Showing posts with label New York art show. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York art show. Show all posts

24/12/13

Cyprien Gaillard, Gladstone Gallery, New York

Cyprien Gaillard: Today Diggers, Tomorrow Dickens 
Gladstone Gallery, New York 
Through January 30, 2014 



Gladstone Gallery presents their first exhibition with CYPRIEN GAILLARD, “Today Diggers, Tomorrow Dickens.” For this ambitious and complex presentation, Gaillard has created two complementary bodies of sculptural works that explore notions of regeneration, ruination, and decay, turning his eye to the relationship between evolution and erosion – a thread that weaves through much of his work. Navigating the concept of the altered readymade through an anthropological lens, Gaillard has incorporated processed natural and industrial materials to achieve an equilibrium that reflects the way in which our society simultaneously progresses and reverts in the realm of the bleak.

Inspiration for the exhibition title came from a series of mural slogans used to conceal a raw building site, home of the future performing arts center in Beverly Hills. Intended as a playful tag suggesting the inconvenience caused by ongoing construction as being an experience worth enduring, the slogan struck Cyprien Gaillard as ironic. As a Dickensian universe connotes poverty, hardship, and ruin, Gaillard thought that the message, rather than suggesting progression and growth, hinted at a reversion to darker times. The works that Gaillard has created for the exhibition evoke this contradiction, inviting viewers to consider the ways in which our vision of progress simultaneously leads us back toward a more dismal landscape and unyielding reality.

On the first floor of the exhibition, visitors encounter a series of sculptures ranging from small-scale to monumental. Entering the gallery as if in reverse, viewers are presented with an opposing perspective of the sculptural works – a series of excavator machine parts, removed from their conventional setting. Placed directly on the floor, with the teeth once used for digging now acting as a sculptural anchor, the excavator heads are set with deftly carved pieces of onyx, inserted where the buckets once attached to the machines. Sourced from a variety of locations, the excavator heads have been washed and waxed, their resilience to the outdoors rendered defunct by the process necessary to preserve them as sculptural works. Once part of a machine used as a means for destruction, to encourage rejuvenation through building, these pieces, now preserved, begin a fossilization process of their own. Though the diggers have caused destruction in their lifetime, in their arrested manner Cyprien Gaillard has preserved them, imbuing them with new purpose.

Bringing together a diverse range of material, Cyprien Gaillard suggests a certain geographical mapping within the works. The white and yellow minerals have been sourced from Iran and Utah, respectively, and together with the machinery, found in California and made by Esco, Caterpillar, Bobcat etc. – American companies with international reach – they evoke the global nature of a tendency towards endless progress and the necessary ruination implicit in that process.

The notion of conceptual mapping, as well as more formal decisions, act as points of connection between the two series of works on view.  The color yellow persists as paint residue on the excavator heads and is reflected again in the yellow-hued banded calcite, which, though mined by similar machinery through a process of destruction, now rests in perfect equilibrium in the grip of the sculpture – an essential part of the work.  The color yellow is present in the body of work on view on the gallery's second floor as well, which features a series of sculptural works made out of back issues of National Geographic magazine, whose covers are outlined in yellow. These works are composed of pages from the magazine, cut with one single artistic gesture, and then folded together to hold them in place. Though they evoke a collage-like appearance, the works are held together simply by the tension incurred on the paper during the cutting and folding process – a tension that is echoed in the stress caused to the onyx held in the grip of the excavator heads.

Cyprien Gaillard sifted through copies of the magazine from the past fifty years, selecting individual pages from various issues, and bringing these disparate pages together to create a geographical map within the confines of each folding on view. Each work is created out of five different pages, whose full nature is concealed by virtue of the folding process. Selecting pages of issues from different decades, Gaillard has brought together fragments from distinct historical periods, distilling a particular moment in time. By putting these pages side by side with one another, Gaillard has created a dialogue within each piece, navigating time and space to create one unified present vision. Placed like scientific specimens beneath vitrines, the works are presented as small portals into history – one that is both real and contained on the pages, and one that is fabricated by virtue of the disparate pairings of the pages.

Taken together, these two series of works reflect Cyprien Gaillard's longstanding interest in artifact and preservation. Though the excavator heads and the magazines were both once lively tools used by people for creation and learning, they now stand as objects frozen in time – still relics that reflect a dystopian vision of our society.

Cyprien Gaillard was born in Paris and lives and works in Berlin and New York. He has been the subject of solo exhibitions at a number of major institutions, including: MoMA PS1, New York; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; Schinkel Pavillon, Berlin; Fondazione Nicola Trussardi, Milan, Italy; Kunst-Werke Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; and Kunsthalle Basel, Basel, Switzerland. 

