Showing posts with label painters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label painters. Show all posts

26/08/25

Turner and Constable: Rivals and Originals @ Tate Britain, London

Turner and Constable: Rivals and Originals
Tate Britain, London
27 November 2025 – 12 April 2026

JMW Turner
J.M.W. Turner
Self Portrait, c. 1799 
Image courtesy of Tate

John Constable by Ramsay Richard Reinagle
John Constable 
by Ramsay Richard Reinagle c. 1799 
NPG 1786 
© National Portrait Gallery, London

Tate Britain presents the first major exhibition to explore the intertwined lives and legacies of Britain’s most revered landscape artists: JMW Turner (1775–1851) and John Constable (1776–1837). Radically different painters and personalities, each challenged artistic conventions of the time, developing ways of picturing the world which still resonate today. Staged across the 250th anniversary years of their births, this exhibition will trace the development of their careers in parallel, revealing the ways they were celebrated, criticised and pitted against each other, and how this pushed them to new and original artistic visions. It will feature over 170 paintings and works on paper, from Turner’s momentous 1835 The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons, lent by Cleveland Museum of Art and not seen in Britain for over a century, to The White Horse 1819, one of Constable’s greatest artistic achievements, last exhibited in London two decades ago.

JMW Turner
JMW Turner 
The Burning of the Houses of Lords 
and Commons, 16 October 1834, 1835 
Cleveland Museum of Art. 
Bequest of John L. Severance 1942.647

John Constable
John Constable 
The White Horse, 1819 
© The Frick Collection, New York 
Photo: Joseph Coscia Jr

Born only a year apart - JMW Turner in London’s crowded metropolis and John Constable to a prosperous family in the Suffolk village of East Bergholt - their contrasting early lives will begin the exhibition. JMW Turner was a commercially minded, fast-rising young star who first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1790 aged just 15, and created ambitious oil paintings like recently-discovered The Rising Squall, Hot Wells, from St. Vincent’s Rock, Bristol, before he turned 18. By contrast, largely self-taught John Constable undertook sketching tours to create early watercolours like Bow Fell, Cumberland 1807 and demonstrated a fierce commitment to perfecting artistic techniques, not exhibiting at the Royal Academy until 1802. Having both emerged amid an explosion in popularity of landscape art, the two were united however, in their desire to change it for the better.

The exhibition explores how both artists developed distinct artistic identities within the competitive world of landscape art, spotlighting their methods, evolution and overlap. Constable built his reputation on the Suffolk landscapes of his childhood, opting to sketch in oils outside amid the vast views of Dedham Vale and the river Stour, which often recurred in his work. Tate Britain will include his painting box and sketching chair, with visitors able to chart the development of Constable’s skilful draughtsmanship and radical handling of paint to add ‘sparkle’. A group of Constable’s cloud studies will be brought together for the exhibition. Reflective of his belief that the sky was key to the emotional impact of a painting they are now one of the most celebrated aspects of his output and underpinned the powerful skyscapes in the artist’s monumental six-foot canvases. Late works such as Hampstead Heath with a Rainbow 1836 will illustrate his deft interweaving of personal and historic memories.

JMW Turner
JMW Turner
 
The Passage of Mount St Gothard from the centre 
of Teufels Broch (Devil’s Bridge), 1804 
© Abbot Hall, Kendal (Lakeland Arts Trust)

By contrast, Turner travelled widely across Britain and Europe filling sketchbooks with quick pencil studies. This offered creative inspiration, influencing sublime Alpine scenes such as The Passage of Mount St Gothard from the Centre of Teufels Broch (Devil’s Bridge) 1804, as well as commercial opportunities to have prints made after his watercolours. The exhibition explores how Turner developed original ways to apply paint and depict light, capturing the raw power of nature. Some of Turner’s most celebrated late works will feature, including Ancient Italy – Ovid Banished from Rome, first exhibited in 1838 and not shown in London in over 50 years.

John Constable
John Constable 
Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows, c. 1829
Image courtesy of Tate

By the 1830s, both Turner and Constable became recognised for taking landscape painting in bold new directions. The stark differences between their work spurred art critics to pit them against one another and to cast them as rivals. In 1831 Constable himself played into this, placing his and Turner’s work side by side at the Royal Academy exhibition. This showing of Turner’s Caligula’s Palace and Bridge next to Constable’s Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows, prompted a flurry of comparisons between the sun-drenched heat of Turner’s mythical Italian scene and Constable’s damply atmospheric Britain; they were ‘fire and water’. Now placed head-to-head at Tate Britain, the artists’ most distinctive and impressive paintings will highlight how, despite their differences, they made landscape a genre worthy of grand canvases and prime importance.

Creators of some of the most daring and captivating works in the history of British art, Turner and Constable changed the face of landscape painting with their two competing visions, elevating the genre with their recognition of its endless potential to inspire. The exhibition will end with a new film featuring contemporary artists Frank Bowling, Bridget Riley, George Shaw and Emma Stibbon reflecting on the enduring legacy of Turner and Constable.

TATE BRITAIN
Millbank, London SW1P 4RG

25/08/25

Koak, Ding Shilun, Cece Philips @ Hauser & Wirth London - "Interior Motives" Exhibition

Interior Motives
Koak, Ding Shilun, Cece Philips
Hauser & Wirth London
22 August – 20 September 2025

Enter interior worlds imagined by contemporary painters Koak, Ding Shilun and Cece Philips at Hauser & Wirth London. The exhibition explores how these artists engage with the interior both as a physical space and a psychological construct. Through distinct painterly vocabularies, each artist interrogates the architectural and domestic environments we inhabit, revealing how these frameworks shape our sense of self, memory and belonging. ‘Interior Motives’ is part of an ongoing initiative at Hauser & Wirth that champions emerging and mid-career artists beyond the gallery’s roster. Produced in collaboration with Union Pacific and Bernheim Gallery, this exhibition reflects a shared commitment to a sustainable arts ecosystem.

Depicting figures in dreamlike domestic interiors, Koak’s painting practice questions the societal expectations and roles of women within the home as well as the traditional portrayal of women by male artists. With a graphic aesthetic that borrows from Japanese and European animations, Koak uses familiar iconography of the home—windows, soft furnishings, flowerpots and vases—to build alternate interiors in which her figures are liberated and given agency. Her contemporary take on art historical depictions of domestic scenes is achieved through a vibrant color palette that blurs the distinction between the imagined and real, between inner and outer worlds, her female gaze highlighting both the emotional and physical experience of her figures.

Inhabiting imaginary worlds, the characters in Ding Shilun’s paintings are often an embodiment of the artist himself, the emotions he feels and the thoughts inside his mind. His worldbuilding relies on everyday objects found in domestic spaces to enable viewers to identify with the characters depicted and emotions evoked. With a style inspired by Japanese manga and traditional Chinese painting, the artist’s interiors include fantastical and mythological elements that question viewer’s perception of reality. Influenced by both global historical events, current affairs and his own experiences, Ding Shilun’s manifestation of his interior realm doubles up as a visual representation of the absurdity of daily life.

The architectural tropes characteristic of household settings, from windows and doorways to hallways and walls, act as visual framing devices in Cece Philips’ paintings. Radiant light is a hallmark of her practice, drawing viewers into the work and leading them through the interiors, yet they are never part of the scene, observing like a flaneur. Like paintings of everyday, domestic life from the Dutch Golden Age and by Félix Vallotton, a narrative is implied—one in which Cece Philips leaves the viewer to fill in the details, encouraged by their imagination and own inner worlds. The use of color adds a layer to the narrative by suggesting a psychological reading, reflecting the figures’ mood and internal realities, as well as that of the viewer. This exploration of interiority is at once about the subject and the viewer, observation and introspection.

