Showing posts with label artworks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artworks. Show all posts

12/09/25

Earthwork Exhibition @ Art Museum at the University of Toronto - Curated by Mikinaak Migwans

Earthwork 
Alex Jacobs-Blum, Art Hunter, BUSH Gallery, Edward Poitras, Faye HeavyShield, Lisa Myers, Michael Belmore, Mike MacDonald, Protect the Tract Collective
Curated by Mikinaak Migwans 
Art Museum at the University of Toronto
September 4 – December 20, 2025

Faye HeavyShield
Clan (performance documentation), 2019 
Courtesy of Blaine Campbell

BUSH gallery
BUSH gallery 
MOMENTA 2021
Photo by Jean-Michael Seminaro 

The Art Museum at the University of Toronto presents the exhibition Earthwork, which reassesses the art historical framing of the “earthwork” popularized by the land art movement of the 1960s and ’70s, reclaiming it from an Indigenous perspective. It is curated by Mikinaak Migwans, Curator of Indigenous Contemporary Art at the Art Museum and Assistant Professor in the Department of Art History at the University of Toronto.

Works by Alex Jacobs-Blum, Art Hunter, BUSH Gallery, Edward Poitras, Faye HeavyShield, Lisa Myers, Michael Belmore, Mike MacDonald, Protect the Tract Collective

Earthwork redefines a term that until now has referred to a type of artistic practice associated within the larger conceptual framework of land art. In this exhibition, Mikinaak Migwans shifts our understanding of earthwork to refer to a way of working, rather than the making of singular objects — similar to the term “beadwork.” With a Canada-wide scope emphasizing the Great Lakes region, the exhibition takes as its starting point an understanding of ancestral earthworks less as monuments and more as sites of ongoing stewardship and care. It considers multiple layers of engagement with the land, including a history of land defense movements, medicine walks, and ancestral practices of prescribed burns, alongside contemporary artworks as creative acts of relational intervention.
“Redefining earthwork in this way helps us think about land as part of the cycles of life and death, rather than eternal monuments outside of time,” says Mikinaak Migwans. “It also helps us to see the huge labour investment that goes into maintaining relations on the land, getting away from this idea that the natural is something opposite to the human. Indigenous connections to land, especially, have been erased in colonial accounts that talk about a natural environment that is ‘virgin,’ ‘untouched,’ and in this way, unclaimed. But recent scholarship is starting to show that North America’s ecosystems were carefully cultivated and maintained by Indigenous Peoples. They’ve quite literally shaped the landscape through generations.” 
Art Hunter
Art Hunter 
Untitled (Controlled burn at Kay-nah-chi-wah-nung mounds), 2023
Digital print
Photo courtesy of the artist

Art Hunter
Art Hunter 
Untitled (Controlled burn at Kay-nah-chi-wah-nung mounds), 2023
Digital print
Photo courtesy of the artist

Central to the exhibition is photo and video documentation by Art Hunter of land stewardship practices at the ancestral Kay-Nah-Chi-Wah-Nung Historical Centre, a national historic site and one of the most significant places of early habitation and ceremonial burial in Canada located in northwestern Ontario. Art Hunter’s description of the Anishinaabe community’s controlled burn and other processes to maintain the site’s special ecology served as the inspiration point for Earthwork. 

Michael Belmore
Michael Belmore
drift, 2025 
Steel, wood, 2.43 m x 9 m x 4.5 m
Photo courtesy of the artist.

Michael Belmore
Michael Belmore
drift, 2025 
Steel, wood, 2.43 m x 9 m x 4.5 m
Photo courtesy of the artist

Internationally recognized artist Michael Belmore will create a new piece in his snow fence series, which will be on view from November 2025 through March 2026—following the seasonal cycle rather than the exhibition cycle. 

A new audio work by independent curator and artist Lisa Myers helps visitors think about land relations through walking and listening. 

Other featured artists are #BUSH Gallery (Gabrielle L’Hirondelle Hill, Peter Morin, Tania Willard), Alex Jacobs-Blum, Faye HeavyShield, Mike MacDonald, Edward Poitras, and Protect the Tract Collective

The exhibition offers visitors a printed Engagement Guide, to better connect with the works on view by sharing specific histories and information in an accessible way.