Gladstone Gallery 
21st Street, New York
www.gladstonegallery.com

15/12/13

Matthew Weinstein at Carolina Nitch, New York

MATTHEW WEINSTEIN: 797.2 Sp. Spitz, Mark. F. Mar. The Splendid Outcast, 1987, 139p 
Carolina Nitch Project Room, New York 
Through January 18, 2014

Carolina Nitsch presents Matthew Weinstein’s second exhibition with the gallery entitled “797.2 Sp. Spitz, Mark. F. Mar. The Splendid Outcast, 1987, 139p.,” an installation of over printed, drawn, and painted library cards. 

MATTHEW WEINSTEIN 
Voyage of Vengeance, 2013 
Courtesy Carolina Nitsch, New York

Matthew Weinstein’s catalog cards are configured as pairs and larger groups, arranged on an underlying grid which provides a structural network for the pieces. Weinstein will also be showing a unique artist’s book , “Giant a Screenplay,” in which a narrative, written by Weinstein, bassed on the 1956 movie “Giant,” weaves through a series of illustrated pages whose content and spectrum darken as the narrative transforms from movie description to obsessive personal narrative.The imagery in all these works is sometimes contained to individual cards, but often spills from one card to the next creating a complex tiled work. The overlaid images are iconographic figures and objects, such as fish and skeletons, common throughout much of Weinstein’s work. 

Matthew Weinstein began acquiring piles of these cards from ebay. They arrived from different locations around the country, from different decades, and from different types of libraries specializing in different types of books. Hand annotated by librarians and smudged by generations of index fingers, they each carried their own history. Weinstein began randomly selecting them from different piles. Patterns, puns, jokes and coincidences occurred that spanned location, subject and time; a dada poetry emerged. Then he began to draw and print on them, using images from his own repertoire that have no direct relation to the subjects of the cards, and an abstract narrative emerged, one nudged along but never pushed. 

As libraries have thrown away their card catalogues, we no longer search for information horizontally and sequentially. The internet search is guided by free association, random patterns of investigation and personalization. The internet is like a box of library file cards tossed on the ground; a sequence turns into a mound and the act of finding one piece of information causes us to associate it with whatever random bits of information come our way. 

Matthew Weinstein’s work has always been based on the linking of different ideas and images that have no logical connections into narratives that almost make sense, but fall short of logical build ups of sequence in order to allow the subjectivity of the viewer to dominate his own experience of the work. The medium that Weinstein always floats his associations in is the intensity of the visual experience he delivers, and over the years he has utilized painting, animation, music, drawing and sculpture to achieve this. Looking is the way into this work, just as it is in abstraction, and it has always been Weinstein’s intention to find a place in art that can dissolve image, text and abstraction into one fluid. 

Carolina Nitsch Project Room 
534 West 22nd Street - New York, NY 10011 

11/10/13

Shirazeh Houshiary exhibition at Lehmann Maupin Gallery, NYC - The eye fell in love with the ear

Shirazeh Houshiary: The eye fell in love with the ear 
Lehmann Maupin Gallery, New York 
30 October - 28 December 2013

SHIRAZEH HOUSHIARY
Echo, 2013
Pencil, pigments and black aquacryl on canvas and aluminum, two panels, 
each 74.8 x 106.3 inches, 190 x 270 cm; overall 74.8 x 212.6 inches, 190 x 540 cm.
Courtesy of Lehmann Maupin Gallery

SHIRAZEH HOUSHIARY’s sixth solo show with Lehmann Maupin features a selection of new paintings that continue to demonstrate the artist’s scale of effort and process which unites line, color, and light to shape a meditative visual experience. The eye fell in love with the ear will also include Houshiary’s new animation Dust in addition to a series of anodized aluminum twisting helical sculptures. 

Shirazeh Houshiary’s work explores the very nature of existence. Through her chosen media of painting, sculpture and video, the artist exposes the nature of human experience to time and space, marked by a multitude of binary ideas which include transparency and opacity, presence and absence, and light and shadow. By exploring these polarities, Houshiary illuminates unique moments suspended in time that reveal and ignite qualities that are often unseen. In creating her works the artist draws inspiration from both established formal principles of Western painting and the rich traditions of Islamic art, however the aesthetic outcome is a new order that is foreign to both. Houshiary’s paintings, which she describes as “a thin skin,” unravel concepts such as perception and cognition to suggest multiple visual planes that appear to pulse and undulate. Intricate markings resembling script are repeated and overlapped across each canvas to create luminous patterns that seem to morph into vapor. The depicted gashes and hazy abstract imagery of each work hint of an infinite dimension and create a space for both imagination and contemplation. Subsequently, the artist’s intense concentration and process in realizing these works is then echoed in the contemplative gaze of the viewer.