ARTIST KOAK

Artist Koak
Koak
Courtesy the artist and Union Pacific

Koak (b. 1981 in the US) is known for work that portrays the complex duality of identity and human nature through a mastery of the line which extends across drawing, painting and sculpture. Rendered with exquisite technique, her emotionally charged figures and landscapes are imbued with a profound agency and inner life. Her work challenges historical portrayals of femininity, depicting figures that shift between boldness and vulnerability, resisting fixed definition and embracing emotional depth. Regardless of subject, each piece is approached with the intimacy of portraiture, suggesting a metamorphic state—a dream of becoming something beyond the self: a body becoming a lake, a flower or a landscape. In this way, painting becomes an act of defiance—a feminist gesture that resists enclosure, imagining identity as something fluid.

Recent solo exhibitions include: ‘The Window Set,’ Charleston in Lewes, UK (2025); ‘Lake Marghrete,’ Perrotin, Paris, France (2024); ‘Letter to Myself (when the world is on fire),’ Altman Siegel, San Francisco CA (2023); ‘The Driver,’ Perrotin, Hong Kong (2022); ‘Return to Feeling,’ Altman Siegel, San Francisco CA (2020); and ‘Holding Breath,’ Union Pacific, London, UK (2019). Selected group exhibitions include: ‘Infinite Regresse: Mystical Abstraction from the Permanent Collection and Beyond,’ Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City MO (2024); ‘I’ve got a feeling,’ Musées d’Angers, Angers, France (2023); ‘I’m Stepping High, I’m Drifting, and There I Go Leaping,’ XIAO Museum, Rizhao, China (2022); ‘Familiars,’ Et. Al Gallery, San Francisco CA (2022); and ‘New Time: Art and Feminisms in the 21st Century,’ Berkeley Art Museum, Berkeley CA (2021), amongst others.

ARTIST DING SHILUN

Ding Shilun
Ding Shilun
Courtesy the artist and Bernheim Gallery 
Photo: Will Grundy

Ding Shilun (b. 1998 in Guangzhou, China; lives and works between London and Guangzhou) harnesses his heritage, current events and a global history of art to create large and detailed pictorial works depicting the absurdity of daily life. His unique concurrence of the mythological, the historical and the everyday allow the emergence of an imaginary world with a representation of himself within our seemingly homogenous society. Rooted in pictorial references such as Gustav Klimt or Kai Althoff intertwined with interpretations of Chinese literature—namely a collection of Chinese legends, translated as ‘In Search of the Supernatural,’ written between 220 – 589 AD—Shilun’s characters inhabit imaginary worlds that serve as allegories for human experience and emotion. The precision of the details is used to contrast the different textures found in the paintings, sometimes resembling watercolor, as well as playing on a combination of co-existing perspectives, which question the distinction between real and surreal.

His recent solo shows include ‘Janus’ at ICA Miami, Miami FL (2024); ‘Invites: Ding Shilun,’ Zabludowicz Collection, London, UK (2023); ‘Paradiso,’ Bernheim, Zurich, Switzerland (2022); and ‘Mirage,’ Bernheim, London, UK (2024). Shilun’s work is included in the permanent collections of The Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami FL; The Nancy A. Nasher and David J. Haemisegger Collection of Contemporary Art, Dallas TX; High Museum of Art, Atlanta GA; Rose Art Museum, Waltham MA; Guangdong Museum, Guangzhou, China; Albertina Museum, Vienna, Austria; Museu Inima De Paula, Below Horizonte, Brazil; Asymmetry Art Foundation, London, UK; and Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas TX, among others.

ARTIST CECE PHILIPS

Cece Philips
Cece Philips
Courtesy the artist
Photo: Rory Langdon-Down

Cece Philips (b. 1996 in London, UK) is a London-based painter whose luminous compositions explore ideas of spectatorship and voyeurism. Embodying the role and spirit of the flaneur, or flâneuse, her works draw on a multitude of sources, from the archive, film stills, found imagery and memory she weaves together historical and contemporary influences to interrogate ideas of interiority, desire and loneliness. Framing is a recurring device in Philips’ paintings, though windows and doorways, barriers and veils are constructed to challenge an easy reading of her female protagonists. Palette, attention to light and space all lend psychological and narrative depth—details that lead us through and beyond the work and activate the viewer’s own imagination.

Cece Philips held her debut solo exhibition ‘I See in Colour’ at HOME in London, UK, in April 2021. Subsequent solo shows include ‘Between the Dog and the Wolf’ at ADA Contemporary, Accra, Ghana (2022); ‘The Night Has a Thousand Eyes,’ Peres Projects, Berlin, Germany (2022); ‘Walking the In-Between,’ Peres Projects, Seoul, South Korea (2023); and ‘Conversations Between Two,’ Peres Projects, Milan, Italy (2024). Recent group exhibitions include ‘The Painted Room,’ curated by Caroline Walker at GRIMM, Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2023); ‘Digestif,’ a two-person show with Hettie Inniss at Palazzo Monti, Brescia, Italy (2024); and ‘The Shed’ at Berntson and Bhattacharjee, London, UK (2025). Her most recent solo presentation, ‘The Wall: Cece Philips,’ was held at Almine Rech, Brussels, Belgium (2025). Cece Philips completed her MA in Painting at the Royal College of Art in 2023 and was awarded the Fribourg Philanthropies Prize the same year.

HAUSER & WIRTH LONDON
23 Savile Row, London W1S 2ET

27/07/25

41 British Artists Exhibition @ Maya Frodeman Gallery, Jackson Hole - "One Thing Touches Another" Curated by Emma Hill and Tom Hammick

One Thing Touches Another 
Maya Frodeman Gallery, Jackson Hole 
July 31 - September 14, 2025 

Ken Kiff
Ken Kiff 
Untitled - After Domenichino, 1996
Encaustic on paper, 40 1/8 x 59 7/8 inches
© Ken Kiff, courtesy of Maya Frodeman Gallery

Lorna Robertson
Lorna Robertson 
Portrait of a Lazy Woman, 2024 
Oil, linseed oil and varnish on paper, 20 5/8 x 18 ¾ inches
© Lorna Robertson, courtesy of Maya Frodeman Gallery

Prunella Clough
Prunella Clough 
Black Flower, 1993 
Oil on canvas, 44 x 48 3/4 inches
© Prunella Clough, courtesy of Maya Frodeman Gallery

Maya Frodeman Gallery presents One Thing Touches Another, a group exhibition curated by Emma Hill and Tom Hammick

The ideas behind One Thing Touches Another began from a simple premise which was to ask whether the language of painting has agency in an increasingly turbulent world. The exhibition offers a view of painting as an essential language of connection – as the physical manifestation of another’s thoughts. A form of invitation – a reaching towards.

Artists: Eileen Agar, Remi Ajani, Karolina Albricht, Ned Armstrong, Charles Avery, Basil Beattie, Maria Chevska, Prunella Clough, Denise de Cordova, Andrew Cranston, Martyn Cross, Joseph Dilnot, Peter Doig, James Fisher, Nick Goss, Phil Goss, Susie Hamilton, Tom Hammick, Marcus Harvey, Celia Hempton, Roger Hilton, Paul Housley, Andrzej Jackowski, Merlin James, Ken Kiff, Deborah Lerner, John Maclean, Elizabeth Magill, Kathryn Maple, Scott McCracken, Jeff McMillan, Margaret Mellis, Roy Oxlade, Carol Rhodes, Dan Roach, Lorna Robertson, William Scott, Myra Stimson, Graeme Todd, Phoebe Unwin, and Alice Walter.