ART MUSEUM AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
University of Toronto Art Centre
University College, 15 King’s College Circle, Toronto, Ontario M5S 3H7

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Artist Jeffrey Gibson

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

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

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

METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART
The Met Fifth Avenue Facade

11/09/25

Roger Ballen Exhibition in Austria at Museum Gugging, Maria Gugging - "roger ballen.! drawing meets photography" Exhibition

Roger Ballen.! drawing meets photography
Museum Gugging, Maria Gugging, Austria
September 25, 2025 – February 15, 2026

Roger Ballen
Roger Ballen
Funeral rites, 2004
© Roger Ballen

Roger Ballen
Roger Ballen
Untitled, 2020
© Roger Ballen

Roger Ballen
Roger Ballen
Wall shadows, 2003
© Roger Ballen

The exhibition roger ballen.! drawing meets photography by South African-based photo artist ROGER BALLEN (*1950) transcends the boundaries between photography and other art forms, at museum gugging.

Nina Ansperger and Roger Ballen in museum gugging
Nina Ansperger
and Roger Ballen in museum gugging
© NÖ Museum Betriebs GmbH, Daniel Hinterramskogler
"With Roger Ballen, we are bringing one of the most important and influential photographic artists of the 21st century to museum gugging," explains Nina Ansperger, the exhibition's curator. Over the past decades, his artistic work has evolved from narrative photography to a work increasingly dominated by drawing. Drawing is therefore the focus of this exhibition. "Roger Ballen is closely connected to Jean Dubuffet's idea of ​​Art Brut and defines himself as an 'outsider.' Drawing, as a central element of his photographic art, is simultaneously the most important medium of the art from Gugging. Thus, not only the subject matter but also the location of the exhibition could not be more appropriate," Nina Ansperger asserts. 

Roger Ballen, who refers to himself as an “outsider,” said: “I have brought drawing and photography into painting to produce a mixed medium image. It has been my goal to break down the boundaries between photography and other arts, taking photography out of its self-isolation as a form.” 

Roger Ballen in museum gugging
Roger Ballen
in museum gugging
© NÖ Museum Betriebs GmbH, Daniel Hinterramskogler

New York-born Roger Ballen has lived in South Africa for several decades. His photographic works, created over 40 years, possess incredible narrative power because they oscillate between painting, drawing, installation, and photography. His “Ballenesque” aesthetic is unsettling, vehemently demands self-reflection and leads to a journey into one’s own unconscious.

Curator: Nina Ansperger

MUSEUM GUGGING
Am Campus 2, 3400 Maria Gugging

Robert Therrien @ The Broad, Los Angeles - "Robert Therrien: This is a Story" - The largest museum exhibition of the artist’s work to date

Robert Therrien: This is a Story
The Broad, Los Angeles
November 22, 2025 – April 5, 2026

Robert Therrien
Robert Therrien
No title (folding table and chairs, dark brown), 2007
Painted steel and aluminum, fabric, and plastic 
Courtesy of Glenstone Museum 
Photo by Joshua White/JWPictures.com

The Broad presents Robert Therrien: This is a Story, the largest museum exhibition of the late artist’s widely-adored work to date. Therrien’s meditations on scale and material are a deeply influential and well-known approach within the field of contemporary sculpture, significant to The Broad’s own identity as a museum, and long admired by visitors of all ages. The installation will showcase Therrien’s personal vocabulary of images and symbols—from enormous tables, chairs, and dishes, to intimate drawings of snowmen, birds, and chapels—as they become a language of continuous creation and transformation for the artist over time. Featuring more than 120 works spanning five decades, the exhibition offers unprecedented access to the artist’s exploration of scale, memory, and perception, just miles from the downtown Los Angeles home and studio space he operated out of for close to thirty years beginning in 1990. Many of the works on view, including those created just before Robert Therrien’s untimely death in 2019, have never been featured in museum exhibitions and will offer new avenues of understanding his practice.
“Robert Therrien has longstanding ties to The Broad and was one of the very first L.A.-based artists to enter the Broad collection decades ago, in its first, formative years. His massive sculpture Under the Table has captivated visitors to our museum’s galleries since the day The Broad opened in 2015, as a surreally enlarged wooden table offering layers of the artist’s intellectual and art historical inquiry within an aura of domestic familiarity,” said Joanne Heyler, Founding Director and President of The Broad. She added, “For our visitors who know and love Under the Table, this ambitious show will reveal a deeper and wide-lens look into the completely unique world Therrien created–a Los-Angeles-based body of work that reshaped contemporary sculpture.”
Robert Therrien
Robert Therrien
No title (bent cone relief), 1983 
Lacquer and wax on wood 
Courtesy of The Broad Art Foundation
Photo by Joshua White/JWPictures.com