Shirazeh Houshiary’s current body of work ambitiously expands her concepts in both scope and scale. Echo, the second diptych painting ever produced by the artist, offers an immersive experience to the viewer that evolves and is altered by their physical relationship to the painting. 

Her newly produced animated film entitled Dust further captures the unseen through a combination of moving images of a single candle burning. As soot from the flame accumulates and dissipates at varied time intervals, these visual transformations paired with a chant, moving as a wave from low to high and back to low, by soprano Olivia Salvadori convey the past, present and future simultaneously. 

Finally, a new trio of sculptures further explore the dichotomy and tension found in Shirazeh Houshiary’s paintings and illustrates the visual vibration of her two-dimensional works in full form. 

SHIRAZEH HOUSHIARY (b. 1955; Shiraz, Iran) moved to London in the mid 1970s, where she studied at the Chelsea School of Art, London and later at Cardiff College of Art. Shirazeh Houshiary quickly became established alongside a generation of sculptors working in Britain in the 1980s, including Anish Kapoor and Richard Deacon. A Turner Prize nominee in 1994, Houshiary has been included in solo and group exhibitions at the Broad Art Museum, Michigan (2013); Royal Academy of Arts, London (2012); The Dayton Art Institute, Ohio (2011); Museum of Modern Art, New York (2007); Tate Liverpool (2003); and Camden Arts Centre, London (1993), among others. In 2013, Houshiary’s work was included in two collateral exhibitions at the 55th Venice Biennale, including a site-specific installation at La Torre di Porta Nuova, Arsenale Nord and Glasstress 2013. The artist’s work was also recently featured in the Kiev Biennale (2012) and the 17th Biennale of Sydney (2010). 

Shirazeh Houshiary’s work can be found in prestigious public collections including the British Council Collection, London; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Contemporary Art, Prato; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; and Tate Modern, London, among others. 

Shirazeh Houshiary lives and works in London. 

Lehmann Maupin Gallery
201 Chrystie Street, New York, NY 10002 

02/09/13

William Pope.L @ Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York

William Pope.L, Colored Waiting Room
Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York
September 12 - October 26, 2013

Mitchell-Innes & Nash presents Colored Waiting Room, the third solo exhibition of WILLIAM POPE.L at the gallery and his second in the Chelsea space.  This show’s incorporation of drawing, painting, sculpture, and projections display the artist’s versatility and use of various media in his practice. 

The show’s title, Colored Waiting Room, interpolates an excess, an aberration of intentional language which seeks to qualify division by defining identity.  The show’s title evokes a very particular historical moment, specifically American racial segregation against blacks in the late 19th to mid 20th centuries.  However, a literal examination of the phrase opens the space to ‘nosier’, more flexible readings of color, words and proximity in the context of art, science and culture.

In this exhibition, William Pope.L addresses a lack within language with a playfulness which is both enigmatic and astute.  As evident in his Skin Set drawings, Pope.L collaborates with society’s use of color terminology to characterize notions such as ontology, gender, race and social value.  The current exhibition includes a large group of Skin Set works as well as two new, large-scale diptychs with a ‘cousin’ focus. In addition, through sound and olfactory pieces, the viewer is invited to contemplate the exhibition through an almost synesthetic dialogue with color. 

By creating an exhibition space that is both structurally and ideologically a puzzle, Pope.L seeks to reconstruct the viewer via his or her own boundaries. 

WILLIAM POPE.L was born in 1955 in New Jersey.  He currently lives and works in Chicago, IL, where he is an Associate Professor in the Department of Visual Arts at the University of Chicago.  He has had solo exhibitions at institutions including the Art Institute of Chicago, the Carpenter Center at Harvard University, the Santa Monica Museum of Art, and the Kunsthalle Wien.  The MIT Press published a monograph to accompany The Friendliest Black Artist in America, his 2002-2004 traveling survey exhibition.  His work has been exhibited and performed at Museum of Modern Art in New York, The Whitney Museum in New York, Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles, The New Museum in New York and the Renaissance Society in Chicago.  Recent exhibitions and performances include Radical Presence: Black Performance in Contemporary Art at Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, Texas; Flux This! With Pope.L and Special Guests at Museum of Modern Art in New York, NY; and The Long White Cloud, Te Tuhi Gallery, Auckland, New Zealand.