Martyn Cross
Martyn Cross 
Way Yonder Trouble, 2021 
Oil on canvas, 12 x 18 inches
© Martyn Cross, courtesy of Maya Frodeman Gallery

John Maclean
John Maclean 
Swamp Things, 2025 
Watercolor on board, 11 3/4 x 9 1/2 inches
© John Maclean, courtesy of Maya Frodeman Gallery

The exhibition brings together work by 41 British artists, from internationally established figures to emerging young contemporaries. It reveals connections and currents in British art that span 75 years, with work by significant artists of the Modern British era, including Eileen Agar, Prunella Clough, Roger Hilton and William Scott, historic paintings by Ken Kiff and Roy Oxlade (whose influence as teachers travels into the present time), and recent work by artists including Basil Beattie RA, Andrew Cranston, Peter Doig and Marcus Harvey.

Though not bound by any one formal aesthetic, a prevailing aspect of the selection is the exploration of ideas expressed through depictions of landscape, both real and imaginary. The rich diversity of current practice in the UK is reflected in examples by contemporary artists including Charles Avery, Denise de Cordova, James Fisher, Tom Hammick, Nick Goss, John Maclean, Elizabeth Magill, Merlin James and Phoebe Unwin. The show also introduces a number of young painters to the US for the first time, selected by Tom Hammick, who worked for many years as a teacher.

The title of the exhibition is premised upon the words of painter Maria Chevska, writing in 2023:
The common factor—one thing touches another thing
Using the language of small gestures... tenuous, empathic, transforming, 
holding, listening,
and the tensions held between bodies and spaces...
Thematic strands run through One Thing Touches Another that relate to landscape, still life, mythmaking, and folklore, but what connects all the work is a sense of the artist approaching painting as a site of perception. Axiomatically the exhibition also examines the materiality of paint as a medium.

Within the exhibition there are numerous meeting points: historic artists who have influenced, artists who have taught other artists, friends, partners, siblings. Conceived by an artist and a curator who have known and worked together in London since the late 1980s, One Thing Touches Another presents eloquent evidence of the value of painting as a vital language in the contemporary world.

This exhibition is accompanied by a physical catalogue featuring an essay by Emma Hill.

Guest-curator Emma Hill founded Eagle Gallery / EMH Arts in London in 1991. Throughout her career, she has championed emerging artists through innovative exhibitions, artist publications and off-site installations. Renowned as one of London’s pioneering alternative art spaces in the early 1990’s Eagle Gallery has nurtured talents now celebrated globally. Hill is currently a guest curator at Turps Gallery, London and has curated institutional exhibitions including Ken Kiff: The Sequence at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Art (2018) and Stephen Chambers: The Court of Redonda for the 57th Venice Biennale (2017). Her visionary initiatives have fostered collaborations with esteemed institutions including Aldeburgh Music, Sadler’s Wells Theatre, the Scuola Internazionale di Grafica, Venezia, and now Maya Frodeman Gallery.

Hill’s co-curator Tom Hammick is an artist living and working in London and East Sussex in the UK. He studied art history at the University of Manchester and later fine painting at Camberwell College of Art and NSCAD, Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in Canada. He has an MA in printmaking, also from Camberwell, and until recently taught fine art painting and printmaking for many years at The University of Brighton. Hammick is the proud father of three grown children as well as a lover of music, theater, film, opera and poetry, all of which informs his work in a profound and tangible way. His work is held in various public and private collections worldwide, including the British Museum, London; Victoria and Albert Museum, London; Pallant House Gallery, Chichester, U.K.; Towner Eastbourne, U.K.; Yale Centre for British Art, New Haven, CT; Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.; New York Public Library, NY; Minneapolis Institute of Art, Minneapolis, MN; Bibiothèque National de France, Paris; and The Art Gallery of Nova Scotia. Tom Hammick was selected to join the Josef and Anni Albers Foundation in New Haven, CT as an artist-in-residence in 2023.

MAYA FRODEMAN GALLERY
66 South Glenwood Street, Jackson Hole, Wyoming 83001

24/06/25

Master I.S. – The Enigmatic Contemporary of Rembrandt @ Serlachius Museum, Mänttä

Master I.S. – The Enigmatic Contemporary of Rembrandt
Serlachius Museum, Mänttä 
Through 17 August 2025

Master I.S.
Master I.S.
Portrait of an Old Woman, 1651
Oil on panel, 41 x 33 cm
Kunsthistorisches Museum Wienna
Photo: © KHMMuseumsverband

Master I.S.
Master I.S.
Young Scholar Half-naked, 1638
Oil on panel, 54 x 40 cm 
Private collection 
Photo: David Bassenge

Master I.S.
Master I.S.
Old Woman Reading a Letter, 1658
Oil on panel, 50 x 35 cm 
Nationalmuseum Stockholm
Photo: Nationalmuseum, Anna Danielsson

Who was the mysterious artist who signed their works in the 17th century with the monogram I.S.? The research project and exion, hibition by Serlachius and the Dutch Museum De Lakenhal present, for the first time, the works of this contemporary of Rembrandt. 

The artist who signed their works with the monogram I.S. is believed to have resided in the city of Leiden in the Netherlands during the 1620s and 1630s. Their works show significant influences from renowned Dutch artists Jan Lievens and Rembrandt, who lived and worked in the city c. 1625–1630/31.

Jan Lievens
Jan Lievens 
Old Man, c. 1625/1626 
Oil on panel, 53,5 x 47,2 cm
Kunsthistorisches Museum Wienna 
Photo: © KHMMuseumsverband

Gerrit Dou
Gerrit Dou
Self-portrait of the Painter in His Studio, c. 1632 
Oil on panel, 60,5 x 44 cm 
Museum De Lakenhal, Leiden, 
Purchased with the support of the 
Vereniging van Belangstellenden in Museum De Lakenhal, 
support from the Vereniging Rembrandt 
and a private donation 
Photo: Museum De Lakenhal

The new research project has explored the artist’s works and identity more extensively than ever before. The research began with the Serlachius Seminar held in spring 2022, the topics of which included the Fine Arts Foundation’s old European art.

With the international research project, c. 25 paintings have been identified that are known or believed to be created by Master I.S. Some of the works have disappeared and are known only from black-and-white photographs. The exhibition is the first in which a significant part of the artist’s work has been gathered in one place. After Serlachius, the exhibition will continue in October at Museum De Lakenhal in Leiden.

The Serlachius exhibition includes eighteen paintings from various collections across Europe and from Canada. Fourteen of these are attributed to Master I.S. Additionally, the exhibition features four other paintings that provide a basis for comparison of the works. These works are by Jan Lievens, Gerrit Dou, and David Bailly.

The exhibition is curated by Tomi Moisio, Curator at Serlachius Museums. The Leiden exhibition is curated by Janneke van Asperen, Curator of Old Masters at Museum De Lakenhal.

Master I.S.
Master I.S.
 
