Showing posts with label Pace Verso. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pace Verso. Show all posts

26/03/23

Tyler Hobbs - QQL: Analogs @ Pace Gallery, NYC

Tyler Hobbs
QQL: Analogs
Pace Gallery, New York
March 30 – April 22, 2023

Tyler Hobbs
TYLER HOBBS
QQL: Analog #2, 2023 
© Tyler Hobbs, courtesy Pace Gallery 
(Pictured: NFT version of QQL: Analog #2
to be accompanied by related painting)

Pace Gallery announces details of an exhibition of new work by leading generative artist, creative coder, and painter TYLER HOBBS. Presented under the banner of Pace Verso, the gallery’s web3 hub, this show features large-scale paintings based on Tyler Hobbs’ own experimentations with the new QQL NFT algorithm he developed in collaboration with fellow generative artist Dandelion Wist. QQL: Analogs marks Pace’s first exhibition dedicated to an individual artist’s web3 project.

Tyler Hobbs—who is known for his virtuosic work in computational aesthetics—utilizes algorithms, mechanical plotters, and paint in his practice. One of his most acclaimed projects is the Fidenza NFT series, which was presented on the generative art platform Art Blocks, a partner of Pace Verso since 2022. Fidenza is widely regarded as a landmark generative art project, ushering in a new level of code complexity and compositional structure within generative and digital art. The artist’s work has been influenced as much by figures like Sol LeWitt and Agnes Martin—whose methodical approaches to art making, mathematically-minded compositions, and other contributions to Minimalism and Conceptualism influenced the rise of generative art in the mid 20th century—as the ever-expanding technological landscape. Hobbs, who studied Computer Science at the University of Texas, Austin, has exhibited at NFT.NYC; Art Dubai; the Seattle Art Fair; Bright Moments Gallery in New York; Unit London; and other international events and venues. His work has also figured in auctions by Sotheby’s, Christie’s, and Phillips.

Through the QQL project, Tyler Hobbs invites collectors to become co-creators of generative art NFTs in an innovative and collaborative process that harnesses the power of unpredictability and happenstance in web3. In September 2022, QQL launched a dedicated website, accessible at qql.art, that serves as a space for intuitive play where visitors can experiment with generating NFTs through Hobbs’ algorithm, using various bespoke tools that encourage interplay between elements of control and chance. Density, flow, and scale are among the mutable attributes that can be manipulated to explore a huge range of formal possibilities generated by the algorithm. Since it went live, the QQL website has seen 21.5 million QQL outputs from users around the world.

Tyler Hobbs’ exhibition with Pace in New York—coinciding with the 2023 edition of NFT.NYC—showcases 12 large-scale paintings that are physical representations of the artist’s own QQL outputs. Created using a combination of traditional painting techniques and robotic tools, including a plotter adapted with mechanical customizations by the artist himself, these works reflect enactments of both chaos and order, foregrounding the vast possibilities of systematic approaches to art making. As part of a process that unites programmed digital equipment with the human touch, Hobbs feeds code through the plotter to forge his compositions and then refines details by hand directly on the canvases. His resulting works feature a wide spectrum of visual effects, forms, and moods, from minimal to maximal and contemplative to exuberant.

While Tyler Hobbs’ paintings are derived from the QQL algorithm, they are also unique artworks in their own right, bearing aesthetic traces of both the machine and the artist’s paint strokes. Tyler Hobbs’ methodology for these works aligns with his deep interest in system-based artistic practices from the past century—in particular, the work of Sol LeWitt, Martin, John Cage, Richard Diebenkorn, and Bridget Riley.

QQL: Analogs is accompanied by an online exhibition—presented by Pace—that brings together QQLs minted by artists within and beyond the gallery’s program. 

Pace’s presentation of QQL: Analogs coincides with Tyler Hobbs’ debut UK exhibition, Mechanical Hand, on view at Unit London from March 7 to April 6 and featuring new and recent paintings on canvas and drawings on paper by the artist. Revealing an intimate, contemplative side to his varied practice, Tyler Hobbs’ Unit London show meditates on synergistic relationships between humans and machines, focusing on the imaginative possibilities of these exchanges.

The artist’s complementary exhibitions in London and New York sheds light on his distinctive approach to abstraction: while Unit London’s show offers a holistic view of the artist’s expansive formal experimentations in painting and drawing, Pace’s presentation spotlights a new, singular body of work derived from his innovative QQL algorithm. Together, the two shows mark an important moment in Tyler Hobbs’ career, showcasing the breadth of the artist’s practice as well as his deep and longstanding interest in system-based art making.

As the first major international art gallery to accept cryptocurrency for both digital and physical artworks, Pace made an early commitment to web3. With Pace Verso, the gallery builds on its 60-year history of innovation and ongoing support of artists who have cultivated advanced studio practices engaged with new technologies. Pace Verso has presented NFT projects by Jeff Koons, Tara Donovan, Loie Hollowell, John Gerrard, A.A. Murakami, Zhang Huan, Glenn Kaino, DRIFT, Lucas Samaras, and other artists in its first year, during which Pace Verso also launched a dedicated Discord server to directly engage web3 communities.