Mitchell-Innes & Nash
534 West 26th st, New York, NY 10001
www.miandn.com

07/02/12

The Art Show 2012, New York City


THE ART SHOW 2012
ORGANIZED BY THE ART DEALERS ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA  
Park Avenue Armory, New York City  
March 7-11, 2012 

The 24th edition of The Art Show, the US foremost and longest running fine art fair, takes place March 7 through March 11, 2012 in New York City. Organized by the Art Dealers Association of America (ADAA) to benefit Henry Street Settlement, the fair presents the nation’s leading art dealers and galleries showcasing a variety of museum quality exhibits ranging from cutting-edge, 21st century works, to masterpieces from the 19th and 20th centuries. 

Expanding its roster for the first time in 24 years, the 2012 Art Show will include 72 of the best galleries from across the USA. ADAA also welcomes five first time exhibiting galleries: Alexander and Bonin, New York City; Crown Point Press, San Francisco, CA; Greene Naftali Gallery, New York City; Anton Kern Gallery, New York City; and Van de Weghe Fine Art, New York City. 

“ADAA dealers represent the very best authorities on fine art in the country, and The Art Show is an opportunity for collectors to meet with these experts and take in fantastic exhibitions in a range of genres,” noted ADAA President Lucy Mitchell-Innes.  Linda Blumberg, ADAA’s Executive Director remarked on the experience of collectors at the show, “Art collectors appreciate The Art Show because the intimate atmosphere and consistently high level of works present an ideal opportunity to interact with our expert dealers and purchase works in a refined environment.” 

The 2012 Art Show leads a contingent of art fairs around New York City such as The Armory Show, VOLTA, Pulse, RedDot, and SCOPE, which also take place during the same week.  Adam Sheffer, Chairman of The Art Show Committee, reflects, “As the city’s and the nation’s longest running art fair, The Art Show inspires New Yorkers and visitors alike to view and purchase exquisite works of art from the most exciting historical and contemporary artists.” 

The Art Show strikes a dynamic balance among its exhibitors, who come from all over the USA to present works by historic, modern, and contemporary artists. As in recent years, the 2012 Art Show will include a number of stand out solo and two person exhibitions, such as: Cindy Sherman’s “Murder Mystery” collage series from 1976 at Metro Pictures; new work by Suzan Frecon at David Zwirner Gallery; a two-person exhibition of David Wojnarowicz and Hunter Reynolds from P•P•O•W; Dorothea Rockburne at Greenberg Van Doren Gallery; a presentation of Rudy Burkhardt: Photographs and Films of New York from Tibor de Nagy Gallery; new work by Philip Pearlstein at Betty Cuningham Gallery; and “Gaston Lachaise / Louise Bourgeois: An Affinity” a two person installation from Cheim & Read. Other exhibition highlights include: a historic look at Acquavella Galleries, “Acquavella: The First 90 Years”; a group show of women artists at Galerie Lelong; and a thematic exhibition from Mary-Anne Martin/Fine Art entitled “Surrealism in Latin America.” 

The Art Show 2012: List of Exhibiting Galleries 

Acquavella Galleries, Inc. 
Adler & Conkright Fine Art 
Alexander and Bonin - Sylvia Plimack Mangold: Selected Works 
Brooke Alexander, Inc. 
John Berggruen Gallery 
Blum & Poe - Henry Taylor: New Work 
Peter Blum Gallery 
Tanya Bonakdar Gallery - Sarah Sze
Valerie Carberry Gallery 
Cheim & Read 
James Cohan Gallery 
Conner•Rosenkranz LLC 
CRG Gallery 
Crown Point Press 
Betty Cuningham Gallery 
D’Amelio Terras 
Maxwell Davidson Gallery 
DC Moore Gallery 
Tibor de Nagy Gallery 
The Elkon Gallery, Inc. 
Richard L. Feigen & Co. 
Debra Force Fine Art, Inc. 
Fraenkel Gallery 
Peter Freeman, Inc 
Galerie St. Etienne - Major works by Austrian and German Expressionists: Max Beckmann, Otto Dix, George Grosz, Gustav Klimt, Oskar Kokoschka, Egon Schiele & others
Gladstone Gallery 
James Goodman Gallery - Drawings and Sculptures 
Marian Goodman Gallery 
Greenberg Van Doren Gallery 
Greene Naftali Gallery 
Hirschl & Adler Galleries - A HAND MIRROR TO THE SOUL: The Figure in American Art 
Leonard Hutton Galleries 
Anton Kern Gallery 
Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery 
Michael Kohn Gallery - Southern California Artists: Berman, Conner, and Goode
Barbara Krakow Gallery 
L&M Arts 
Margo Leavin Gallery 
Lehmann Maupin - Artist as Author
Galerie Lelong - Here First
Locks Gallery 
Jeffrey H. Loria & Co., Inc. 
Luhring Augustine 
Lawrence Markey 
Mary-Anne Martin/Fine Art - Latin American Art - Realism and Surrealism
Barbara Mathes Gallery 
Stephen Mazoh & Co, Inc. 
McKee Gallery 
Anthony Meier Fine Arts 
Menconi & Schoelkopf Fine Art, LLC - It’s All About Color: American Art from 1910-1950 
Metro Pictures 
Laurence Miller Gallery 
Mitchell-Innes & Nash 
Moeller Fine Art New York - Berlin 
David Nolan Gallery 
P•P•O•W  
The Pace Gallery 
Pace/MacGill Gallery 
Pace Prints  
Friedrich Petzel Gallery, Inc. 
Regen Projects 
James Reinish & Associates, Inc. 
Susan Sheehan Gallery 
Manny Silverman Gallery 
Skarstedt Gallery, Ltd. 
Sperone Westwater 
Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects 
Van de Weghe Fine Art 
Washburn Gallery 
Michael Werner 
Donald Young Gallery 
David Zwirner Gallery 

