Archive for the 'Featured Post' Category

New York – Kerry James Marshall: “Mastry” at the Met Breuer Through January 29th, 2017

Saturday, November 12th, 2016

Kerry James Marshall, Better Homes, Better Gardens (1994), via Art Observed
Kerry James Marshall, Better Homes, Better Gardens (1994), all photos via Katerina Paitazoglu for Art Observed

The long-anticipated retrospective of the work of Kerry James Marshall has come to New York, opening its doors this week on an expansive and impressively selected body of works that spans the painter’s wide creative output and varied adventures in the painted form.  Ranging from cogently political abstraction and surrealist figuration through to studied depictions of everyday life or quietly executed self-portraits, the exhibition is a fascinating introduction and elaboration on Marshall’s artistic perspective.

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Aspen — Gabriel Orozco at The Aspen Art Museum Through December 18th, 2016

Friday, November 11th, 2016

gabriel-orozco-untitled-2016-via-aspen-art-museum
Gabriel Orozco , Untitled (2016), all images courtesy Aspen Art Museum

Maneuvering between various genres and mediums since he began his practice during the 1990’s, Gabriel Orozco has been returning frequently to strategies in blurring and abstracting distinctions between art and reality.  The Mexican artist’s current exhibition at the Aspen Art Museum signals his departure from recent experiments with the breadth of photography and sculpture, while charting a renewed interest in geometric abstraction, drawing particular strength from operations with the color green, a hue the artist has rarely explored since the beginning of his career. (more…)

Paris – Takashi Murakami: “Learning the Magic of Painting” at Galerie Perrotin Through December 23rd, 2016

Thursday, November 10th, 2016

Takashi Murakami, title to be determined (2016), via Art Observed
Takashi Murakami, title to be determined (2016), via Art Observed

Continuing a body of work that has dominated his focus over the past several years, Takashi Murakami returns to Galerie Perrotin’s Paris location for an exhibition of new work that delves deeper into is fascination with Japanese spiritualism, while pushing its engagement with the history of contemporary art ever further.  Drawing influence, and often direct subject matter, from masters of 20th painting, including Francis Bacon, Roy Lichtenstein, and others from the canon of Western art history.

Takashi Murakami, Murakami Arhat Robot (title to be determined) (2016), via Art Observed
Takashi Murakami, Murakami Arhat Robot (title to be determined) (2016), via Art Observed

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New York – “Take Me I’m Yours” at The Jewish Museum Through February 5th, 2017

Wednesday, November 9th, 2016

Lawrence Weiner, NAU EM I ART BILONG YUMI (The art of today belongs to us), (1988-2016), via Art Observed
Lawrence Weiner, NAU EM I ART BILONG YUMI (The art of today belongs to us) (1988–2016), via Art Observed

Originally on view at the Monnaie de Paris, Hans Ulrich Obrist and Jens Hoffmann’s curatorial project Take Me I’m Yours has touched down at the Jewish Museum.  Bringing together a body of works centered around portability, consumption and distribution, everything on the show can be interacted with or taken by the viewer in some way, allowing the viewer to build up a collection of small-scale works and pieces from a single show.

Yoko Ono, Air Dispenser (1971), via Art Observed
Yoko Ono, Air Dispenser (1971), via Art Observed

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New York – Carrie Mae Weems at Jack Shainman Through December 10th, 2016

Tuesday, November 8th, 2016

Carrie Mae Weems, Work from the Scenes and Take Series (2016), via Art Observed
Carrie Mae Weems, Work from the Scenes and Take Series (2016), via Art Observed

Returning to New York City for her major solo exhibition in the city since her 2014 retrospective at the Guggenheim, artist Carrie Mae Weems has brought a series of new works, spread across a broad range of media and techniques, to both of Jack Shainman’s Chelsea exhibition spaces.  Addressing both the ongoing violence against African-Americans at the hands of the police, as well as threads of cultural peripheries, power and representation in relation to concepts of the image and its performance.  Drawing on diverse threads and themes, Weems’s series of works is a striking orchestration of ongoing themes and thematics in the modern discourse of race in America.