Old Man with a Fur Hat, 1640s 
Oil on canvas, 42 x 35,5 cm 
Gösta Serlachius Fine Arts Foundation. 
Photo: The Finnish National Gallery, Yehia Eweis

Master I.S.
Master I.S.
Old Woman in Three-Quarter Profile, 1640–1645 
Oil on panel, 47 x 38 cm
Private collection 
Photo: Eva Steentjes

The artist’s identity remains a mystery

The Serlachius collection includes a work purchased from London in 1937, Old Man in a Fur Hat (1640s), previously attributed to Jan Lievens (1607–1674). The research project has strengthened the notion that the creator might be Master I.S.

The artist often depicts elderly people in great detail and without embellishment. The models are characterised by a melancholic, sideways gaze. Their works feature costumes, details, and interiors that suggest Eastern European or Scandinavian origins.

“Perhaps they are from that region and came to study in Leiden, for example. Alternatively, they may have travelled in Eastern or Northern Europe”, says Tomi Moisio.

So far, the identity of the artist who signed their works with the pseudonym I.S. has not been discovered. Research continues, and the interest of international art historians has brought new information about their works. At the same time, their value has increased.

The exhibition is accompanied by a publication in which experts in the field explore the mystery of Master I.S. and make comparative research on artist-contemporaries. The articles in the book have been written by curators Tomi Moisio and Janneke van Asperen, as well as the distinguished specialists on old Dutch and Flemish art, professors Volker Manuth and Marieke de Winkel. 

The research group has also included David de Witt, the Chief Curator at Rembrandthuis in Amsterdam. The book is published in English, as it is expected to be of great interest to the international academic community.

SERLACHIUS MUSEUM
Serlachius Manor, Joenniementie 47, Mäntä

Master I.S. – The Enigmatic Contemporary of Rembrandt
Serlachius Museum, Mänttä, Finland, 12 April - 17 August 2025

21/06/25

Shifting Horizons @ Peter Blum Gallery, NYC - An exhibition of paintings featuring landscapes by Nancy Diamond, Alex Katz, Eleanor Ray, Nicole Wittenberg, Robert Zandvliet

Shifting Horizons
Nancy Diamond, Alex Katz, Eleanor Ray, Nicole Wittenberg, Robert Zandvliet
Peter Blum Gallery, New York
June 5 – July 25, 2025

Peter Blum Gallery presents Shifting Horizons, an exhibition of paintings and works on paper featuring landscapes by Nancy Diamond, Alex Katz, Eleanor Ray, Nicole Wittenberg, and Robert Zandvliet. 

Shifting Horizons assembles five contemporary artists whose intimately scaled landscapes reflect a shared sensitivity to the nuances of place, perception, and memory. Working at a modest size in these works, Diamond, Katz, Ray, Wittenberg, and Zandvliet approach the natural world not as a fixed subject but as a space for exploration—where observation and emotion converge. These works transcend straightforward representation, instead offering distilled moments that evoke atmosphere, light, and spatial rhythm. Whether rooted in direct experience or shaped by recollection, the landscapes presented here invite a slower way of seeing.

Nancy Diamond’s recent works on paper explore the interplay between natural observation and imaginative transformation. Utilizing watercolor and gouache, she creates layered compositions of clouded skies, often inspired by her time in the Catskills. These images shift between the recognizable and the abstract, reflecting a space between recording and reimagining. Her attention to form and subtle variation invites viewers into a quiet terrain that considers both detail and broader view, where the natural world is shaped by personal perspective. Within this space, a subtle bodily presence emerges, connecting internal and external, inviting contemplation on how perception and memory mediate experience. Diamond’s palette suggests changing weather, fading light, and quiet transitions—moments that feel both observed and remembered. Diamond received a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design and she received awards from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Marie Walsh Sharpe Foundation. Select recent exhibitions include FLAG Art Foundation, New York, NY (2024); Maya Frodeman Gallery, Jackson Hole, WY (2024); and KARMA, Thomaston, ME (2024).

Alex Katz’s small-scale landscape paintings on board reveal a more immediate and spontaneous side of his iconic practice of larger scale flattened forms. Often painted en plein air or quickly from memory, they emphasize light, seasonal shifts, and spatial rhythm. The landscapes on board are concise yet expansive, balancing on the cusp of abstraction and representation. In these works, Katz revisits familiar locations—Maine woods, waterlines, and fields—with a sense of closeness, reinforcing his enduring fascination with perception, time, and the American landscape. Katz studied at Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture and the Cooper Union, and he received the National Medal of Arts and Lifetime Achievement Award, National Academy Museum. Select recent solo exhibitions include The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY (2024); The Albertina, Vienna, Austria (2023); and Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY (2022-23).

Eleanor Ray’s intimately scaled landscape paintings distill complex spatial and emotional experiences into panels, often no larger than a notebook page. Working primarily in oil on panel, she captures the essence of places—ranging from the American West to the Caribbean—through a synthesis of memory, observation, and abstraction. Her compositions are informed by drawings, photographs, and recollections, allowing her to reconstruct scenes with a focus on light, atmosphere, and architectural framing. This approach results in works that are both specific and universal, inviting viewers into a contemplative space that transcends the depicted locale. Ray’s restrained palette and subtle brushwork evoke a sense of quietude and introspection, demonstrating how modestly scaled works can convey resonance. Ray received an MFA from the New York Studio School and received awards from The Edward F. Albee Foundation and NYFA Fellowship in Painting. Select recent exhibitions include Nicelle Beauchene Gallery, New York, NY (2024); Venus Over Manhattan, New York, NY (2022); and Night Gallery, Los Angeles, CA (2022).

Nicole Wittenberg’s works are expressively rich. Beyond rendering naturalistic topography or scenery, living entities emerge in her images as through sensation or perception: a torrent of water, the twist of a leaf, the glare of afternoon light on the bark of a tree, all suggestive of fleeting moments and a subjective view. In a textural play of color and movement, they convey her affective relationship to the natural world, as well as nature’s evanescent traits. While Wittenberg captures the physical reality of Maine’s coastal forests, wetlands, and meadows, she more closely works with light, with the transit of the sun through the sky, as well as her own positioning within the dense and verdant landscape. Wittenberg received a BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute and received the American Academy of Arts and Letters’ John Koch Award. Select recent solo exhibitions include Ogunquit Museum of American Art, Ogunquit, ME (2025); Center for Maine Contemporary Art, Rockland, ME (2025); and Maison la Roche, Paris, France (2025).

Robert Zandvliet’s works on paper—each horizontal and measuring 9 x 12 inches—demonstrate an intuitive and meditative engagement with landscape and mark-making. Using egg tempera, oil, or a combination, Zandvliet treats each paper surface as a space for distilled experimentation, balancing gesture, color, and form. They operate like visual thoughts: rhythmic, atmospheric, and charged with a sense of immediacy. Despite their uniform size, the works vary in tone, yet all reflect his ongoing investigation into the essence of painting itself. Zandvliet’s process reveals a careful calibration between control and spontaneity, echoing the structure of historical Dutch landscape painting while pushing toward abstraction. Robert Zandvliet received an MFA from De Ateliers, Amsterdam, Netherlands and received a Prix de Rome and the Wolvekamp Prize. Select recent exhibitions include Kunstmuseum Den Haag, The Hague, Netherlands (2022); Kunstmuseum Solothurn, Solothurn, Switzerland (2022); and Dordrechts Museum, Dordrechts, Netherlands (2020, 2019).