Robert Therrien
Robert Therrien
No title (black witch hat), 2018 
Carved Delrin plastic
Courtesy of Robert Therrien Estate.
Photo by Joshua White/JWPictures.com

Robert Therrien (1947–2019) was born in Chicago and relocated to Los Angeles in the 1970s to complete an MFA at the University of Southern California. Despite the prominence of conceptual and minimalist practices at the time, he developed his own adjacent artistic vernacular that saw the infinite potential of ordinary objects across basic forms and their three-dimensional counterparts, varying in size, color, and detail. A single Robert Therrien gesture can expand, contract, change materially, or seamlessly transform into other images entirely. A chapel will become an oil can; the oil can will become a pitcher; the pitcher, a cone, then morphing into a witch hat. At the heart of Therrien’s practice is a sense of artistic animation, by turns fun, playful, and serious.
“Los Angeles has been and remains a historically important place to make sculpture and Robert Therrien is vital to that story” said Ed Schad, Curator and Publications Manager at The Broad. “From his handmade and intimate responses to Minimalism in the 1970s, to his early involvement in what would become a golden age of L.A. fabrication, Therrien made important contributions to many of sculpture’s central conversations for over forty years. However, the most important thing to know about Therrien is that he can evoke a sense of wonder. What starts in Therrien’s personal and closely guarded memories and passions, becomes a mysterious place in which a viewer can think about and dwell in one’s own.”
Visitors will be able to walk under and around large tables and chairs, approach enormous hanging beards, and navigate around large, stacked dishes designed to appear to be in motion and alter one’s sense of balance. In addition, a special collaboration with the artist’s estate will expose visitors to partial reconstructions of Therrien’s studio environment, including his project tables, drawings, and tools, to full-sized rooms full of surprises and encounters that are a hallmark of the artist’s practice. Therrien’s living and working space in Downtown L.A. remains pivotal to his understanding of space and size.

In addition to being the largest solo museum presentation of his work to date, Robert Therrien: This is a Story places his legacy within the broader arc of contemporary sculpture in Los Angeles and beyond. An exhibition catalog published by DelMonico Books will develop these connections further, edited by curator Ed Schad and featuring texts by Kathryn Scanlon, Richard Armstrong, and Darby English, as well as reflections from Vija Celmins, Vicky Arnold, Jacob Samuel, Christina Forrer and more.

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

07/09/25

Visual Language: The Art of Irving Penn - Auction @ Phillips, New York

Visual Language: The Art of Irving Penn
Phillips, New York
Auction viewing: 30 September – 7 October 2025
Auction: 8 October 2025

Irving Penn
Irving Penn
Mouth (For L’Oréal) (A), New York, 1986
© The Irving Penn Foundation, © Condé Nast
Estimate: $200,000 – 300,000

Irving Penn
Irving Penn
Harlequin Dress (Lisa Fonssagrives-Penn), New York, 1950
© The Irving Penn Foundation, © Condé Nast
Estimate: $200,000 – 300,000

Irving Penn
Irving Penn
Ginkgo Leaves, New York, 1990
© The Irving Penn Foundation, © Condé Nast
Estimate: $200,000 – 300,000

Phillips will host Visual Language: The Art of Irving Penn, a landmark auction of photographs and artworks from The Irving Penn Foundation. This standalone sale, featuring photographic prints and paintings that Penn made during his seven decades-long career, marks the first time that the foundation has offered the artist's work through auction. This historic event will celebrate Penn’s remarkable talents, highlighting his unique vision and masterful craftsmanship across a variety of photographic print processes. The 70-lot sale will take place on 8 October 2025 ahead of Phillips' seasonal Photographs sale on 9 October.
Tom Penn, Executive Director of The Irving Penn Foundation, said, “As stewards of Irving Penn's artistic legacy since 2010, this auction is a pivotal moment for The Irving Penn Foundation as we aspire to expand our charitable and educational program. My father would say to me, ‘whatever you do in life, do it with complete passion.’ It was with passion that he sought excellence in everything he did, and each object included in this sale reflects the innovation and exactitude that defined Penn’s practice. The artworks selected for the auction span the range of mediums and subjects Penn explored across his career, presenting rarely seen images alongside his most well-known photographs that provide a new perspective on the diversity of his production. Through this carefully considered sale, we demonstrate Irving Penn's mastery and enduring influence in the field of photography.”
Irving Penn
Irving Penn
Black and White Hat, New York, 1950
© The Irving Penn Foundation, © Condé Nast
Estimate: $25,000 – 35,000

