly allow us to present our private lives as public theater. During the same period, governments worldwide have asserted vast new powers of surveillance, placing unwitting “participants” on an entirely different kind of stage. Against this backdrop, THE TALENT SHOW examines a range of relationships among artists, audiences, and participants that model the competing desires for notoriety and privacy marking our present moment. Whether portraying seemingly benevolent partnerships or those that appear to exploit their subjects, many of the works in the exhibition animate the tensions between exhibitionism and voyeurism, and raise challenging ethical questions around issues of authorship, power and control. 

For the classic 1970 MoMA exhibition Information, ADRIAN PIPER (American, b. 1948) installed a visitor’s book on a pedestal, providing a pen and the instruction to “you (the viewer) to write, draw, or otherwise indicate any response,” with the disclaimer that “the information entered in the notebook will not be altered or utilized in any way.” Visitors filled seven notebooks over the 11 weeks of the show with a range or responses, including political slogans, statements of rebellion and resistance, and declarations of love and artistic identity (“I hereby claim to be an included artist in this show as a result of my presence as justified by my signature”). Pointedly, a number of visitors wrote that they couldn’t write what they wanted because they were being surveilled.

Piper’s invitation finds an echo in London in the early 1990s, when GILLIAN WEARING (British, b. 1963) approached strangers with markers and posters, suggesting that they write whatever they wished and then pose for a portrait with the poster. Wearing’s Signs that say what you want them to say and not Signs that say what someone else wants you to say (1992-1993) gave her subjects a voice, inviting them to participate directly in the creation of their own image. Some 30 years earlier, STANLEY BROUWN (Dutch, b. 1935) had also approached passersby on the streets of Amsterdam, but he was asking them for directions. He later signed the sketches people helpfully drew for him as his own artworks, calling into question whether he was in some way misusing these drawings or taking advantage of those who had unknowingly created artwork on his behalf. JOHN SMITH (British, b. 1952) takes this one step further in his 1976 film The Girl Chewing Gum, in which the narrator seems to direct the actions of people passing before his camera on the street.

SOPHIE CALLE (French, b. 1953), who has both stalked strangers and had herself stalked by a private detective, undertook a particularly invasive project in 1983 that provided a window into the life of an unwitting man whose address book Calle had found in the street. She returned it to him, but only after photocopying every page. Over the next month, she contacted people listed in the address book and interviewed them about its owner, publishing summaries of these conversations in a daily Paris newspaper. The ways in which these works model control and participation prefigure dynamics that animate a range of cultural forms that have proliferated in the past decade, as well as the concurrent rise in the collection and commercialization of personal information.

Two relics of early CHRIS BURDEN (American, b. 1946) performances offer a counterpoint to the publicizing of personal information represented by Calle. As part of a performance in Kansas City in 1971, Burden wore a ski mask during the entire duration of his visit. In another, he disappeared for three days, advising no one of his whereabouts or activities during that time. Burden’s counterperformances point to the ways in which people have variously resisted the coerced exhibitionism of popular culture, dropping out of society to go “off the grid,” and more recently, canceling their Facebook accounts.

Alternatively, TEHCHING HSIEH (Taiwanese, b. 1950)—who had illegally immigrated to New York in the 1970s and was living in fear of deportation—made a poster in 1978 in which he advertized his illegal status, and encouraged people to turn him in to the appropriate authorities if they saw him. 

A vague sense of coercion lurks behind a recent work by AMIE SIEGEL (American, b. 1974) that compiles and combines YouTube videos of many different people singing the same song. The singers—mostly performing in front of their computers at home—variously adopt poses and conventions from music videos, calling into question the supposed diversity of expression that such new cultural forms claim to elicit. An earlier form of the impulse that Siegel investigates is found in an ANDY WARHOL (American, 1928–1987) Screen Test that documents an unknown teenager who came by the Factory, one of only a handful of anonymous subjects in Warhol’s legendary project.

Several works bring the dynamics of viewer participation into real time in the exhibition space itself by directly inviting the audience to place themselves on view or watch as others do. DAVID LAMELAS’ (Argentine, b. 1946) Limit of a Projection I (1967), a simple theatrical spotlight illuminating a darkened gallery, is an implicit and alluring, if ambiguous, invitation. Similarly, those who elect to stand on the pedestal that comprises PIERO MANZONI’s (Italian, 1933–1963) Base magica – Scultura vivente (Magic Base – Living Sculpture) (1961) are instantly elevated to the status of art. PETER CAMPUS’ (American, b. 1937) Shadow Projection (1974) extends this performative invitation to the televisual realm, as visitors step into a spotlight, face a camera, and witness a sort of auto-eclipse of themselves. Through a simple construction, visitors’ exaggerated, on-camera images become visible only in the shadow of their real selves.