PETER BLUM GALLERY
176 Grand Street, New York, NY 10013

01/04/25

Marcia Marcus, Alice Neel, Sylvia Sleigh @ Lévy Gorvy Dayan, New York - "The Human Situation" Exhibition

The Human Situation: Marcia Marcus, Alice Neel, Sylvia Sleigh 
Lévy Gorvy Dayan, New York
April 10 – June 21, 2025

Sylvia Sleigh
Sylvia Sleigh 
The Blue Dress, 1970
Oil on canvas, 66½ × 34½ inches (168.9 × 87.6 cm) 
Collection of Audrey and Joseph Anastasi 
© Estate of Sylvia Sleigh, 
courtesy of the Estate of Sylvia Sleigh and Lévy Gorvy Dayan

Alice Neel
Alice Neel 
Pregnant Nude, 1967
Oil on canvas, 36½ × 57¼ inches (92.7 × 145.4 cm)
Private Collection, New York, courtesy of AWG Art Advisory
© Estate of Alice Neel, 
courtesy of the Estate of Alice Neel and David Zwirner

Lévy Gorvy Dayan presents The Human Situation: Marcia Marcus, Alice Neel, Sylvia Sleigh. The exhibition, conceived by Saara Pritchard, marks the first focused presentation of Marcia Marcus (b. 1928), Alice Neel (1900–1984), and Sylvia Sleigh (1916–2010), who each worked in New York City and shared in its artistic circles in the dynamic decades of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. During this period, they portrayed mutual sitters, exhibited together, and participated in public discussions. Their representations of loved ones, friends, and acquaintances are distinctive in form and style, yet share in their evocation of the human spirit, capturing Sylvia Sleigh’s reflection “The human situation adds a certain poignancy to portraits...”

In 1973, paintings by the three figurative artists were on view in the unprecedented exhibition Women Choose Women, organized by Women in the Arts and presented at the New York Cultural Center. The three painters would exhibit together again in the following years, notably in Women’s Work: American Art 1974, Philadelphia Civic Center and In Her Own Image, Samuel S. Fleischer Art Memorial, administered by the Philadelphia Museum of Art (both part of Focus on Women in the Visual Arts, 1974)—as well as Sons and Others: Women Artists See Men, Queens Museum (1975). Marcia Marcus, Alice Neel, and Sylvia Sleigh too were early participants in the collaborative installation The Sister Chapel, PS1, New York (1978)—from which Marcia Marcus eventually withdrew due to teaching and other exhibition commitments—with Alice Neel and Sylvia Sleigh unveiling large-scale paintings.

In their works, each artist differentiated herself from prevailing modes of Abstract Expressionism, Pop, and Minimalism—capturing Neel’s predecessor Robert Henri’s principle “Paint what you feel. Paint what you see. Paint what is real to you.” Their distinguished images depicted many of the same artistic and critical figures, including David Bourdon, Sari Dienes, Red Grooms and Mimi Gross, and John Perreault, among others, as well as self-portraits. They also each painted or collaborated with writers and curators such as Lucy Lippard, Cindy Nemser, Linda Nochlin, Barbara Rose, Marcia Tucker, and Sleigh’s husband Lawrence Alloway.

While working at different phases of maturity in their practices during the 1960s and 1970s, they experienced the period’s socio-political movements, including for civil and women’s rights. This historical environment is described by Lucy Lippard in her exhibition catalogue introduction for Women Choose Women
“A largescale exhibition of women’s art in New York is necessary at this time for a variety of reasons: because so few women have up until now been taken seriously enough to be considered for, still less included in, museum group shows; because there are so few women in the major commercial galleries; because young women artists are lucky if they can find ten successful older women artists to whom to look as role models; because although seventy-five percent of the undergraduate art students are female, only two percent of their teachers are female. And above all—because the New York museums have been particularly discriminatory, usually under the guise of being discriminating.” 
Although the three artists aligned with and participated in feminist causes to varying degrees, the energies of the movement created a focus on women’s art, resulting in exhibitions, galleries such as AIR Gallery and Soho 20 Gallery, grassroots publications, organizations including Women’s Interart Center and Women’s Caucus for Art, and panel discussions, in which they each featured. The portraits by Marcia Marcus, Alice Neel, and Sylvia Sleigh gesture towards this critical art-historical moment, while illuminating for viewers each artist’s distinctive point of view. 

As a testament to their legacies, the exhibition features works by contemporary figurative painters Jenna Gribbon, Karolina Jabłońska, Chantal Joffe, Nikki Maloof, Wangari Mathenge, and Claire Tabouret, who carry forward the tradition of rendering lived images of self, family, friends, and the home. Presenting recent and new canvases created on the occasion of the exhibition, the contemporary artists share in the history and atmosphere of community, and expand upon the themes of womanhood, intimate portraiture, the nude, and the still life that underlie The Human Situation

LEVY GORVY DAYAN, NEW YORK
19 East 64th Street, New York City

Related Posts:

Marcia Marcus, Role Play: Paintings 1958-1973 @ Eric Firestone Gallery, New York, October 12 - December 2, 2017

Alice Neel: The Early Years @ David Zwirner, New York, September 9 - October 16, 2021
Alice Neel: Freedom @ David Zwirner, New York, February 26 - April 13, 2019
Alice Neel @ Philadelphia Museum of Art, February 18 - April 15, 2001

Sylvia Sleigh: Every leaf is precious @ Ortuzar, New York, February 12 – April 5, 2025

23/03/25

Inherent Nature @ Maya Frodeman Gallery, Jackson Hole - A group exhibition of paintings and works on paper, curated by artist Kathryn Lynch

Inherent Nature 
Curated by Kathryn Lynch
Maya Frodeman Gallery, Jackson Hole
April 4 - May 18, 2025

Will Gabaldon
Will Gabaldón 
Trees and Cloud, 2024 
Oil on panel, 12 x 12 inches, 
Framed dimensions 16 3/4 x 16 3/4 inches
© Will Gabaldón, courtesy of Maya Frodeman Gallery

Aubrey Levinthal
Aubrey Levinthal 
I-76 Underpass, 2024 
Oil on panel, 18 x 14 inches
© Aubrey Levinthal, courtesy of Maya Frodeman Gallery

Lisa Sanditz
Lisa Sanditz 
Hudson River/Devil Pods/Barge, 2024 
Acrylic on canvas, 30 x 40 inches
© Lisa Sanditz, courtesy of Maya Frodeman Gallery

Elizabeth Hazan
Elizabeth Hazan 
Some Trees, 2025 
Oil on linen, 66 x 55 inches
© Elizabeth Hazan, courtesy of Maya Frodeman Gallery

MAYA FRODEMAN GALLERY presents Inherent Nature, an invitational group exhibition of paintings and works on paper, curated by artist Kathryn Lynch. The first of its kind at the gallery, Inherent Nature brings together seventeen landscape painters working today whose work addresses and interprets the natural and manmade world. 

Featuring artists beyond the gallery roster, this exhibition invokes the words of Emily Dickinson’s poem The Outer—from the Inner and invites the exploration of human nature and our place in the world from a variety of vantage points. Tania Alvarez, Olive Ayhens, Deborah Brown, JoAnne Carson, Nancy Diamond, Jonathan Edelhuber, Will Gabaldón, Elliott Green, Elizabeth Hazan, Melora Kuhn, Aubrey Levinthal, Kathryn Lynch, Lizbeth Mitty, Donna Moylan, Mason Saltarrelli, Lisa Sanditz, and Suzy Spence each approach paint and the painted landscape as individual entities with a unique story to tell; their Inner painting their perceived Outer.
The Inner—paints the Outer—
The Brush without the Hand—
Its Picture publishes—precise—
As is the inner Brand—
 
On fine—Arterial Canvas—
A Cheek—perchance a Brow—
The Star's whole Secret—in the Lake—
Eyes were not meant to know.

