Showing posts with label photographs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photographs. Show all posts

12/09/25

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

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: 

28/08/25

Marguerite Humeau @ ARKEN Museum of Contemporary Art, Ishøj - "Torches" Exhibition

Marguerite Humeau: Torches
ARKEN Museum of Contemporary Art, Ishøj
Through 19 October 2025

Photo de Margurite Humeau
Marguerite Humeau
, 2024 
Photography by Eoin Greally 
Image courtesy of the artist

Marguerite Humeau
Marguerite Humeau 
‘Torches’ at ARKEN Museum, 2025 
© Marguerite Humeau 
Photography by Mathilde Agius
Courtesy of the artist

Marguerite Humeau
Marguerite Humeau 
‘Torches’ at ARKEN Museum, 2025 
© Marguerite Humeau 
Photography by Mathilde Agius
Courtesy of the artist

In the immersive exhibition Torches, French artist Marguerite Humeau creates a richly affective opera that spans across time and space, asking questions about our shared origins and alternative futures. Sound and light bring Humeau’s sculptures and installations to life, weaving a complex and evocative narrative. Her works incorporate many unconventional materials, including beeswax, wasp venom, yeast and cyanobacteria, also known as blue-green algae.

In the exhibition Torches, the internationally acclaimed French artist MARGUERITE HUMEAU (b. 1986) invites us to rethink our past, present and future here on Earth – and guides us through the darkness with her art. Conceived as an opera, the exhibition presents the artworks in an array of interlinked acts, using sound and light as mainstays of the other-worldly narratives that have won Marguerite Humeau international acclaim. She is also known for incorporating unusual materials in her art, with examples including hand-blown glass, waxed felt, laser-cut steel, silk, and even yeast. The exhibition at ARKEN also presents a work featuring an ecosystem of cyanobacteria that will continue to multiply during the exhibition run. 
Curator Sarah Fredholm explains the exhibition title, Torches, by pointing out that ‘the works, embodying characters, are like torches in the dark. They point towards new connections between all living things across time and place and show us the way ahead,’ she says and continues: 

‘Even though the point of departure of Marguerite Humeau’s work is our crisis-stricken planet, there is still hope to be found. Her art shows us that we can still find fresh starts and new beginnings; all we need to do is to imagine other ways of existing, ways that are more closely attuned to the rich variety of the rest of life on Earth.’
Marguerite Humeau
Marguerite Humeau 
‘Torches’ at ARKEN Museum, 2025 
© Marguerite Humeau 
Photography by Mathilde Agius
Courtesy of the artist

Marguerite Humeau
Marguerite Humeau 
‘Torches’ at ARKEN Museum, 2025 
© Marguerite Humeau 
Photography by Mathilde Agius
Courtesy of the artist

Marguerite Humeau
Marguerite Humeau 
‘Torches’ at ARKEN Museum, 2025 
© Marguerite Humeau 
Photography by Mathilde Agius
Courtesy of the artist

Marguerite Humeau’s works ask thought-provoking questions: What if elephants had become the dominant species on Earth? What would the world look like if we co-operated like ants or bees? Or if life could only be sustained high up in the atmosphere? Torches shows us new perspectives to marvel at and possibly learn from. 
Says curator Sarah Fredholm: ‘With her art, Marguerite Humeau offers up alternative narratives about possible ways of co-existing here on Earth; ways where humankind does not take centre stage and where the boundaries between lifeforms, time and place are fluid and open to renegotiation.’   
For the first time ever, Torches brings together all-new and earlier works by Marguerite Humeau. It is also the artist’s first solo show in Scandinavia. Furthermore, Torches constitutes the third and final part of ARKEN’s exhibition series NATURE FUTURE, in which prominent figures on the international art scene focus on humanity’s relationship with art, nature and technology. The previous instalments in the series were Refik Anadol’s Nature Dreams (2023) and Julian Charrière’s Solarstalgia (2024–25).

Marguerite Humeau was born in 1986 in Cholet, France, and lives and works in London. She holds an MA (2011) from The Royal College of Art, London. Her past exhibitions include solo shows at ICA Miami (2024), Lafayette Anticipations, Paris (2021), Kunstverein Hamburg (2019), Museion, Bolzano (2019), New Museum, New York (2018), Tate Britain, London (2017), and Palais de Tokyo, Paris (2016). 