Daily admission to The Art Show from March 7th - 11th, and its Gala Preview on March 6th, 2012, benefits Henry Street Settlement, one of New York City’s best-known and most effective social services agencies. 

The Art Show will be held from Wednesday March 7, through Sunday, March 11, at the Park Avenue Armory at 67th Street City. Admission is $20 per day.  The show hours are as follows:  Wednesday through Saturday, noon to 8 p.m., and Sunday, noon to 6 p.m.

AXA Art Insurance is the Lead Sponsoring Partner of The Art Show 2012. 

Art Dealers Association of America 
Founded in 1962, the Art Dealers Association of America (ADAA) is a non-profit membership organization of more than 170 of the nation’s leading galleries in the fine arts. 
ADAA's web site : www.artdealers.org  

18/07/11

Willem de Rooij: Crazy Repelled Firelight - Exhibition at Friedrich Petzel Gallery, NYC

NYC Contemporary Art Exhibition: Willem de Rooij, Crazy Repelled Firelight  
Friedrich Petzel Gallery, Chelsea, NYC

Crazy Repelled Firelight is a solo exhibition by Dutch artist Willem de Rooij in New York City at Friedrich Petzel Gallery.

Since 2007, Willem de Rooij has been producing abstract weavings that aim to generate meaning through the material they are made of, not through external references. The first weavings of this kind, originally produced for the 2009 Athens Biennale and shown in this exhibition, titled Silver to Gold (2009/2011). This artwork was industrially produced at Van Maele linen manufactures outside of Brussels and consists of five stretched pieces. The material developed for this work is a mixture of unbleached Belgian Linen and silver and gold-colored polyester threads. Through a step-by-step transition the monochromatic silver panels gradually change to gold through adjustments in the mixture.

Joining Silver to Gold in his exhibition, Willem de Rooij has produced four new handwoven works. These works show a gradual transformation in color through the production of the material they are made from. The first handwoven artwork, Black to Black (2011) gradates from shiny black to matte black. Rather than a treated surface, like that of a painting, this fabric panel is woven on a loom by placing black cotton lengthwise (the warp) and weaving 10 different mixtures of polyester sewing thread as well as reflecting synthetic strips crosswise (known as the woof). 

The second woven panel, Black to Brown (2011) also has a black cotton warp as a base that is then shot through with 10 different mixtures of black and brown polyester sewing thread, producing a slow gradation from black to brown. 

A third artwork, Digot Lovers (2011) an anagram of the words “silver to gold,” combines unbleached linen with silver and gold-colored polyester threads, gradating color from the unbleached linen to a combination of silver and gold thread which approach from either side of the lozenge. 

The fourth handwoven work on display, Mechanize Her Jenny (2011), is a pink monochrome produced from unbleached linen and a woof plied of 10 different shades of pink polyester sewing thread, so that the resulting image fluctuates in color depending on the physical position of the viewer. 

These four artworks were produced by Ulla Schünemann on a 200-year old loom at Handweberei Geltow outside Potsdam, Germany.

Willem de Rooij’s work is determined by the selection and combination of images in diverse media, such as sculpture, film, photography and text. His work analyzes the conventions of presentation and representation and assesses the tension between socio-political and autonomous image production. Where early film installations already had a sculptural quality, de Rooij's most recent exhibitions became works of art in their own right, often incorporating found materials or appropriated works of art. 