Expanding upon the questions begged by Campus’ installation, HANNAH WILKE’s (American, 1940–1993) final work, produced after her death, explores the space between our private lives and what we show to the world. Wilke, who died of lymphoma in 1993, recorded her life during its last two-and-a-half disease-ridden years, compiling more than 30 hours of tape that were assembled posthumously into a 16-channel installation. Partly anticipating the world of reality television to follow, Wilke’s moving work urgently asks why, and under what circumstances, do we place or find ourselves on view? Moreover, what do we gain from such exposure, and how much control, freedom, and dignity are we willing to give up in exchange?

THE TALENT SHOW is organized by Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, and curated by Peter Eleey, Curator of MoMA PS1.

The presentation of the exhibition at MoMA PS1 is made possible by Jerry I. Speyer and Katherine G. Farley.  Additional support is provided by Agnes Gund and Patricia Phelps de Cisneros.  The development of the exhibition was made possible by generous support from the David Teiger Foundation and Ann M. Hatch.

MoMA PS1
Long Island City
New York 11101

www.ps1.org

Feng Mengbo, Long March: Restart large-scale video game installation at MoMA PS1

Feng Mengbo , Long March: Restart MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY 
December 12, 2010 -  April 4, 2011

MoMA PS1 presents the New York debut of Feng Mengbo’s installation Long March: Restart (2008), a large-scale, interactive video game installation. Recently acquired by MoMA and presented for the first time since entering the Museum’s collection, Long March is a fully functioning video game created by the Beijing-based artist who is known for his long-time engagement with digital technology. Feng Mengbo is on view in the first floor Painting Gallery beginning December 12, 2010.

LONG MARCH borrows imagery from arcade favorites like Street Fighter II and Super Mario Bros., along with propaganda motifs of Communist China. Feng invites visitors to direct the hero of the game—a Red Army soldier—via a wireless controller and combat the myriad enemies in his digital path. Comprising eight large-scale projections, the work creates an immersive environment in which visitors are dwarfed by the video game graphics. Like many popular games, Long March is a “horizontal scroller,” in which the hero moves from one side of the screen to the other. This movement is made physical through the scale of the installation. As the player directs the Red Army soldier across the game’s landscape, the player is forced to walk along with the character in order to keep the soldier in clear view and literally keep pace with the action.

FENG MENGBO (Chinese, b. 1966) lives and works in Beijing. He has been exhibiting his art for nearly two decades. He has had numerous solo exhibitions at such institutions as the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing; The Renaissance Society, Chicago; and the Dia Center for the Arts, New York. He has also participated in the 45th Venice Biennale; the 1st and 3rd Guangzhou Triennials; Documenta X and Documenta 11; Ars Electronica 2004; Mahjong: Contemporary Chinese Art from the Sigg Collection that debuted at Kunstmuseum Bern, Switzerland; and Between Past and Future: New Photography and Video from China at the International Center for Photography, NY; among other exhibitions. 

Feng Mengbo is organized by Klaus Biesenbach, Director of MoMA PS1 and Chief Curator at Large at The Museum of Modern Art. 

Opening Day Celebration: Sunday, December 12 from 12 pm to 6 pm

Major support for the exhibition is provided by The International Council of The Museum of Modern Art. 

MoMA PS1 Long Island City
New York 11101
www.ps1.org

13/10/10

NY Art Book Fair 2010 – MoMA PS1

The NY Art Book Fair 2010
MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY

November 5-7, 2010

Printed Matter, the world’s largest nonproft organization dedicated to publications by artists, presents the fifth annual NY Art Book Fair, November 5–7 at MoMA PS1, Long Island City, Queens. Free and open to the public, the Fair hosts over 230 international presses, booksellers, antiquarian dealers, artists and publishers from twenty-one countries, offering the best in contemporary art-book publishing.

Philip Aarons, Chairman of the Board for Printed Matter, said: “The NY Art Book Fair is the premier venue to find what’s new in art publishing. While it has spawned a new generation of independent art book fairs world-wide, it remains the biggest, the best, and by far the most fun.”

The NY Art Book Fair includes special project rooms, screenings, book signings, and performances, throughout the weekend. Other events include the third annual Contemporary Artists’ Books Conference and The Classroom, a curated series of informal conversations between artists, together with readings, workshops and other artist-led events.

Artist’s Project
Leidy Churchman
takes over the lobby with a large set of facsimile book paintings on wood. Drawing upon the stacks at the Museum of Modern Art Library, Library with friend and librarian David Senior, Churchman traces a unique and fetching portrait of artists’ publications from the last hundred years.

Featured Countries
This year, the NY Art Book Fair celebrates eighteen cutting-edge publishers from The Netherlands, including a project room by Kunstverein Amsterdam (Amsterdam) and Witte de With (Rotterdam), together with a variety of book launches and informal presentations in the dutch Pavilion. Other countries represented include: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Finland, Germany, Ireland,  Italy, Japan, Korea, New Zealand, Norway, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, and United States.