The exhibition Torches is presented in co-operation with the Helsinki Art Museum (HAM), where it will subsequently be shown. 

ARKEN Museum of Contemporary Art
Skovvej 100, 2635 Ishøj

Marguerite Humeau: Torches
ARKEN Museum of Contemporary Art, 22 May - 19 October 2025

26/08/25

Newton, Riviera & Dialogues. Collection FOTOGRAFIS x Helmut Newton @ Helmut Newton Foundation at the Museum of Photography, Berlin

Newton, Riviera & Dialogues. Collection FOTOGRAFIS x Helmut Newton
Helmut Newton Foundation at the 
Museum of Photography, Berlin
September 5, 2025 – February 15, 2026

Helmut Newton
Helmut Newton
Grand Hôtel du Cap, Marie Claire, Antibes 1972
© Helmut Newton Foundation

Helmut Newton
Helmut Newton
Helmut Newton, Untitled, Saint-Tropez 1975
© Helmut Newton Foundation

In summer 2022, Foundation Director Matthias Harder co-curated the solo exhibition "Newton, Riviera" with Guillaume de Sardes for the historic Villa Sauber in Monte-Carlo. It was the first time this late residence of the Newtons and the region where many iconic Helmut Newton photographs were created was given in-depth attention. A selection of that exhibition is now being presented—parallel to "Dialogues. Collection FOTOGRAFIS x Helmut Newton”—at the Berlin foundation.

At the turn of 1981/82, Helmut Newton and his wife June moved from Paris to Monte Carlo. This relocation not only changed their main residence to the French Mediterranean coast but also dramatically shifted the perspectives and backgrounds of Newton's commissioned work. From then on, it wasn't the casual or elegant Parisian chic but the more glamorous society that he photographed—often juxtaposed against the concrete walls of construction sites in Monaco as a backdrop for fashion shoots.

Newton's fascination with the French Riviera started much earlier. As early as 1964, he and June bought a small stone house near Ramatuelle, close to Saint-Tropez. From then on, they spent their summers there, engaging in intense artistic work. The exhibition unites a large number of early, sometimes unique vintage or lifetime prints. During the 1980s and 1990s, cities like Cannes and Nice were also popular locations for Newton’s striking fashion shoots. He also visited other parts of the Riviera, such as Cap d’Antibes, Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat, Menton, and even across the border to Bordighera, Italy. He created works across his three main genres—fashion, portrait, and nude—with the intense light in these images often playing a central role.

Helmut Newton
Helmut Newton
American Vogue, Monaco 2003
© Helmut Newton Foundation

Helmut Newton
Helmut Newton
Jude Law, Monaco 2001
© Helmut Newton Foundation

Helmut Newton also occasionally photographed at night from his apartment balcony in Monaco, capturing the quiet, dark sea. Similar melancholic landscape photographs were created in Berlin in the mid-1990s and culminated in one of his last gallery exhibitions titled "Sex and Landscapes" in 2001 at the Galerie de Pury & Luxembourg in Zurich, which also posthumously opened his Berlin foundation in June 2004. By presenting these large-format original prints in the current "Riviera" exhibition, the circle closes again—over 20 years later. Newton’s very last photo shoot, a fashion editorial for Italian Vogue, also took place on the Mediterranean coast of Monaco. One of the images now appears as a giant wall mural in the new exhibition, which—despite more than 100 photographs—can only offer a small glimpse of this important body of work.

Diane Arbus
Diane Arbus
The King and the Queen of a Senior Citizen Dance, 
NYC, 1970
Courtesy Collection FOTOGRAFIS, 
Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien

Helmut Newton
Helmut Newton
Hanna Schygulla and costume designer Edith Head,
Los Angeles 1980
© Helmut Newton Foundation

In recent years, the Helmut Newton Foundation has featured not only solo and themed group exhibitions but also photographic collections—"Between Art & Fashion" (Carla Sozzani Collection, 2018) and "Chronorama" (Pinault Collection, 2024). Both were exceptionally curated and featured major icons of photographic history.