Bantar Gebang (2000), a 10-minute single take 35mm film, shows an early morning scene in a slum area in Jakarta, Indonesia. While the sun rises, the colors of the landscape are in constant flux. 

Orange (2004), a slideshow comprised of eighty-one 35mm slides that are all a different shade of orange, was shown at Friedrich Petzel Gallery in 2006. A wall text that accompanies this work associates prisoners’ attire on Guantanamo Bay with national identity in general and that of the Netherlands in particular. 

Bouquet V (2010) is a flower arrangement that exists of 95 different flowers, each individual species or type being present only once. 

Bouquet VI (2010) juxtaposes 100 black tulips with 100 white tulips. These works all test the capacity of supposedly objective entities (color, form, material) to simultaneously evoke and question social and political structures: difference, individuality, majority, change, and polarization. 

The notion of referentiality, and more specifically the development of strategies to bypass external references became important parameters in Willem de Rooij’s work over the last 5 years. Intolerance, shown at the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin in the autumn of 2010 is the most recent in a series of temporary sculptural installations that investigate whether it is possible to produce new works out of existing objects and artworks, rather than to use them as references.

SHORT BIOGRAPHY: WILLEM DE ROOIJ (born in 1969 in Beverwijk, Holland) studied at the Gerrit Rietveld Akademie in Amsterdam from 1990-95 and at the Rijksakademie from 1997-98. He has been a tutor at De Ateliers in Amsterdam since 2002 and Professor of Fine Arts at the Städelschule in Frankfurt am Main since 2006. De Rooij lives and works in Berlin. De Rooij worked and exhibited together with Jeroen de Rijke untill 2006, followed by exhibitions at K 21, Düsseldorf (2007) and at the Museo d’Arte Moderna di Bologna (2008). He received a Robert Fulton Fellowship at Harvard University in 2004 and represented the Netherlands at the Venice Biennale in 2005. His works are in the collections of the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin, MUMOK, Vienna, and the Museum of Modern Art in New York. De Rooij will participate in group exhibitions at the Kröller Möller Museum, Otterloo, the Centro Galego de Arte de Arte Contemporanea, Santiago de Compostella, and PS1, New York later this year. A new installation at Bentheim Castle, Gemany and a large solo exhibition at the Kunstverein Munich, Germany will open early October.

Friedrich Petzel Gallery is located at 535 & 537 West 22nd Street, in Chelsea between 10th and 11th Avenues, New York, NY 10011. 
Website: www.petzel.com



30/04/11

Conrad Marca-Relli at Knoedler & Company, NYC and Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center, East Hampton

Conrad Marca-Relli 
City to Town 
Knoedler & Company, New York  
May 5 - July 29, 2011 

Conrad Marca-Relli 
The Springs Years, 1953-1956 
Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center, East Hampton 
May 5 - July 30, 2011 

In assocation with Archivio Marca-Relli, Parma

CONRAD MARCA-RELLI 
Cityscape, ca. 1952
Oil on canvas, 36 1/2 x 61 1/2 inches 
Courtesy Knoedler & Company, NYC 
and Archivio Marca-Relli, Parma

A wonderful, mysterious city has been discovered by Marca-Relli. Its exact location is never revealed, yet clues place it somewhere between Hopper’s New York and de Chirico’s dream city. — Paul Brach, 1953
CONRAD MARCA-RELLI’s life and career were restlessly peripatetic—he moved back and forth between Europe and the United States, with homes at various times in New York City, East Hampton, Rome, Paris, Ibiza, and Parma—even for a time living on a houseboat on the Seine. In addition, his frequent travels included two trips to Mexico (in 1940 and 1952), where the geometric abstract quality of the white adobe architecture, seen in intensely contrasting light and shadow, proved extremely influential on his cityscapes, as well as his evolving work in collage.