Emily DickinsonThe Outer—from the Inner 
At first glance, this grouping feels replete with unlikely bedfellows. From Tania Alvarez’ small-scale, sculptural mixed media works of manmade environs to the poppy, art historical fever dream of Jonathan Edelhuber and exquisitely rendered forests of Will Gabaldón, one wonders how they could possibly relate. However, given the opportunity, Mason Saltarrelli’s abstracted forms speak directly to the heady bouquet of cosmic flora of JoAnne Carson and Lisa Sanditz’ deep tonal color fields. Lizbeth Mitty’s impasto-heavy dreamscape atmospherically sets a precedent to view both Nancy Diamond’s pseudo-surrealist articulated clouds and Donna Moylan’s figures, set like constellations in a field of stars. In Dickinson’s words, perhaps, “eyes were not meant to know.” Here, however, eyes rejoice.

Artist and guest-curator KATHRYN LYNCH was born and raised in Philadelphia. She received her undergraduate degree from William Smith College in Geneva, NY, and an MA at the University of Pennsylvania in 1990. She was awarded the NYSCA/NYFA artist Fellow in Painting in 2018. She has been invited to Skowhegan, Yaddo, The Marie Walsh Foundation and The Vermont Studio Center. Since earning her MFA, Lynch has held solo exhibitions and participated in well over thirty group shows both and internationally. Her work is in the permanent collections of the University of California Berkeley Art Museum, Berkeley, CA and Fort Wayne Museum of Art, Fort Wayne, IN, as well as many corporate collections, including Microsoft, Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer, and the Millennium Art Collection in the Ritz Carlton, Battery Park, in NYC. The artist lives in Catskill, NY, and works in a curated artist campus called Foreland.

The exhibition is accompanied by a digital catalogue featuring an essay by Grant Wahlquist.

MAYA FRODEMAN GALLERY
66 South Glenwood Street, Jackson Hole, Wyoming 83001

28/12/24

Pictures of Belonging: Miki Hayakawa, Hisako Hibi and Miné Okubo @ Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC+ Other venues

Miki Hayakawa, Hisako Hibi and Miné Okubo
Pictures of Belonging
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC
November 15 - August 17, 2025

Miki Hayakawa Painting
Miki Hayakawa
 
One Afternoon, ca. 1935
Oil on canvas, 40 x 40 in. 
New Mexico Museum of Art, Santa Fe, 
Gift of Preston McCrossen in memory 
of his wife, the artist, 1954, 520.23P

“Pictures of Belonging: Miki Hayakawa, Hisako Hibi and Miné Okubo” is an unprecedented exploration of three trailblazing Japanese American artists of the mid-20th century who, until now, have been excluded from the story of modernism in the United States. The exhibition asserts their place in American art and reveals a broader picture of the American experience by presenting their artworks and life stories in dialogue with each other for the first time.

The exhibition is on view at the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s main building in Washington, D.C. The museum’s presentation is the second stop on a national tour, organized by the Japanese American National Museum with exhibition curator ShiPu Wang, Coats Family Chair in the Arts and professor of art history at the University of California, Merced. “Pictures of Belonging” is coordinated at the Smithsonian American Art Museum by Melissa Ho, curator of 20th-century art, with Anna Lee, curatorial assistant for Asian American art.
“The Smithsonian American Art Museum plays a leadership role in telling richer and deeper stories about art in the United States, featuring new voices and presenting a more inclusive narrative of American art through acquisition campaigns, reimagined permanent collection galleries, new scholarship and special exhibitions,” said Jane Carpenter-Rock, acting director of the Smithsonian American Art Museum. “I am delighted that SAAM is able to partner with the Japanese American National Museum to share with audiences in Washington, D.C., the incredible work of Miki Hayakawa, Hisako Hibi and Miné Okubo.”
The exhibition highlights the paintings of Hayakawa, Hibi and Okubo, complemented by drawings, sketchbooks, archival material and video footage. The artworks span eight decades, revealing the range and depth of these three artists’ careers and connections that have not been explored previously. A visual timeline puts their life events in context with each other and with key moments in U.S. history. The prolific careers of Hayakawa, Hibi and Okubo are remarkable considering that they lived through the Exclusion Era (1882–1965), a period characterized by U.S. laws that restricted immigration, prevented Asians from becoming naturalized American citizens and contributed to the mass displacement and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II.

Hayakawa, Hibi and Okubo were the three most visible and critically acclaimed Japanese American women artists in the United States in the 1930s. During World War II, all three were forced from their homes in California. The federal government imprisoned Hibi and Okubo in incarceration camps, first in California and then in Utah; Hayakawa relocated to New Mexico. Yet all three remained committed to making art, their creative work a vital means of navigating their experiences and building bonds of community.

By tracing the artistic development of Hayakawa, Hibi and Okubo before, during and after World War II, the exhibition offers the first nuanced and in-depth view of how each developed a distinct painting style. Hayakawa, who died young at age 53, displayed a special affinity for painting people early on and was known for her sensitive, luminous portraits. Hibi, over time, evolved from painting landscapes and still lifes to creating symbolically freighted canvases activated by abstract marks of color. Okubo, best known for her 1946 graphic memoir of wartime removal and incarceration, Citizen 13660, operated within the mainstream of American social realism in the 1930s, but turned to bold color, simplified forms and whimsical images of children and animals in later years. Collectively, their art, produced during tumultuous decades in U.S. history, carry powerful stories of resilience, beauty and connection.
“‘Pictures of Belonging’ demonstrates that the artists’ experience of mass incarceration and relocation during WWII, while pivotal, did not define them,” Ho said. “These women continued to evolve and challenge themselves as artists throughout their lives.”
The exhibition includes works by Hibi and Okubo recently acquired for Smithsonian American Art Museum’s collection, part of a multi-year initiative to expand and enrich the representation of Asian American experiences, perspectives and artistic accomplishment in public displays and new scholarship.

National Tour
The exhibition opened at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts in Salt Lake City. Following the presentation in Washington, D.C., it will travel to the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia; the Monterey Museum of Art in Monterey, California; and the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles.

“Pictures of Belonging: Miki Hayakawa, Hisako Hibi and Miné Okubo” is organized by the Japanese American National Museum.

Publication
The accompanying catalog, co-published by the Japanese American National Museum and the University of California Press, includes essays by Ho; Wang; Becky Alexander, archivist at the San Francisco Art Institute Legacy Foundation + Archive; Rihoko Ueno, archivist at the Smithsonian’s Archives of American Art; Patricia Wakida, associate editor of the Densho Encyclopedia project and a contributing editor to the Discover Nikkei website; and Cécile Whiting, professor emerita and Chancellor’s Professor of Art History at the University of California, Irvine. The book is available for purchase ($50) in the museum’s store and online.