Weegee
Weegee (Arthur Fellig)
The Critic – Mrs. Cavanaugh and Friend about to enter 
the Metropolitan Opera House, New York 1943
Courtesy Collection FOTOGRAFIS, 
Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien

Helmut Newton
Helmut Newton
Blumarine, Monaco 1994
© Helmut Newton Foundation

The current collaboration with the "Collection FOTOGRAFIS" from Bank Austria Kunstforum Vienna continues this approach. It consists of over 60 diptychs. Inspired partly by the newsletter of the Collezione Ettore Molinario—which presents two photographs from the Milan collection in dialogue—selected photographs from the prestigious Viennese collection now engage in a thought-provoking visual conversation with works from the Helmut Newton Foundation archive.

Helmar Lerski
Helmar Lerski
Ohne Titel, ca. 1935
Courtesy Collection FOTOGRAFIS, 
Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien

Helmut Newton
Helmut Newton
Close-up, Italian Vogue, Bordighera 1982 
© Helmut Newton Foundation

Curators Bettina M. Busse (Kunstforum) and Matthias Harder (Helmut Newton Foundation) paired the works based on intuition and association. Two photographs are always shown side by side: portraits, still lifes, landscapes, architecture, or surrealistic fashion and nude photographs from entirely different eras. Sometimes the connection is formal, sometimes thematic. Occasionally, the pairing may seem arbitrary or humorous, but each one opens a vast imaginative space for the viewer.

Etienne Carjat
Etienne Carjat
Charles Baudelaire, 1863
Courtesy Collection FOTOGRAFIS, 
Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien

Helmut Newton
Helmut Newton
Jack Nicholson, Los Angeles 1985 
© Helmut Newton Foundation

Frank Meadow Sutcliffe
Frank Meadow Sutcliffe
Excitement, ca. 1888
Courtesy Collection FOTOGRAFIS, 
Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien

Helmut Newton
Helmut Newton
Eva Herzigová, Blumarine, Monaco 1995
© Helmut Newton Foundation

"Dialogues. Collection FOTOGRAFIS x Helmut Newton" presents various facets of humanity and the evolution of social life over a century—through pairings of Newton’s photographs with works by Diane Arbus, Alfred Stieglitz, Margaret Bourke-White, Elliott Erwitt, Florence Henri, Duane Michals, Paul Strand, Man Ray, August Sander, Judy Dater, Otto Steinert, and many other renowned names in 19th- and 20th-century photography. These often complementary or contrasting image pairs have never been shown together before.

HELMUT NEWTON FOUNDATION
MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY
Jebensstrasse 2, 10623 Berlin

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

22/08/25

Sixties Surreal @ Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

Sixties Surreal
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
September 24, 2025 – January 19, 2026

Linda Lomahaftewa
Linda Lomahaftewa 
Untitled Woman's Faces, 1960s 
Oil on canvas, 36 × 48 in. (91.4 × 121.9 cm)
Heard Museum, Phoenix
Gift of the artist
© Linda Lomahaftewa

Robert Crumb
Robert Crumb 
Burned Out, 
Cover for The East Village Other 5, no. 10, 1970 
Ink on paper, 16 × 10 in. (40.6 × 25.4 cm) 
Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, Los Angeles, CA. 
© Robert Crumb, 1970 
Courtesy the artist, Paul Morris, and David Zwirner

Shawn Walker
Shawn Walker
 
Man with Bubble, Central Park (near Bandshell), c. 1960-79, 
printed 1989. Gelatin silver print, 8 x 10 in. (20.3 x 25.4 cm) 
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York 
Purchase with funds from the Photography Committee 2020.62. 
© Shawn Walker

Oscar Howe
Oscar Howe 
Retreat, 1968 
Casein on paper: sheet, 26 1/8 × 20 1/4 in. (66.4 × 51.4 cm); 
image, 24 × 18 1/4 in. (60.96 × 46.3 cm)
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
Purchase with funds from the Director’s Discretionary Fund 2023.86. 
© Oscar Howe Family

The Whitney Museum of American Art presents Sixties Surreal, a sweeping, ambitious, revisionist look at American art from 1958 to 1972 through the lens of the “surreal,” both inherited and reinvented. The exhibition features the work of 111 artists who embraced the psychosexual, fantastical, and revolutionary energy of an era shaped by civil unrest, cultural upheaval, and boundless experimentation. 