PACE GALLERY
508 West 25th Street, New York, NY

18/11/21

Pace Verso: NFT platform of Pace Gallery - Inaugural Program

Pace Verso: NFT platform of 
Pace Gallery
Inaugural Program

Lucas Samaras
Lucas Samaras 
XYZ 0868 (Chinoiserie), 2012/2021 
© Lucas Samaras, courtesy Pace Gallery

Glenn Kaino
Glenn Kaino
Invisible Man (Ceremony), 2021 
© 2021 Glenn Kaino Studio, courtesy Pace Gallery

Pace Gallery announces the inaugural program on its new NFT platform, Pace Verso, which launches November 22 with a first drop of digital artworks from Lucas Samaras’s XYZ series. On November 29, to coincide with the physical presentation of NFTs in Pace’s booth at Art Basel Miami Beach, Pace Verso will release works by Glenn Kaino and DRIFT artists Lonneke Gordijn and Ralph Nauta, who collaborated with DJ and digital art pioneer Don Diablo on their first NFT.

An early champion of artists engaged with technology, Pace has long held innovation as a core value. The development of Pace Verso aligns with the gallery’s history of supporting boundary-pushing artists and their projects, and it underscores the gallery’s commitment to the advanced studio practices of artists within and beyond its program. The platform is helmed by Online Sales Director Christiana Ine-Kimba Boyle.

Marc Glimcher, President and CEO of Pace Gallery, says: “We became interested in creating a dedicated NFT platform for Pace when our artists expressed curiosity about making NFTs, and after we supported their first few NFT projects with other platforms. Our philosophy is to build the tools our artists need, and Pace Verso is now a core strand of our NFT programming. Alongside offering artists the opportunity to show and sell NFTs on our own Pace Verso platform, we will continue to support standalone NFT projects with other partners. We are thrilled to launch Pace Verso with Lucas Samaras, one of the very earliest artists to join the gallery and the grandfather of digital art, as well as a pioneering new AR work by DRIFT, and two NFTs by Glenn Kaino, who has revolutionized the NFT model to achieve social change on a grand scale.”

Pace Verso was created in partnership with the Palm NFT Studio on the Palm Network, a new NFT-optimized blockchain network for culture and creativity, built by and for the open Ethereum ecosystem. The Palm Network offers low gas costs, fast transaction finality, and a 99.99%+ reduction in energy consumption when compared to Proof of Work systems.

Palm Co-Founder and Palm NFT Studio CEO Dan Heyman says: “Our goal is to create a platform with Pace that removes barriers for artists. We built our sustainable and scalable infrastructure so that, as organizations like Pace grow, they only have to think about how blockchain can amplify creativity, not their environmental impact or gas fees.”

Glenn Kaino
Glenn Kaino
Salute (Generations), 2021 
© 2021 Glenn Kaino Studio, courtesy Pace Gallery

DRIFT
DRIFT 
Block Universe, 2021 
© DRIFT, courtesy Pace Gallery

PACE VERSO Inaugural Program

LUCAS SAMARAS

Following the gallery’s successful presentation of two NFTs derived from Lucas Samaras’s XYZ series earlier this fall, Pace Verso will spotlight a second suite of digital XYZ works in its first exhibition. These NFTs will be made available in multiple drops over the course of the coming weeks, with the prices of the works increasing incrementally with each new release. NFTs in the first drop are priced at $10,000 USD each and those in the second drop will be $20,000 USD each. Every NFT will be accompanied by a physical 11 x 17 inch framed print. A QR code embossed on the backs of the frames links to a web page displaying an image of the NFT and Lucas Samaras’s stream of consciousness writings.

Lucas Samaras is a pioneering figure in photography and digital art. He has been at the forefront of these mediums throughout his career, working in the digital realm well before it was widely associated with fine art. Deeply engaged with Lucas Samaras’s longtime experimentations with image making, works in the XYZ series feature psychedelic formations rendered in electric colors.

GLENN KAINO

The two new NFTs by Glenn Kaino that will be made available on Pace Verso are part of his Legacy Team project, a longstanding collaboration between the artist and the Olympic track and field athlete Tommie Smith. These digital works include Invisible Man (Ceremony) (2021), which is inspired by the opening ceremony of the Olympics and features a custom soundtrack by David Sitek and Just Blaze, and Salute (Generations) (2021), which is based on Glenn Kaino’s sculptural series Salute and references the long-lasting impact of Smith’s salute for human rights at the 1968 Olympic Games.

Glenn Kaino has cultivated an expansive, activist-minded practice that spans painting, sculpture, installation, performance, monumental public art, theatrical production, and feature film.

At Art Basel Miami Beach, Pace will present a hologram from Glenn Kaino’s digital art project Pass the Baton, which comprises baton NFTs inspired by Smith’s storied career, including his record breaking 1600-meter relay race in 1966. Launching in December, Glenne Kaino’s Pass the Baton project uses NFTs to facilitate a generative crypto-giving structure that directly funds social justice efforts and organizations.

DRIFT

An NFT created by DRIFT artists Lonneke Gordijn and Ralph Nauta as part of their collaboration with the DJ and digital art pioneer Don Diablo will be presented on Pace Verso. The NFT is part of the artists’ augmented reality work Block Universe (2021), which is on view in their solo exhibition at Pace’s New York gallery through December 18. The NFT comprises a one of one mp4 video file rendering of Block Universe with a soundscape by Diablo. A physical component of the work includes a handheld custom display showcasing the NFT in an infinite loop.

DRIFT is known for their research-based practice that explores the relationships between nature, technology, and humanity. The duo’s NFT will be presented in Pace’s booth at Art Basel Miami Beach in addition to the gallery’s digital platform. 

PACE