As a condition of duality characterized his pattern of residency throughout his life, so too, in his art, Marca-Relli kept a foothold both in abstraction and figuration. He never gave himself over entirely to pure abstraction, but found he was either inclined to abstract a figurative reference or to travel back and forth in his work between figuration and total abstraction. In his catalogue essay, Senso Architettonico, Carter Ratcliff identifies the “architecture” of art-making as a unifying and core principle in Marca-Relli’s work, one which led him ultimately away from painting per se, to the “construction” of collages. As early as 1951, in an ongoing series of town- and cityscapes, the artist began exploring a theme that brought together his attention to structure in his work; his literal engagement with architecture; his response to the history and specificity of the locales he visited; and the metaphorical underpinning the theme allowed for. Metaphorical depictions of towns and cities recur throughout Western art history—from Ambrogio Lorenzetti’s 14th century allegorical murals in the Palazzo Pubblico, Siena, to the urban world of Edward Hopper, to the metaphysical cityscapes of Mario Sironi and Giorgio de Chirico. Indeed Marca-Relli’s stacked dwellings and perforated façades, as well as his desolate, depopulated views, have much in common with these artists. Carter Ratcliff has written:
Seen in isolation the Cityscapes of 1951–52 are astonishing. Rendered in a palette of grays at once gloomy and luminous, they are filled with a melancholy that is not mere sadness but, rather, an exalted awareness of the humanity we have shared in the cities we began to build more than five millennia ago. Charging ordinary buildings with the weight of history, these paintings are all the more remarkable when we see them against the backdrop of the New York art world in the early 1950s.
Despite the dominance of Abstract Expressionism in postwar American art, Marca-Relli’s cityscapes had relevance and resonance for his contemporaries. In 1976, Harold Rosenberg recalled of Marca-Relli that the first strong impression made on me by his canvases was a show of his “cityscapes.” The U.S. Pavilion at the 1956 Venice Biennale was an exhibition entitled, American Artists Paint the City, curated by Katharine Kuh of The Art Institute of Chicago. Included was Marca-Relli’s 1951 New York cityscape, La Città. The series continued to evolve in Marca-Relli’s work, and we find him passing through widely diverging treatments and variations on the subject through the late 1990s.

CONRAD MARCA-RELLI: CITY TO TOWN, spans the years 1942 to 1996, and includes over twenty paintings and collages. The exhibition remains on view at Knoedler & Company through July 29. The opening reception will be held on Thursday, May 5, from 5:30 to 7:30 pm.

Concurrently on view at the Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center, East Hampton is CONRAD MARCA-RELLI: THE SPRINGS YEARS, 1953-1956, May 5-July 30. This exhibition focuses on works created during the period of Marca-Relli’s four-year residence in East Hampton, at 852 Fireplace Road, which was also the period of his warm and respectful friendship with his neighbors, Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner. Marca- Relli later wrote, I felt that moving away from the city would give me the peace necessary to pursue my work. The move had a favorable, even decisive influence on his art, as it had for Jackson Pollock, who moved to Springs in 1945. In Marca-Relli’s case, this period saw the full emergence of his engagement with collage; indeed, in his catalogue essay, Carter Ratcliff sees the artist as redefining the premises of collage, literally reinventing it. A reception will be held at the Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center on Sunday, June 26, from 5:00 to 7:00 pm, with a gallery talk by Magdalena Dabrowski, Special Consultant in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Department of Nineteenth-Century, Modern and Contemporary Art.

The exhibitions, both organized in cooperation with the Archivio Marca-Relli, Parma, Italy, are accompanied by a dual publication with essays by Carter Ratcliff.

CARTER RATCLIFF is a poet and art critic. A contributing editor of Art in America, he has received several awards for his work, including the College Art Association’s 1987 Frank Jewett Mather Award for Art Criticism, a Guggenheim Fellowship, two National Endowment for the Arts’ Art Critics Grants, and a Poets Foundation Grant. His writings have appeared in American and European journals and in the publications of museums including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Guggenheim in New York, and the Royal Academy in London. He has taught at the School of Visual Arts and Hunter College and has lectured at a variety of institutions, including the Whitney Museum of American Art and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Among his books are monographs on Andy Warhol, John Singer Sargent, and Georgia O’Keeffe. He is the author of The Fate of a Gesture: Jackson Pollock and Postwar American Art, The Figure of the Artist (2000), and Out of the Box: The Reinvention of Art: 1965-1975 (2000).

The upcoming exhibition in the Knoedler Project Space will be KEITH MAYERSON: Iconscapes, 1995-1999, May 12 - July 29, 2011

KNOEDLER & COMPANY
19 East 70th Street, New York, NY 10021

03/03/11

SCOPE New York 2011 Art Fair Highlights

Artwork by TYPOE, Confetti Death, 2010 - Spinello Gallery, Miami


SCOPE NewYork 2011 
International Contemporary Art Show 
March 2 - 6 2011 


Building on Miami’s overwhelming success, SCOPE launches its 2011 season with its fagship fair, SCOPE NEW YORK.  Serviced daily by shuttles, SCOPE NY 11 expands to a 60,000 square foot hall on the West Side Highway, minutes from The Armory Show. The fair opens to Press and VIP’s today with the FirstView benefit. 