Rather than adhering to familiar movements of the 1960s like Pop Art, Conceptualism, or Minimalism, Sixties Surreal uncovers alternate histories and recontextualizes some of the decade’s best-known figures alongside those only recently rediscovered. The exhibition considers how artists turned to Surrealism, not as a European import, but as a way to navigate the strange, turbulent realities of American life. Featuring iconic works by Diane Arbus, Yayoi Kusama, Romare Bearden, Judy Chicago, Nancy Grossman, Christina Ramberg, David Hammons, Louise Bourgeois, Jasper Johns, Fritz Scholder, Peter Saul, Marisol, Robert Crumb, Faith Ringgold, H.C. Westermann, Jack Whitten, and many others, the exhibition brings new visibility to a generation of artists who challenged mainstream narratives in pursuit of radical freedom.

Raymond Saunders
Raymond Saunders 
Untitled, 1968 
Oil on canvas with collage, 52 × 81 in. (132.1 × 205.7 cm) 
Courtesy the artist and Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York 
© Raymond Saunders 
Photograph by Thomas Barratt

John Outterbridge
John Outterbridge 
No Time for Jivin', from the Containment Series, 1969 
Mixed media, 56 × 60 in. (142.2 × 152.4 cm) 
Collection of Mills College Art Museum, Northeastern University; 
Museum Purchase, Susan L. Mills Fund. 
© Courtesy the Estate of John Outterbridge 
and Tilton Gallery, New York 
Photograph by Paul Kuroda

Lynn Hershman Leeson
Lynn Hershman Leeson
Giggling Machine, Self Portrait as Blonde, 1968
Wax, wig, feathers, Plexiglass, wood, sensor, and sound, 
16 1/2 × 16 1/2 × 13 in. (41.9 × 41.9 × 33 cm) 
Promised gift to Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH
© Lynn Hershman Leeson
Sixties Surreal has been nearly three decades in the making, dating to my time as a Whitney intern and subsequent college thesis. Through intense collaboration with curatorial colleagues Dan Nadel, Laura Phipps, and Elisabeth Sussman, the project has grown into a sweeping reexamination of a turbulent and transformative chapter in American life and art,” said Scott Rothkopf, the Alice Pratt Brown Director of the Whitney. “Sixties Surreal reveals how artists across the country embraced and reinvented surreal tendencies to challenge conventions and mirror the strangeness of a time marked by radical political, social, and cultural change. By bringing their visionary contributions into fuller view, this exhibition helps to reshape how we understand the art and spirit of the 1960s, as well as our own roiling moment.” 

“Our years of conversations and research showed us a new map of the 1960s, one that sprawls out across the country and includes networks of artists and ideas that have too often been left out of institutional histories,” said curators Laura Phipps, Dan Nadel, and Elisabeth Sussman. “We hope that this view of the long sixties will offer a vibrant and capacious new version of the decade and leave visitors with ideas for how to build a new future.” 

Sixties Surreal is the perfect embodiment of the Whitney’s longtime commitment to reexamining art histories and celebrating understudied narratives in art of the United States,” added Kim Conaty, Nancy and Steve Crown Family Chief Curator of the Whitney. “We’re excited to highlight this ambitious historical retelling as part of a dynamic fall program featuring much-anticipated presentations of iconic Whitney collection works, such as Alexander Calder’s Circus, and bold emerging talents like Grace Rosario Perkins.” 
Carlos Villa
Carlos Villa 
Ritual, 1970 
Wig, chicken bones, canvas 
101 × 95 in. (256.5 × 241.3 cm) 
Collection of Kim and Lito Camacho 
© Carlos Villa Art Estate 
Courtesy the Asian Art Museum 
Photograph by Jay Jones


Jae Jarrell
Jae Jarrell 
Ebony Family, ca. 1968 
Velvet dress with velvet collage, 
38 1/2 x 38 x 1/2 in. (97.8 x 96.5 x 1.3 cm) 
Brooklyn Museum, Gift of R.M. Atwater, Anna Wolfrom Dove, 
Alice Fiebiger, Joseph Fiebiger, Belle Campbell Harriss, 
and Emma L. Hyde, by exchange, Designated Purchase Fund, 
Mary Smith Dorward Fund, Dick S. Ramsay Fund, 
and Carll H. de Silver Fund. 
© Jae Jarrell