Irving Penn
Irving Penn
Untitled, circa 1987
© The Irving Penn Foundation, © Condé Nast
Estimate: $30,000 – 50,000

Irving Penn
Irving Penn
Miles Davis Hand on Trumpet,
New York, 1986
© The Irving Penn Foundation, © Condé Nast
Estimate: $70,000 – 90,000

Irving Penn
Irving Penn
Télégraphiste, Paris, 1950
© The Irving Penn Foundation, © Condé Nast
Estimate: $30,000 – 50,000

Irving Penn was one of the 20th century’s most significant photographers, known for his arresting images, technical mastery, and quiet intensity. Though he gained widespread acclaim as a leading Vogue photographer for over sixty years, Penn remained a private figure devoted to his craft. Trained under legendary art director Alexey Brodovitch in Philadelphia, he began his career assisting at Harper’s Bazaar before joining Vogue in 1943, where editor and artist Alexander Liberman recognized Penn’s distinctive eye and encouraged him to pursue photography. Penn’s incomparably elegant fashion studies reset the standard for the magazine world, and his portraits, still lifes, and nude studies broke new ground. His 1960 book Moments Preserved redefined the photographic monograph with its dynamic layout and high-quality reproductions. In 1964, Penn began printing in platinum and palladium, reviving this 19th-century process to serve his own distinct vision. He was one of the first photographers to benefit from the burgeoning fine art photography market of the 1970s, and he earned a growing following of collectors and curators leading to major exhibitions at The Museum of Modern Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Art Institute of Chicago, and National Portrait Gallery, London, among many other institutions.

Irving Penn
Irving Penn
Irving Penn in a Cracked Mirror (Self-Portrait) (A)
New York, 1986
© The Irving Penn Foundation, © Condé Nast
Estimate: $25,000 – 35,000

Irving Penn
Irving Penn
Mud Glove, New York, 1975
© The Irving Penn Foundation, © Condé Nast
Estimate: $50,000 – 70,000

Irving Penn
Irving Penn
Three Tulips ‘Red Shine’, ‘Black Parrot’, ‘Gudoshnik’
New York, 1967
© The Irving Penn Foundation, © Condé Nast
Estimate: $70,000 – 90,000

Irving Penn
Irving Penn
Marriageable Young Woman of Imilchil, Morocco, 1971
© The Irving Penn Foundation, © Condé Nast
Estimate: $20,000 – 30,000

An innovator in every sense, Penn’s approach to photography was bold. Few photographers of his generation experimented as widely with both conventional and historic print processes, and none achieved Penn’s level of excellence in all. Phillips’ auction will feature work in a variety of photographic media, including Penn’s bravura gelatin silver prints, such as Coffee Pot, nuanced platinum-palladium prints like Harlequin Dress (Lisa Fonssagrives-Penn), and rare dye-transfer prints, led by the iconic Ginkgo Leaves.
Vanessa Hallett, Phillips’ Deputy Chairwoman and Worldwide Head of Photographs, said, “Irving Penn was one of the foremost photographers of our time, standing alongside the great contemporary artists who have come to define the 20th-century art historical canon. Today, Penn’s vision and skill remain unequaled. Phillips is honored to work with the foundation in its 20th-anniversary year, shining a spotlight on Penn’s technical genius, creative process, and extraordinary output while presenting this groundbreaking work to a new audience. These works were preserved for decades by the artist and his foundation, hence their incredible provenance and condition. We are thrilled to provide a platform that educates the next generation of collectors on Penn’s impact, while assisting the foundation further its mission of preserving and advancing Penn’s legacy for years to come.”
Irving Penn
Irving Penn
Cracked Egg, New York, 1958
© The Irving Penn Foundation, © Condé Nast
Estimate: $30,000 – 50,000

Irving Penn
Irving Penn
Cigarette No. 37, New York, 1972
© The Irving Penn Foundation, © Condé Nast
Estimate: $150,000 – 250,000

Irving Penn
Irving Penn
Coffee Pot, New York, 2007
© The Irving Penn Foundation, © Condé Nast
Estimate: $20,000 – 30,000

Heralding an exceptional opportunity for collectors, many of the works selected from the foundation's archives have never before appeared at auction; this includes several examples from Penn's influential 1950 Black and White series for Vogue, and the large-scale four-panel platinum-palladium print of Mud Glove with typography advertising his 1977 Street Material exhibition at The Met. In addition to his work as a photographer, Irving Penn was also an accomplished painter and draftsman. For the first time at auction, Phillips will also showcase his work in these mediums, taking the opportunity to set forth the full range of this remarkable artist's creative output.