This year’s New York edition of the art fair presents over 50 international galleries from four continents and sixteen countries including China, Mexico, Japan, Korea, Brazil, Italy, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Norway, Switzerland, Germany, UK, Spain, and Canada. 

Solo and thematic group shows on view at SCOPE New York providing the opportunity for gallerists, collectors, curators, artists, critics and art lovers alike to experience a great view of contemporary art. 
“Our new monumental location will highlight SCOPE’s core mission of introducing international galleries alongside museum quality programming, collector tours, screenings, and special events. Anchoring SCOPE as New York’s destination fair, programming expands in partnership with local and international cultural organizations, featuring: film, music, installation and performance. SCOPE New York will again highlight our lead role as creative R+D for a wider audience of taste makers who make art their business” says SCOPE President & Founder Alexis Hubshman.  

GALLERY HIGHLIGHTS 

Eleanor Harwood Gallery, San Francisco
TANJA SELZERFeuer / Fire, 2010
Oil on canvas, 220 x 150 cm


TANJA SELZER

Eleanor Harwood Gallery, San Francisco
FRANCESCA PASTINEErosion, 2008


FRANCESCA PASTINE


SPINELLO GALLERY, Miami
DEAD DADS CLUB CORPORATION, These Heads Died Series, 2006
Crayola Crayon on Cotton Paper with 3/4" Neodymium Cylinder Magnets
79 x 64 1/8 inches

DEAD DADS CLUB CORPORATION


English Kills Art Gallery, Brooklyn
BRENT OWENS, Froze Socks, 2009

BRENT OWENS


Saatchi On-Line, London
KRISTEN SCHIELE, Tiger Talk TV, 2011 

KRISTEN SCHIELE


Exhibit/101, Miami
JOSHUA HAGLER 
A Fossilizing towards. The Name Engorged By Capillarity, 2010 
Mixed Media Sculpture 

JOSHUA HAGLER


Bonelli Arte Contemporanea, Mantova 
WILLIAM MARK ZANGHI, Pic-Nic, 2010 
Varnish on canvas
120 x 156 cm / 47" x 61.5"

WILLIAM MARK ZANGHI


Foley Gallery, New York 
ANDREA MASTROVITO, Marilyn, 2010
Paper on panel, 24 x 20

ANDREA MASTROVITO


Contra Projects, Detroit
TRUSTOCORP, 100% American Male 

TRUSTOCORP


Hanmi, London
SANKEUM KOH, Excerpt from a novel ‘Paettaragi’: by Dong In Kim, 2010
1cm steel beads on black stainless steel
110 cm x 160 cm

SANKEUM KOH

Sloan Fine Art, New York

MARION PECK solo booth (Booth #C05) to celebrate the release of her book Animal Love Summer. New works and earlier works included in the book are on display and available.


SCOPE NEW YORK 2011 
EXHIBITORS LIST

101/exhibit 
a.m.f Projects
Area B 
Artists Wanted 
Aureus Contemporary 
Besharat Gallery 
Black Square Gallery 
Bonelli Art Contemporanea 
Butter Gallery 
C. Emerson Fine Arts 
Carol Jazzar 
Civilian Art Projects 
Contemporary by Angela Li 
Contra Projects 
Dean Project 
Eleanor Harwood 
Emmanuel Fremin Gallery 
English Kills Art Gallery 
Frederico Seve 
Foley Gallery 
Frosch & Portmann
Galeria Christopher Paschall 
Galeria Lyle O. Reitzel 
Galerie D’Este 
Galerie Gaia 
Galerie Von Braunbehrens
Gallerie Dukan & Hourdequin
Gallery H.A.N.
Gallery Olivier Waltman 
Golden Thread Gallery 
Hamburg Kennedy Photographs 
Hamiltonian Gallery 
Hanmi Gallery 
Hardcore Art Contemporary Space 
Hendershot Gallery 
Janine Bean Gallery 
Juan Ruiz Gallery 
Jung Park Gallery 
Krause Gallery 
Licht Feld 
Light Work 
Mauger Modern Art 
Mindy Solomon 
Muriel Guepin 
Next Art Galleria 
Now Contemporary Art 
Opus 
Paci Arte 
RARE
Rize Art Gallery 
Saatchi Online 
Silas Marder 
Sloan Fine Art (SFA) 
Spinello Gallery 
Station Independent Projects 
Sundaram Tagore 
Symbolic Collection 
Tally Beck Contemporary 

SCOPE NY 11
New Location
320 West St (West Side Highway)
Across from Pier 40 
NY 10014