Mel Casas
Mel Casas 
Humanscape #56 (San Antonio Circus), 1969 
Acrylic on canvas, 72 × 96 in. (182.9 × 243.8 cm) 
Mel Casas Family Trust 
© The Mel Casas Family Trust 
Photograph by Ansen Seale

Karl Wirsum
Karl Wirsum
 
Gargoyle Gargle Oil, c. 1969 
Acrylic painted on mirror, 
22 × 16 3/8 × 5 in. (55.9 × 41.6 × 12.7 cm) 
KAWS Collection 
© The Estate of Karl Wirsum

Spanning painting, sculpture, photography, film, and assemblage, twenty percent of the works on view in Sixties Surreal are drawn from the Whitney’s collection. The exhibition traces how artists working in cities like Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, and New York grappled with identity, sexuality, race, and power in ways often overlooked in canonical art histories. Influenced by, and taking permission from, the ethos of historical Surrealism—dream logic, eroticism, irrationality—these artists channeled that spirit into new and localized forms, producing work that is deeply personal and politically pointed.

From the experimental films of Jordan Belson to the biomorphic sculptures of Barbara Chase-Riboud and the visionary imagery of Jay DeFeo, the show unites diverse voices under a shared impulse to depict the world as it felt at the time, and still today—surreal.


Kiki Kogelnik
Kiki Kogelnik 
Gee Baby - I'm Sorry, 1965 
Acrylic and oil on canvas, 50 1/8 × 39 7/8 in. (127.4 × 101.4 cm) 
Kiki Kogelnik Foundation, New York 
© Kiki Kogelnik

Rupert Garcia
Rupert Garcia
Unfinished Man, 1968 
Acrylic on canvas, 48 × 48 in. (121.9 × 121.9 cm) 
Rena Bransten Gallery, San Francisco 
© 2024 Rupert García 
Photograph by John Janca

T.C. Cannon Art
T.C. Cannon
“Andrew Myrick - Let Em Eat Grass”, 1970 
Acrylic on canvas, 46 × 40 in. (116.8 × 101.6 cm) 
United States Department of the Interior, 
Indian Arts and Crafts Board, 
Southern Plains Indian Museum, Anadarko, OK 
© US Department of the Interior, Indian Arts and Crafts Board

Organized thematically rather than chronologically, Sixties Surreal invites visitors to move through immersive galleries that explore how artists across the US responded to a decade in which the world itself felt increasingly surreal. In an era marked by political unrest, radical liberation movements, shifting social norms, and an expanding media and technology landscape, the poet John Ashbery wrote, “We all ‘grew up Surreal’ without even being aware of it.” By the late 1960s, the Surrealist movement, which began in 1920s Paris and inspired artists such as Salvador Dalí and René Magritte to explore dreams and the unconscious, had influenced everything from film and dance to design and advertising. Surrealism was pervasive throughout American popular culture, yet it was often seen as tasteless or passé, particularly by a New York-centric art world. However, for many artists working in the 1960s, Surrealism—or the more general idea of the “surreal”—became a liberating force. It offered a way to make art amidst profound cultural changes.

Sixties Surreal opens with an installation of three life-sized, lifelike camel sculptures by artist Nancy Graves. Initially exhibited in Graves’s solo exhibition at the Whitney’s Breuer Building uptown in 1969, the three camels in this gallery are not true taxidermy but are patchworked together out of natural and synthetic materials. They serve as a reminder for visitors as they enter the exhibition that reality is strange and that even what is real may not be quite what it seems.

While Pop Art was a predominant artistic movement of the 1960s, artists like Martha Rosler, Jim Nutt, and Lee Lozano were dismantling the consumerist promises of the American Dream in their work by blending domestic imagery with violent, sexual, and psychological associations. The works on display here can be understood in terms of their destabilizing effect on the viewer. They question the reciprocal relationship between consumption and identity, a relationship that was increasingly fraught in the consumerist boom of the post-World War II era. In 1966, curator Gene Swenson organized The Other Tradition, an exhibition in Philadelphia that included many of the artists in this gallery alongside historic Surrealists like Salvador Dalí and Max Ernst. The works presented in The Other Tradition and in this gallery highlight how surreal sensibilities infiltrated Pop’s sheen with undercurrents of dread and critique.