Antiquarian Dealers
Exhibitors present collections of rare Conceptual Art, Minimalism, Fluxus, and the avant-garde from Japan, Europe, and North America. Exhibitors include: John McWhinnie @ Glenn Horowitz (East Hampton), Harper’s Books (East Hampton), Marcus Campbell (London), Steven leiber (San Francisco), Sims reed (London), Stefan Schuelke (Cologne), and others.

Artists & Activists
This diverse group of politically minded artists and collectives focus on the intersection of art and activism. Exhibitors include: Journal of Aesthetics and Protest (Los Angeles), GuerrillaGirlsBroadBand (New York), The Yes Men (New York), Bread and Puppet (Glover, Vermont), Center for Urban Pedagogy (Brooklyn), and Temporary Services (Chicago), among others.

Zines by Artists
A lively selection of international zinesters will represent independent publishing at its most innovative and affordable. Exhibitors include: The Holster (Brooklyn), Nieves (Zurich), Ooga Booga (Los Angeles), and ZINE’S MATE (Tokyo), among others. A special section of queer zines includes our favorites, from Original Plumbing (San Francisco) and Girls Like Us (Amsterdam) to PINUPS (Brooklyn).

Limited Editions
Printed Matter presents new limited editions by artists Rachel Harrison, Christian Holstad and Misaki Kawai, published on the occasion of the NY Art Book Fair 2010. Purchase of these editions supports the Fair, ensuring the event remains free and open to the public. 

The NY art book fair Committee
Philip Aarons, AA Bronson, Skuta Helgason, Catherine Krudy, Carolina Nitsch, Richard Prince, Dieter von Graffenreid, John Waters, and Matthew Zucker

A list of exhibitors, event schedule, and more information is available at www.nyartbookfair.com

MoMA PS1 
22-25 Jackson Ave at the intersection  of 46th Ave
Long Island City, NY

Free and open to the public:
Thursday, November 4, 6-9 p.m.
Friday and Saturday, November 5 & 6, 11 a.m. - 7 p.m.
Sunday, November 7, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Printed Matter, Inc.
195 Tenth Avenue
New York, NY

www.printedmatter.org

05/08/10

Peter Eleey PS1 Curator - One of the most talented Curators of his generation

 

Peter Eleey is Curator of P.S.1 since 1 July 2010.  Previously Visual Arts Curator at the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, a position he has held since 2007, Mr. Eleey organize exhibitions and public programs at PS1, and oversee the curatorial staff.  He is also working with Mr. Biesenbach and PS1’s staff and Board of Directors on the development of a long-range plan for the institution. 

 

Peter Eleey Photograph by Cameron Wittig, 2010PETER ELEEY CURATOR OF PS1 CONTEMPORARY ART CENTER
© Photograph by Cameron Wittig, 2010. Courtesy MoMA

 

“Through his excellent work at the Walker Art Center, and previously in New York at Creative Time, Peter Eleey has emerged as one of the most talented curators of his generation. He is thoughtful and inventive, and has demonstrated a strong committment to artists in his work. I am thrilled to have him join us at this important moment, and know that he will be a great addition to P.S.1,” states Klaus Biesenbach, Director of PS1 Contemporary Art Center, in April 2010, when he has announced the appointement of Peter Eleey as PS1 curator.


PETER ELEEY CURATORIAL WORK (Selection)

As Curator in the Visual Arts department at the Walker Art Center, Peter Eleey organized the exhibitions The Talent Show (2010), The Quick and the Dead (2009), and Trisha Brown: So That the Audience Does Not Know Whether I Have Stopped Dancing (2008).  He has brought to the Walker collection important works by artists Tomma Abts, Paul Chan, Trisha Donnelly, Pierre Huyghe, Mark Manders, Kris Martin and Susan Philipsz, among others, and helped to expand the museum’s conceptual holdings with key pieces by Robert Barry, Stanley Brouwn, Stephen Kaltenbach, and Adrian Piper. 

Prior to joining the Walker, Peter Eleey was Curator and Producer at Creative Time, New York from 2002 to 2007, where he organized a wide range of multidisciplinary projects and events, including Doug Aitken: sleepwalkers (2007), which was commissioned jointly with The Museum of Modern Art and co-curated with Klaus Biesenbach. Other major projects included Mike Nelson: A Psychic Vacuum (2007), a site-specific installation at the Essex Street Market co-organized with Nato Thompson; Strange Powers (2006), a group exhibition highlighting works made to have a paranormal effect on the world co-organized with Laura Hoptman; The Plain of Heaven (2005), an exhibition in a vacant meatpacking warehouse inspired by the redesign of the High Line; Jenny Holzer: For the City (2004), a series of airplane banners over the Hudson river and light projections at sites around the New York; and Cai Guo-Qiang’s Light Cycle (September 15, 2003), a pyrotechnic event in Central Park.

PS1 Contemporary Art Center
MoMA - Museum of Modern Art Affiliate
Long Island City, New York 11101

www.ps1.org