The Irving Penn Foundation was established in 2005 to promote knowledge and understanding of Irving Penn’s artistic legacy, including the diversity of techniques, mediums, and subject matters the artist explored. It is the largest repository of Irving Penn's work.

PHILLIPS NEW YORK 
432 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10022
Click here for more information: 

Global Icons, Local Spotlight: Contemporary Art from the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer @ Portland Art Museum

Global Icons, Local Spotlight: Contemporary Art from the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer
Portland Art Museum
September 6, 2025 – January 11, 2026

Jeff Koons
Jeff Koons
, American, (b. 1955)
Gazing Ball (da Vinci Mona Lisa), edition 38/40, 2016
Archival pigment print with inlaid mirrored glass
40 11/16 x 27 3/4 in. Overall
Published by Two Palms, New York, NY
Collection of Jordan D. Schnitzer
© Jeff Koons
Photography Courtesy of the artist and Two Palms, NY


Dinh Q. Le
Dinh Q. Lê
, Vietnamese-American, (1968 - 2024)
I am Large, I Contain Multitudes, edition AP 1/1, 2009
Bicycle, steel, mirrors, wood, plastic, rubber, and metal lock
72 x 90 x 40 in. Overall, 90 x 106 1/2 x 57 in. Crate
Published by the artist
Collection of the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation
© Courtesy of Elizabeth Leach Gallery and the Dinh Q. Lê Estate
Photography Aaron Wessling

Amy Sherald
Amy Sherald
, American, (b. 1973)
As Soft as She Is..., edition 2/35, 2024
70-color screenprint on Lana Aquarelle 600 gsm
50 5/8 x 42 3/8 x 1 3/4 in. Frame, 
45 1/4 x 37 in. Sheet, 40 1/4 x 32 in. Image
Published by Hauser & Wirth, New York, NY
Collection of the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation
© Amy Sherald. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth
Photography Aaron Wessling

Portland Art Museum (PAM) presents Global Icons, Local Spotlight: Contemporary Art from the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer, an exhibition that shares works from Oregon’s foremost fine art collector by some of today’s leading artists with local Portland audiences.

Highlighting recent acquisitions from the collections of Jordan Schnitzer and his Family Foundation, the exhibition includes more than 75 works—some of which have never previously been exhibited—by celebrated artists of the 20th century, such as Louise Bourgeois, Jasper Johns, Ellsworth Kelly, and Robert Rauschenberg, in addition to contemporary luminaries such as Nick Cave, Jenny Holzer, Mickalene Thomas, and Hank Willis Thomas.

Jordan Schnitzer, who has been named an ARTnews Top 200 art collector globally, is a lifelong Portland resident and local business owner. His collaboration with PAM to exhibit these collections is an extension of the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation’s mission to share art with audiences across the globe.
“Instead of having to travel to New York City to go to the Museum of Modern Art or the Whitney, all you have to do is visit the Portland Art Museum to see exceptional artwork by some of today’s biggest artists," said Jordan Schnitzer. “Each year, when I collect new works, I think about how to share them with museums across the country through the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation exhibition program. My hope is that they will inspire audiences who might not otherwise have the opportunity to see works by these amazing artists.”
Jeffrey Gibson
Jeffrey Gibson
Native American, Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians 
and Cherokee, (b. 1972)
SPIRIT AND MATTER, 2023
Acrylic paint on elk hide inset in custom wood frame
90 x 72 1/2 x 5 in. Frame
Collection of the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation
© Jeffrey Gibson
Photography Aaron Wessling

Tschabalala Self
Tschabalala Self
, American, (b. 1990)
Untitled (Bodega Run), 2023
Unique cast and pigmented paper in artist designed frame
40 1/4 x 49 1/4 in. Sheet, 45 3/4 x 54 3/4 x 6 7/16 in. Frame
Published by Two Palms, New York, NY
Collection of the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation
Courtesy of the artist and Two Palms, NY
Photography Aaron Wessling