SMITHSONIAN AMERICAN ART MUSEUM - SAAM
8th and G Streets, NW, Washington, DC 2000

13/11/24

Jean-Michel Basquiat and Ouattara Watts: A Distant Conversation @ Currier Museum of Art, Manchester, NH, USA

Jean-Michel Basquiat and Ouattara Watts
A Distant Conversation
Currier Museum of Art, Manchester, NH, USA
October 26, 2024 — February 23, 2025 

The Currier Museum of Art presents the latest chapter in its ongoing series of "Distant Conversations" pairing the work of artists whose artistic and intellectual affinities manifest across barriers of time and space. This new exhibition brings together six artworks by American artist Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960–1988), one of the most celebrated and influential artists of his generation, and seven large canvases by New York–based Ivorian painter Ouattara Watts (b. 1958). 
“‘Distant Conversations’ at the Currier has brought together artists whose works transcend time and geographical boundaries,” said Jordana Pomeroy, Director of the Currier. “We are delighted to bring together Basquiat and Watts in an exhibition that captures the spark between these two artists, although they knew each other only briefly.”
The two artists first met in 1988 at the opening of Jean-Michel Basquiat’s solo show at Yvon Lambert Gallery, which was held only seven months prior to his death. The exhibition at the Currier imagines how their friendship and mutual influence could have evolved over time and demonstrates how, despite Basquiat’s untimely death, their dialogue and spiritual exchange have effectively continued. Following their serendipitous first meeting in Paris, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Ouattara Watts quickly became friends and established a strong intellectual connection. Jean-Michel Basquiat was so taken by Ouattara Watt’s work after a single studio visit that he convinced the Ivorian painter to move to New York City, where he would introduce him to gallerists and collectors, providing essential support and help in launching Ouattara Watts’ career overseas. During their brief friendship and artistic alliance, Basquiat and Watts traveled together to New Orleans—Basquiat was fascinated with the city and wanted to show Watts how diasporic African cultures and traditions had permeated and creolized the local culture. The two had already planned a trip to Watts’ home country of the Ivory Coast—Basquiat wanted to explore the country he had first visited in 1986 in the company of his new friend. Sadly, the trip never happened, as Jean-Michel Basquiat died on August 12, 1988, shortly before they were to depart.

Ouattara Watts moved to Paris from the Ivory Coast in 1977 to study at the École des Beaux-Arts. Ouattara Watts had been showing his work in gallery contexts since 1985—the same year that Basquiat was profiled for the cover of the New York Times Magazine in an article titled “New Art, New Money: The Marketing of an American Artist.” While Ouattara Watts was beginning his career in the art world, Jean-Michel Basquiat had already permeated mainstream culture, elevating graffiti to the realm of high art and re-energizing the art of his time by infusing the Neo-Expressionist movement with his distinct, sophisticated, and politicized visual language. Like Watts, who references multiple religions and spiritual practices in his work in addition to musical and scientific symbolism, Basquiat uniquely blended diverse sources of inspiration and often included language and writing in his paintings. Born in Brooklyn to a Haitian father and a mother of Puerto Rican descent, Basquiat’s artistic inclination and intellectual curiosity manifested early. Following his participation in seminal group exhibitions such as the Times Square Show and New York/New Wavecurated by Diego Cortez (MoMA PS1, NYC), and his collaboration (SAMO) with street artist Al Diaz, Basquiat began his solo career in 1980 with successful solo presentations at Annina Nosei Gallery and Fun Gallery. In 1982, he joined Galerie Bruno Bischofberger, helping to propel him to international stardom.

Born and raised in Abidjan, Ouattara Watts’s work has been strongly influenced by his family’s cultural and religious syncretism. He first arrived in Paris in the late-1970s, motivated by his profound love for art and art history. Once in Europe, he soon found in painting a means of reconciling the African context in which he was raised with his experience of the West. By combining in his oeuvre elements originating in different religions and traditions, Ouattara Watts presented Jean-Michel Basquiat with visual and intellectual solutions for recomposing and healing his sense of displacement and diasporic fracture, which he was grappling with at the same time as he sought an outlet for righteous anger at anti-Black racism. In the time that he became close with Ouattara Watts, Jean-Michel Basquiat was increasingly invested in learning about his African heritage and keen to experience the continent firsthand. His first trip to the Ivory Coast, during which time he prophetically visited Ouattara Watts’ hometown of Abidjan, is an early testament to this commitment.

The exhibition at the Currier captures these two important artists as they encounter each other at a crossroads, a mental and spiritual space simultaneously informed by Africa and the West. They were literally traveling in opposite directions, in search of meaning and connection, when they found each other on a complementary although reverse journey.

Jean-Michel Basquiat and Ouattara Watts: A Distant Conversation presents six artworks by Jean-Michel Basquiat from a private collection alongside seven large paintings by Ouattara Watts. The earliest piece in the selection by Basquiat is a portrait of art critic and curator extraordinaire Henry Geldzahler (c. 1981) who interviewed Jean-Michel Basquiat for a January 1983 feature in Andy Warhol’s Interview magazine. Works like Feng Yao (1983) and Dinah Washington (1986) speak directly to Basquiat’s interest in dance and music. And jazz music was a passion he shared with Watts.

Procession (1986) painted by Jean-Michel Basquiat on slats of wood showcases his desire to experiment with different materials while enhancing the depth of his paintings and subverting the rules of ‘high art.’ Similarly, Ouattara Watts, whose first paintings upon arriving in Paris were created on tarp (a far cheaper and more resistant material than canvas) often combines diverse techniques and layers to create works that are worlds unto themselves. Watts’ artistic vision is often outwardly and celestial. At times, however, the work seems more solidly grounded with direct references to African ceremonial traditions and landscapes. Watts’ palette is explosive and rich in tonalities, as clearly demonstrated by his most recent body of work (the Spiritual Gangster series from 2023) included in this exhibition. While paintings like Intercessor #0 (1989) and Beyond Life (1990) were made around the time of Watts’ friendship with Basquiat, other works in the selection prove how their spiritual and artistic conversation continued despite the latter’s passing in 1988. A conversation that continues at a distance to this day

CURRIER MUSEUM OF ART
150 Ash Street, Manchester, NH 03104, USA

15/09/24

Jiten Thukral & Sumir Tagra @ SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah - "Arboretum" Exhibition

Jiten Thukral & Sumir Tagra
Arboretum
SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah
July 31 – December 23, 2024

"If a tree falls in the Metaverse, does it make a noise?" Posing this question in their ongoing project Arboretum, artist collaborators JITEN THUKRAL (b. 1976, Jalandhar, Punjab, India) and SUMIR TAGRA (b. 1979, New Delhi, India) contemplate the intersection of the digital and natural worlds. The series was sparked by the global isolation of the Covid-19 pandemic and the subsequent escalation of virtual mediation between people and their physical world. Amassing a collection of digital images of flora in their immediate environment, the artists used select photos as the basis for hyperrealistic paintings on shaped canvases. The resulting works resist the instant gratification of digital technology, favoring hands-on, labor-intensive techniques that require months to complete. By incorporating analog representations of pixels and glitches, the artists remind the viewer of the inescapable intervention of data and algorithms that inform our daily choices and the ways we see and interpret the world.

SCAD MUSEUM OF ART - SCAD MOA
Savannah College of Art and Design
601 Turner Blvd., Savannah, Georgia

27/05/24

Thomas Chapman, Alejandro Garmendia, Louis Jacquot, Lucy Mullican, Milko Pavlovelana @ Pace Gallery, Seoul - "Illusive Places" Exhibition Curated by Cy Schnabel

Illusive Places 
Thomas Chapman, Alejandro Garmendia, Louis Jacquot, Lucy Mullican, Milko Pavlovelana 
Curated by Cy Schnabel
Pace Gallery, Seoul
May 11 - June 15,  2024

Alejandro Garmendia
Alejandro Garmendia 
Jessica Descending & Ascending in the North Sea, 2007 
© Alejandro Garmendia 

Pace presents Illusive Places: Thomas Chapman, Alejandro Garmendia, Louis Jacquot, Lucy Mullican, Milko Pavlov, a group show curated by Cy Schnabel, at its gallery in Seoul. This exhibition brings together works by artists who, in one way or another, share an interest in reinventing landscape painting. These five artists—Thomas Chapman, Alejandro Garmendia, Louis Jacquot, Lucy Mullican, and Milko Pavlov—use landscape as a point of departure to create nuanced approaches to subject matter, form, and content. 