Abstraction through a surreal lens is explored and becomes embodied through the work of artists who forged new forms to reckon with the tactile and emotional reality of inhabiting a body. Some works on view in this section of the exhibition are erotic, while others are anxious, but they all evoke physicality through unorthodox materials. Bridging East and West Coast practices, many of the featured artists were included in two 1967 exhibitions: Eccentric Abstraction in New York and Funk in Berkeley, California. Eccentric Abstraction, curated by Lucy Lippard, presented artists, including Bruce Nauman, Don Potts, Louise Bourgeois, and Eva Hesse, whose work was rigorously abstract yet retained a sensuous quality. The artists whose work was shown by the curator Peter Selz in Funk, among them Jeremy Anderson, Ken Price, and Franklin Williams, were more explicit in their references to guts, fingers, and anthropomorphic forms. The objects these West Coast artists produced may seem innocuous at first glance, but the subtle protrusions and openings of works such as Price’s S. L. Green (1963) or Williams’s Untitled (1966) evoke both the anxieties and the ecstasies of our physical being. Looking beyond these historic exhibitions, the works on view in this portion of Sixties Surreal bring together artists from across the country who worked with unorthodox materials to create objects of embodied abstraction.

Paul Thek
Paul Thek 
Untitled (from the series Television Analyzations), 1963 
Oil on canvas, 39 1/2 × 39 3/4 in. (100.3 × 101 cm) 
Collection of the BRD Family Foundation 
© Estate of Paul Thek

Many artists in the 1960s presented everyday American life as being off-kilter, uncanny, or unexpected—in other words, surreal. This was particularly true of photographers who increasingly found that if they looked at the world from a certain angle, the disorientation of modern life became evident. Images and videos capturing the strangeness of postwar American life became even more ubiquitous as television sets transmitted this novel visual language directly into American homes. Artists such as Lee Friedlander, Paul Thek, and Luis Jimenez were unnerved by television’s presence—the oddity of bringing this technology into a domestic space, an object that might confront you with images of Count Dracula one moment and the Vietnam War the next.

In a dedicated gallery, Edward Owens’s work, Private Imaginings and Narrative Facts (1966) is showcased. This lush, lyrical film offers a layered portrait of the artist’s mother and aunt that combines staged and documentary footage to create complementary visions of reality and fantasy. This work showcases Owens’s queer, avant-garde sensibility and reveals how personal memory can be reshaped through surreal cinematic techniques.

Fritz Scholder
Fritz Scholder
Indian and Rhinoceros, 1968 
Oil on canvas, 68 × 120 in. (172.7 × 304.8 cm) 
National Museum of the American Indian, New York 
Smithsonian Institution; purchase 26/8066

Violence and oppression confronted American households of the 1960s head-on as imagery of war, state violence, and systemic racism played on television for the first time. Artists such as Fritz Scholder, Nancy Spero, Peter Saul, and Ralph Arnold channel rage, grief, and resistance in works that echo this brutality and inequity. Drawing from mass media and protest, their works use surreal exaggeration, satire, and fragmentation as forms of social critique. Here, the surreal is not escapist, but rather a tool of dissent.

The Surrealist tradition of collage and utilizing found objects is reclaimed in the 1960s by artists like Noah Purifoy, Bruce Conner, Melvin Edwards, and Ed Bereal, who employed assemblage to engage directly with contemporary political conditions. Whether responding to the Watts Rebellion, racism, war, or nuclear anxiety, these artists reconfigure cultural debris into poetic and provocative forms. The gallery emphasizes how assemblage became a language of protest and renewal during a period of social rupture.