Katherine Bernhardt
Katherine Bernhardt
, American, (b. 1975)
Untitled, 2024
Monotype in watercolor and crayon
100 3/4 x 52 3/4 x 2 5/8 in. Frame, 96 x 48 in. Sheet
Published by Two Palms, New York, NY
Collection of the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation
Courtesy of the artist and Two Palms, NY
Photography Aaron Wessling

The exhibition features works across various media including paintings, textiles and tapestries, sculpture, photography, glass, ceramics, mixed media, and more, many of which will be shown publicly for the first time. Additional artists in the exhibition include Roy Lichtenstein, Jeff Koons, Helen Frankenthaler, Andy Warhol, Keith Haring, Dinh Q. Lê, Julie Mehretu, and Tschabalala Self. The wide array of artists represented in this presentation includes numerous women, Native American and Black artists, and other artists of color, building on PAM’s own work to spotlight underrepresented artists who represent the myriad communities that comprise Oregon.
“Portland Art Museum is a vital cultural resource for the region, which is why we are thrilled to partner with the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation collection to provide our community more opportunities to access and find inspiration in the art that brings the world to Portland,” said Brian Ferriso, Director. “Jordan and his family have long been ardent supporters of the Museum and our city, and we are grateful for his collaboration with PAM to further our mission to engage and enrich Portland’s diverse communities through art.”
Nick Cave
Nick Cave
, American, (b. 1959)
Rescue, 2014
Mixed media including ceramic birds, metal flowers, 
ceramic Basset Hound, and vintage settee
70 x 50 x 40 in. Overall
Collection of the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation
© Nick Cave. Photo by James Prinz Photography 
Courtesy of the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York

Alison Saar
Alison Saar
, American, (b. 1956)
Plucked, 2022
Charcoal and acrylic on vintage cotton picking bag, 
found hooks and chain, 93 x 28 in. Overall
Collection of the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation
© Alison Saar. Courtesy of L.A. Louver, Venice, CA.
Photography Aaron Wessling 

Christopher Myers
Christopher Myers
, American, (b. 1974)
Let the Mermaids Flirt with Me, 2022
Stained glass lightboxes and tent
42 3/4 x 42 3/4 x 5 in. Frame
Collection of the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation
© Christopher Myers 2022 
Courtesy of the artist and James Cohan, New York 
Photo by Dan Bradica

Other notable works in the exhibition include Christopher Myers' immersive and mesmerizing installation Let the Mermaids Flirt with Me, on view for only the second time since debuting at Art Basel Miami in 2022. Featured in the Museum’s grand Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Sculpture Court, the installation is a suite of stained glass paintings in lightboxes installed within a freestanding octagonal architectural structure, creating a chapel for contemplation of the illuminated compositions.

Several of the artists featured in the exhibition have previously exhibited works at PAM or are represented within PAM’s encyclopedic collection, including Hank Willis Thomas, with whom PAM organized a traveling solo exhibition in 2019, and Jeffrey Gibson, whose work PAM commissioned and exhibited at the Museum in 2023 before serving as co-commissioner for his exhibition for the U.S. Pavilion at the 60th International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia (the Venice Biennale).

PAM has also previously featured works from the collections of Jordan Schnitzer in its exhibitions including En Suite: Contemporary Prints from the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer and The Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation (2001), Location/Dislocation: Recent Prints from the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer and The Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation (2003), Minimalism/Postminimalism: Selections from the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer and His Family Foundation (2007), Ellsworth Kelly Prints (and Paintings) (2012), Anish Kapoor: Prints from the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer (2015), Andy Warhol Prints (2016), Josiah McElheny’s Cosmic Love (2018), and Jeffrey Gibson: To Name An Other (2022).

This exhibition is organized by the Portland Art Museum in partnership with The Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation. 

ABOUT THE JORDAN SCHNITZER FAMILY FOUNDATION

Jordan Schnitzer
Jordan Schnitzer 
Courtesy of Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation

The Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation’s contemporary art collection is one of the most notable in North America. The Foundation has shared its art with millions across the U.S. and internationally through groundbreaking exhibitions, publications, and programs. Founded by ARTnews Top 200 Collector Jordan D. Schnitzer—whose passion for art began in his mother’s contemporary art gallery in Portland, Ore.—the Foundation has organized over 180 exhibitions from its collection and additionally loaned thousands of artworks to over 120 museums at no cost to the institutions. Jordan Schnitzer began collecting contemporary prints and multiples in 1988 and today is North America’s largest print collector. His Foundation’s collection consists of more than 22,000 works of art, including a wide variety of prints, sculptures, paintings, glass, and mixed media works.