Throughout this exhibition, natural settings turn into imaginary realms that suggest new perspectives of the physical world and life in general. An abstracted sense of space in the pictures on view gives way to unstable compositions that are charged with desire, fantasy, and sometimes loneliness. A range of psychological views carry their own resonances and connect through each artist’s interest in presenting a distinct irreality in their work. Utopias, nightmares, hallucinations, and fragmented memories all materialize in these illusive places.

Cy Schnabel

Cy Schnabel (b. New York, 1993) is an independent curator and the founder and director of Villa Magdalena, a gallery based in San Sebastian, Spain since 2020. The gallery focuses on contemporary Spanish painting and works with international mid-career and emerging artists. In 2017, Schnabel worked as an assistant curator at the Centro Cultural de España en México (CCEMX) in Mexico City, making his curatorial debut with the group show Horizontes Imaginarios. In 2018, Schnabel co-curated the posthumous retrospective Alejandro Garmendia: Paisajes, enigma, y melancolía at the Sala Kubo Kutxa in San Sebastian. Schnabel has presented two exhibitions at Galería Mascota in Mexico City—Mie Yim: New Works on Paper (2022) and Lucy Mullican: Veils (2023)—which marked each artist’s first solo exhibition in Mexico. In collaboration with Spazio Amanita, Schnabel curated Felicidad Moreno: Form and Formlessness (Miami, 2022) and Cristina Lama: Música para un murciélago (New York, 2023), both artists’ first solo presentations in the United States. He was also the author and co-curator of Schnabel and Spain: Anything Can Be a Model for a Painting at the CAC Málaga, a 2022 survey of 23 paintings made by his father between 1997 and the present, showing the artist's works in the context of Spanish painting and the evolution of his practice during this period.

Cy Schnabel’s curatorial writings on the five artists in the show follow below.
Thomas Chapman

After experimenting with shaped canvases for more than 20 years, Thomas Chapman (b. 1975, San Diego, California) has returned to figurative painting, developing a style that is heavily influenced by his drawings of everyday life. Like his Lake Paintings, the works on view in Illusive Places are voyeuristic studies of leisurely moments. Layered imagery resulting in a dense atmospheric haze makes the figures who populate these invented scenes barely perceptible. Throughout his oeuvre, found fabrics, collage, stolen typographies, markers, paint, pencil markings, glue, and many other elements comprise the surfaces of his paintings. The unorthodox shapes of some of Chapman’s early canvases are inspired by a variety of subjects: astronomy, mythology, and ancient history. Taking an unconventional approach to painting, Chapman makes use of supports and many layers of sometimes conflicting visual information as common features in his diverse practice.

Alejandro Garmendia

The two works on view by Alejandro Garmendia (b. 1959, d. 2017, San Sebastian, Spain) are from his Pinturas Sucias (Dirty Paintings) series. But why dirty? Surely it has to do with the murky appearance of these paintings. Their messy execution with a muddy color palette, which reflects the artist’s embrace of accidents and imperfections as part of his practice, confirm that his process for these works is consistent with their conceptual underpinnings. The very idea of a landscape as “dirty” suggests that Garmendia was questioning the legitimacy of the act of painting itself, and, more specifically, the impulse to make something even remotely pastoral in contemporary times. This was yet another ironic and subversive gesture, illustrating an awareness of the risk involved in his chosen subject, given that the pictures seem so opposed to avant-garde tendencies and the general trajectory of contemporary art. In any case, these works serve as pretexts to his experimentations with the surrealist lineage he so admired, along with other art historical references. Garmendia documented the nonexistent, created physically impossible compositions, and ultimately presented a distanced metaphysical vision of the world that evokes estrangement and disorientation.

Louis Jacquot

Louis Jacquot’s (b. 1994, Paris, France) practice hinges on relationships between objects and pictures. The artist’s sculptural paintings combine minimalist gestures with iconographic elements. Blinky (2022) and Imi (2022), the two works present in this exhibition, turn intimate spaces and domestic objects on their sides to create illusive perspectives. In Jacquot’s hands, the intimate subject transcends the image to encompass the entire painting. Both the material— bedding—and the shape of the canvases—like that of a pocket notebook—speak to direct contact with the body. In the past, during his BFA at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, the artist maintained a workspace more akin to a woodworker’s shop than a painter’s studio. He avoided his “own” mark-making in favor of objects that were practically devoid of any graphic elements. In the few cases where pigments are applied, Jacquot chooses images that could belong to anyone. His previous works show an impersonal vocabulary of generic found symbols appropriated from the street—any universal emblems became subjects of interest for him.

Lucy Mullican

Lucy Mullican’s (b. 1994, New York) paintings use the horizon line as a compositional device to create a tension between gravity and the human spirit, which, in contrast to the former, is always in a state of ascension. We can trace maps of ethereal worlds in her works, which are ultimately self-portraits. The artist has experienced a spiritual transformation that is evident in her departure from painting waterfalls, islands, and rivers in favor of a more contemplative, inward consideration of the mind and the organs. Exterior environments blend with bodily forms, creating anthropomorphic landscapes. Her delicate paintings on wood consist of many layers of mineral pigments and pulsating lines, which create translucent surfaces. What the artist refers to as “pockets” or “holes” within her compositions function like portals, allowing the viewer to travel back and forth between pictures. The natural pigments of the watercolor and the wood receivers become one, reflecting the artist’s innate ability to understand her medium and employ technical fluidity. Mullican’s penetrating vision goes beyond the surface to reveal what we cannot see and bring us closer to what we feel. Transient moments flooded with light embody the artist’s representation of spirit.

Milko Pavlov

Milko Pavlov’s (b. 1956, Aytos, Bulgaria) paintings depict an imaginary natural world where rock formations, trees, water, and other organic matter have been rendered unrecognizable. The artist’s pictorial blend of naturalistic representation and abstraction creates a vast scale within the picture plane that is an everchanging way of seeing. In Pavlov’s oeuvre, form, surface, and composition develop in response to paint itself as a subject. His black and white frottage works—a technique he now applies to canvas—are continuations of the graphic work he was making in Bulgaria in the early 1990s. The artist’s colorful palette derives from his early exposure to 18th and 19th century Bulgarian Icon painters, which shifted his attention towards religious works of art instead of assimilating formal ideas related to the socialist realist aesthetic dominant in the country in the 1970s. With his titles, Pavlov is interested in a conceptual dimension that reflects an intersection of different moments in time. In many cases, his artwork titles can contain multiple dates yet to come, as with 2133-2 МРП 2042 (2024) and B.V 2099 МРП 2065 (2022), both of which are included in the exhibition at Pace in Seoul. Through these references to futuristic times, Pavlov is challenging the life expectancy of everything: himself, the viewer, the painting itself. The way the artist organizes space in his paintings—in other words, the composition—loosely resembles mountains or landscapes, a subconscious gesture which perhaps illustrates the mountainous nature of his native country.
PACE SEOUL
267 Itaewon-ro, Yongsan-gu, Seoul