Barbara Hammer
Barbara Hammer 
Schizy, 1968 
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 
color, silent; 3:59 min 
Courtesy of the Estate of Barbara Hammer, New York 
and Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI), New York 
© Estate of Barbara Hammer

Luchita Hurtado
Luchita Hurtado
Untitled, 1971 
Oil on canvas, 50 × 34 7/8 in. (127 × 88.6 cm) 
© The Estate of Luchita Hurtado. 
Courtesy The Estate of Luchita Hurtado and Hauser & Wirth
Photograph by Jeff McLane

Before the women’s liberation movement entered wider public consciousness in the early 1970s, women artists were creating an early feminist aesthetic and imagining new fields of possibility for themselves and their work. For historic Surrealists, the radical juxtapositions made possible by collage were appealing for their apparent capacity to communicate unconscious thoughts and desires. For the Proto feminists of the 1960s, like Martha Edelheit, Barbara Hammer, Luchita Hurtado, and Shigeko Kubota, collage techniques offered a way to highlight the myriad social, political, and psychological expectations for women. Although the presence of sexual content meant their work was often sensationalized as “erotic art,” such artists held an expansive set of concerns, from gender and sexuality to objectification and artifice.

Wally Hedrick
Wally Hedrick 
HERMETIC IMAGE, 1961 
Oil on canvas, 84 × 60 in. (213.36 × 152.4 cm)
Collection of Mills College Art Museum, Northeastern University 
© Wally Hedrick
Photograph by MCAM

Eduardo Carrillo
Eduardo Carrillo 
Testament of the Holy Spirit, 1971
Oil on panel, 47 3/4 × 60 in. (121.3 × 152.4 cm) 
Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA
Purchase with funds from the Maude T. Pook Acquisition Fund 
© The Estate of Eduardo Carrillo

Sixties Surreal concludes with a turn toward the spiritual and mystical. Organized religion was one of the many institutions that came under question in the 1960s. For many artists, the search for alternatives led to the exploration of expansive forms of spirituality, influenced by cultural roots, ancestral knowledge, and the occult. Many practitioners of historic Surrealism promoted esotericism and the magical sciences as tools for unlocking the subconscious mind and critiquing the dominant institutions of the period, like family, church, and state. Artists followed that line of thinking to various critical ends. Some, such as Jordan Belson and Ching Ho Cheng, sought spiritual knowledge by using meditation, psychedelic drugs, and divination as tools for elevating consciousness. Others, including Claes Oldenburg and Eduardo Carrillo, looked outward, questioning the dominance of religious institutions and reappropriating conventional iconography for new ends. Still others, such as Oscar Howe and Carlos Villa, evoked ritual practice in their work to assert claims to cultural identity and counter the destabilizing effects of colonization and Christianity upon Indigenous systems of belief.

Sixties Surreal is organized by Dan Nadel, Steven and Ann Ames Curator of Drawings and Prints; Laura Phipps, Associate Curator; Scott Rothkopf, Alice Pratt Brown Director; and Elisabeth Sussman, Curator; with Kelly Long, Senior Curatorial Assistant, and Rowan Diaz-Toth, Curatorial Project Assistant, at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

Sixties Surreal - Catalogue

Sixties Surreal is accompanied by a scholarly publication that complements the exhibition and aims to reevaluate American art of the 1960s by foregrounding the role of Surrealism during a period of social and political upheaval. By challenging what we think we know about art of the 1960s, this volume moves beyond the established movements of Pop art, Minimalism, and Conceptualism to shine a light on how American artists created a unique type of Surrealism, making works suffused with eroticism, dread, wonder, violence, and liberation. A series of essays reveals how this new Surrealism enabled artists to reconnect art to an increasingly untethered reality following the period of rapid postwar transformation and to imagine new worlds and models for art rooted in political and social change. Presenting a new framework to understand the work of artists such as Lee Bontecou, Franklin Williams, Nancy Grossman, Mel Casas, Yayoi Kusama, Jim Nutt, John Outterbridge, Ralph Arnold, H. C. Westermann, Romare Bearden, Louise Bourgeois, Christina Ramberg, and Robert Arneson, this study features an expansive chronology that highlights how a broad group of artists across the United States connected to each other through exhibitions, galleries, and collectives, offering a fresh perspective on how artists in the 1960s harnessed psychoanalysis, wordplay, and assemblage, among other strategies, to create new horizons for subject matter and form that continue to reverberate in American art today. Sixties Surreal is published by the Whitney Museum of American Art in association with Yale University Press.

THE WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART
99 Gansevoort Street, New York City

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