PORTLAND ART MUSEUM - PAM
1219 SW Park Avenue Portland, OR 97205

02/09/25

Jangueando: Recent Acquisitions, 2021-2025 Exhibition @ El Museo del Barrio, New York

Jangueando: Recent Acquisitions, 2021-2025 
El Museo del Barrio, New York 
August 28, 2025 — Summer 2026 

Laura Aguilar
Laura Aguilar
Plush Pony #25, 1992
Gelatin silver print 
Collection of El Museo del Barrio, New York 
Gift of the Acquisitions Committee
Photo by Matthew Sherman 

william cordova
william cordova 
2 tienes santo pero no eres Babalawo, 2023 
Mixed media 
Collection of El Museo del Barrio, New York 
Gift in memory of Rudy Perez

Danielle De Jesus
Danielle De Jesus 
Loyalty like this doesn't exist anymore, 2021 
Oil on linen 
Collection of El Museo del Barrio, New York
Gift of Noah Roy 
Photo by Dario Lasagni

Mundo Meza
Mundo Meza 
Kuikuro Jakui Flutes, 1976 
Acrylic on canvas 
Collection of El Museo del Barrio, New York 
Gift of the Estate of the artist 
Photo by David Frantz

El Museo del Barrio in New York presents Jangueando: Recent Acquisitions, 2021–2025, a dynamic exhibition showcasing 39 newly acquired works by 36 artists that reflect the Museum’s ongoing commitment to representing the cultural vibrancy and complexity of Latinx and Latin American communities. This exhibition marks a bold and celebratory moment for El Museo’s evolving Permanent Collection.
Jangueando embodies El Museo del Barrio’s unwavering commitment to artists whose work captures the complexities, resilience, and brilliance of our Latine culture. In this moment of heightened threats, this exhibition becomes more than a celebration—it asserts the power of gathering—of hanging out—as a form of resistance, healing, and transformation.” —Patrick Charpenel, Executive Director, El Museo del Barrio.
The title is a play on words. It looks to janguear, Puerto Rican slang for socializing with friends. From hanging out to hanging art, here it uses the museum context to create a space of dialogue and gathering. At a time when many of the communities represented by El Museo del Barrio are under attack—through immigration raids, backlash against DEI initiatives, and the cancellation of federal grants—these multiple interpretations imply both solidarity and a political call to action through holding space and kinship.

Hiram Maristany
Hiram Maristany
The Gathering, 1964/2022
Silver gelatin print
Collection of El Museo del Barrio, New York 
Museum Purchase

Carlos Motta - Higinio Bautista
Carlos Motta
with Higinio Bautista 
Shaman Boa, 2023 
Carved wood 
Collection of El Museo del Barrio, New York 
Gift of the Acquisitions Committee 

Benjamin Munoz
Benjamin Muñoz 
Contract Labor, 2024 
Chine collé woodcut on paper 
Collection of El Museo del Barrio, New York 
Gift of Benjamin & Julianna Muñoz

Jaime Munoz
Jaime Muñoz 
Metal Only, 2022
Acrylic, glitter, paper, and velvet on wood panel
Collection of El Museo del Barrio, New York
Gift of Lio Malca

El Museo del Barrio’s Permanent Collection of more than 8,500 artworks was shaped by the Museum’s unique history as an artist-led, community-focused institution from when it was first established in 1969. The founding community of the Museum faced extreme racism and economic hardship and insisted that art had the power to help communities connect in the face of these trials and, together, imagine alternative ways of being.

Jangueando brings together 39 works by artists at various stages in their careers, representing a range of generations, cultural perspectives, and media—including painting, photography, sculpture, and video. Organized into thematic clusters, select groupings build on the museum’s historical strengths, such as Puerto Rican and Nuyorican portraiture, Latinx photography, and printmaking. The exhibition also highlights the evolution of the museum’s collecting strategy, with renewed focus on queer artists and those of Indigenous descent.
“Ever evolving, El Museo del Barrio’s distinct Permanent Collection stands as a testament to the artists, cultural workers, donors, and community members who have helped build and shaped it over time,” says Susanna V. Temkin, Interim Chief Curator, El Museo del Barrio. “Jangueando marks an exciting new chapter in the Museum’s evolution as a collecting institution—serving not only as a platform to debut new acquisitions, but also as a reflection of our shared, collective spirit. The exhibition offers both a framework and a provocation to what is at stake in being together.”

