Global contemporary art events and news observed from New York City. Suggestion? Email us.

New York – Lee Ufan at Pace Gallery Through August 21st, 2015

Wednesday, June 17th, 2015

Lee Ufan
Lee Ufan, (Installation View), via Bria Cole for Art Observed

If tranquility could serve as a physical construct, rather than a state of mind, then a state of calm could perhaps be considered as a reconditioning of vision, a way to perceive extended relations of time, material and space.  This sense of the perceptual retooling, and its effects, is one reading offered by Lee Ufan’s continuous series Relatum and Dialogue, the most recent version of which is currently on view at Pace Gallery.   The artist tends towards a relationship between philosophy and the objects he creates with artistic significance, in order to provoke subtle perceptual reconsiderations, as proposed in his writings and contributions to the Mono-ha school of artistic practice.

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London – Lee Ufan at Lisson Gallery Through May 9th, 2015

Friday, April 17th, 2015

Lee Ufan, Dialogue-Silence (2013)
Lee Ufan, Dialogue-Silence (2013)

Lisson Gallery is currently presenting a new body of work by Lee Ufan, the influential artist who first gained recognition within the avant-garde art movement Mono-ha (School of Things) during the 1960’s. Considerably less known and understood in the West, Mono-ha emerged in Japan as a response to Eurocentric notions of representational and descriptive art making, focusing instead on the dialogue between nature and material.  Ufan, who started his career as a professor and art critic, stands out as an influential figure from the movement with his visually serene yet intellectually intriguing works, often harmonizing sculpture with works on canvas. (more…)

AO Newslink

Monday, October 1st, 2012

Blum & Poe Gallery is expanding, and is set to open in Tokyo in the coming months. Tim Blum, a co-founder, says that it is a “major moment for post-war Japanese art. There seems to be a real dialogue going on right now.” The gallery plans to strengthen relationships with artists and present secondary-market material from both Japanese and Western historical art movements. (more…)