Juan Sanchez
Juan Sánchez 
Still from Unknown Boricua Streaming: 
Nuyorican State of Mind, 2011 
Video, color with sound, 8:09 mins 
Collection of El Museo del Barrio, New York
Gift of Javier Lumbreras

Ethel Shipton
Ethel Shipton 
Change Cambio, 2020 
House paint and vinyl on wooden panel 
Collection of El Museo del Barrio, New York 
Gift of the artist and Ruiz-Healy Art 

Daiara Tukano
Daiara Tukano 
Hori, 2023 
Acrylic on canvas
Collection of El Museo del Barrio, New York 
Gift of Daiara Tukano and Millan

Artists whose works are on view in the exhibition include:

Eduardo Abaroa (1968, Mexico City, Mexico; lives in Mexico City)
Laura Aguilar (1959, San Gabriel, CA – 2018, Long Beach, CA)
José Alicea (1928, Ponce, Puerto Rico; lives in Río Piedras, Puerto Rico)
Lola Álvarez Bravo (1903, Lagos de Moreno, Mexico - 1993, Mexico City, Mexico)
assume vivid astro focus (formed in New York, NY in 2001)
Myrna Báez (1931, Santurce, Puerto Rico – 2018, Hato Ray, Puerto Rico)
Higinio Bautista
Eloy Blanco (1933, Aguadilla, Puerto Rico – 1984, New York, NY)
Luis Carle (1962, San Juan, Puerto Rico; lives in New York, NY)
Los Carpinteros (formed in La Havana, Cuba in 1992)
Manuel Chavajay (1982, San Pedro La Laguna, Guatemala, lives in San Pedro La Laguna)
william cordova (1971, Lima, Peru; lives in North Miami Beach, FL)
Abraham Cruzvillegas (1968, Mexico City, Mexico; lives in Mexico City)
Danielle De Jesus (1987, Brooklyn, NY; lives in Brooklyn)
Sandra Gamarra Heshiki (1972, Lima, Peru; lives in Madrid, Spain)
Luis Gispert (1972, Jersey City, NJ)
Matías González Chavajay (b. 1959, San Pedro La Laguna, Guatemala, lives in San Pedro La Laguna)
Pedro Rafael González Chavajay (b. 1956 in San Pedro la Laguna, Guatemala, lives in San Pedro La Laguna)
Julia Isidrez (1967, Itá, Paraguay; lives in Itá)
Antonio C. Ixtamer (b. in 1968 in San Juan la Laguna, Guatemala, lives in San Juan la Laguna, Guatemala)
Lidia Lisbôa (1970, Guaira, Brazil; lives and works in São Paulo, Brazil)
Marepe (Marcos Reis Peixoto) (1970, Santo Antônio de Jesus Bahia, Brazil; lives in Santo Antônio de Jesus)
Hiram Maristany (1945, New York, NY – 2022, St. Petersburg, FL)
Maria Teodora Mendez de González
Mundo Meza (1955, Tijuana, Mexico - 1985, Los Angeles, CA)
Carlos Motta (1978, Bogota, Colombia; lives in New York, NY)
Benjamin Muñoz (1993, Dallas, TX; lives in Dallas)
Jaime Muñoz (1987, Los Angeles, CA; lives and works in Pomona, CA)
Paula Nicho Cúmez (1955, Comalapa, Guatemala, lives in Comalapa)
Miguel Pou y Becerra (1880, Ponce, Puerto Rico - 1968 San Juan, Puerto Rico)
Juan Sánchez (1954, Brooklyn, NY; lives in Brooklyn)
Ethel Shipton (1963, Laredo, TX; lives in San Antonio, TX)
Valeska Soares (b. 1957, Belo Horizonte; lives in Brooklyn)
Laureana Toledo (1970, Ixtepec, Mexico; lives in Mexico City, Mexico)
Rigoberto Torres (1960, Aguadilla, Puerto Rico; lives in New York, Puerto Rico, and Florida)
Daiara Tukano (1970, Guaira, Brazil; lives and works in São Paulo, Brazil)

The exhibition is organized by the Curatorial Department of El Museo del Barrio: Zuna Maza, Lee Sessions, and Susanna V. Temkin, with María Molano Parrado.

EL MUSEO DEL BARRIO, NEW YORK
1230 5th Avenue at 104th Street, New York, NY 10029