Carrie Mae Weems, All the Boys (2016), via Art Observed
Carrie Mae Weems, All the Boys (2016), via Art Observed

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New York – Vittorio Brodmann at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise Through November 13th, 2016

Monday, November 7th, 2016

Vittorio Brodmann, Persistence of Denial (2016), via Art Observed
Vittorio Brodmann, Persistence of Denial (2016), via Art Observed

Continuing an exhibition plan at his Chinatown exhibition space that has charted a more exploratory and adventurous departure from his usual stable of artists, Gavin Brown has invited the Swiss painter Vittorio Brodmann to show a body of new works at 291 Grand.  Welcoming the painter’s sense of wry surrealism and cartoonish abstraction, the show is a fitting reintroduction to the city for the young artist, bringing a body of fresh compositions that continue his technique to the canvas.

Vittorio Brodmann, Beyond the Pale (2016), via Art Observed
Vittorio Brodmann, Beyond the Pale (2016), via Art Observed

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London— Njideka Akunyili Crosby: “Portals” at Victoria Miro Through November 5th, 2016

Sunday, November 6th, 2016
Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Mother and Child (2016), courtesy of Victoria Miro

Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Mother and Child (2016), courtesy of Victoria Miro

Currently on view at Victoria Miro, Portals is Njideka Akunyili Crosby’s first solo show in Britain. Drawing upon religious art, traditional modes of academic portrait painting, personal anecdotes, history, and cross-cultural exchange, her new series of large-scale paintings examine generalisations about African diaspora and notions of cultural identity. Born in Nigeria, Akunyili Crosby moved to the United States at the age of sixteen, and currently resides in Los Angeles. She is in many ways culturally tied to her homeland, a place she uses as a source of great inspiration, but her work is largely grounded in Western art history. With a keen interest in the ways society categorises individuals and cultures as a whole, she is aware of the groups she falls into. She has been noted by others, and in many ways identifies, as an African American woman, as a Nigerian woman, as an American woman, as a wife, and as an artist; she exists as an individual who inhabits many spheres, residing in a realm of constant flux and transformation.

Njideka Akunyili Crosby, “The Beautyful Ones,” Series #5  (2016), courtesy of Victoria Miro

Njideka Akunyili Crosby, “The Beautyful Ones,” Series #5 (2016), courtesy of Victoria Miro

Her multi-layered and highly complex paintings are a way for her to contribute to this new crop of people, the new cultural identity of a body in transition— an immigrant occupying two identities, two distinct cultures. Her compositions are usually figurative, and are always very layered, both literally in terms of collage techniques and metaphorically by making reference to a long line of pictorial symbolism. The series Portals is an invitation for the viewer into her life, where she creates interior scenes or as she calls them ‘wormholes,’ by which the viewer can examine individual identities that exist in scenes of everyday life. She renders her family and friends while they eat, drink, and watch television, simple activities that act as points of departure and arrival for examining the ebbs and flows of cross-cultural identity. The windows, screens, doors, and televisions act as points of entry for crossing the threshold into a new cultural realm. The ethos of her practice is to uncover nuances in time, space, and values that exist in different societies and regions.

Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Ike Ya (2016), courtesy of Victoria Miro

Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Ike Ya (2016), courtesy of Victoria Miro

In the work Ike Ya (2016) she captures an affectionate moment between a couple. However, alongside the tenderness of the embrace there is also a sense of pacifying another’s behaviour. Like most of her other portraits, the viewer doesn’t meet the gaze of the subject, rather examining the work from a slightly voyeuristic perspective. Additionally she and her husband are often the models for her paintings, so in many ways this image addresses her anxieties about marrying a white American man, someone who is rooted in another culture. As in many of her other works, her loaded symbolic iconography becomes clear only upon closer inspection. At first glance the painting portrays a relatively westernised couple in their home, however there are key objects that are indicative of an attention to Nigerian pop culture and politics. Using an acetone transfer technique the artist lays a second wave of imagery that layers her Nigerian self with her American self. Offsetting the couple are Nollywood film posters, Nigerian celebrities, and ‘Bring Back our Girls’ slogans, in reference to the 2014 kidnapping of Nigerian schoolgirls by Boko Haram. Additionally the artists grandmother’s storm lantern is included in the scene, an item that is present throughout her oeuvre, such as in Grandmother’s Parlour (2016).

 Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Grandmother’s Parlour (2016), courtesy of Victoria Miro

Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Grandmother’s Parlour (2016), courtesy of Victoria Miro

Truly a master storyteller Akunyili Crosby”s work operates in an ‘in-between’ realm, examining different zones of identity and normalcy. In Super Blue Omo (2016), the title refers both to a well-known brand of washing powder that was advertised in Nigeria in the 1980s, and that Akunyili Crosby would have been familiar with as a child, as well as an emotional state of ‘blueness.’ The advertisement for the cleaning product is playing on the television, while the lone female figure stares off into the distance. Sitting on a couch with a tea set for two, this image of coolness draws connections between commodity goods and psychological states.

 

Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Super Blue Omo (2016), courtesy of Victoria Miro

Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Super Blue Omo (2016), courtesy of Victoria Miro

The objects in Akunyili Crosby’s works hold equal symbolic weight as the sitters, sometimes acting as stand-ins for particularly loaded visual icons. The Twain Shall Meet (2015) alludes to traditional still lives in the art historical canon. The image depicts an interior scene with a table owned by her grandmother centrally placed. Atop the table are framed images of her family members, as well as the recurring motif of her grandmother’s kerosene lamp which makes reference to rural areas of Nigeria where electricity is unreliable or nonexistent. There are also tea containers and images of the Virgin Mary, making a commentary on the history of British colonial rule.

Njideka Akunyili Crosby, The Twain Shall Meet (2015), courtesy of Victoria Miro

Njideka Akunyili Crosby, The Twain Shall Meet (2015), courtesy of Victoria Miro

The collaged elements and attention to texture plays into notions of dual identity, and counteract generalisations made about African culture and the diasporic experience.  Akunyili Crosby explains that ‘the layers of herself change over time, as she moves farther out into the world.’  Her patchwork of iconography allows her to create multi-faceted individuals. Speaking to both urban and rural life, she depicts the many identities that exist in a single person. It is hard to categorise her figures into a simple box, because the specific idea of a character doesn’t exist. Her vibrant works portray the contemporary experience of postcolonial self, of an individual who inhabits a liminal space.

-S. Ozer

Related Links:

Exhibition Page [Victoria Miro]

London – Tony Cragg at Lisson Gallery Through November 5th, 2016

Thursday, November 3rd, 2016

Tony Cragg (Installation View) all images courtesy of Lisson Gallery
Tony Cragg (Installation View) all images courtesy of Lisson Gallery

Spanning both London venues, Tony Cragg’s fourteenth exhibition with Lisson Gallery features a new series of sculptural works that continue and further develop his pursuit of manifesting dynamic energy within the gallery space in conjunction with his keen interest in texture and materiality.  Cragg’s practice begins with simple, yet loaded elements of gestural line, signifying the presence of the artist’s hand in the work, often evolving into morphed, distended form that play on ideas of perception and subjective realities. Cragg works towards uncovering the unseen, both in terms of untapped energy and the unseen rules of the universe, metaphysical manifestations of connectivity and action, layering forms and lines to reshape visions of the contemporary world. (more…)

London – Neo Rauch: “Rondo” at David Zwirner Through November 12th, 2016

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2016

Neo Rauch, Der Störfall (2016), via David Zwirner
Neo Rauch, Der Störfall (2016), via David Zwirner

Marking his first solo exhibition in the UK, painter Neo Rauch has brought a series of new compositions to David Zwirner, marking a new entry in the artist’s unique explorations of figuration, Central European art history, and the shifting surrealist language that mixes epochs and styles over the range of his practice.  Rendered in his signature  palette of subdued oils on canvas, the works continue Rauch’s exploration of the past as an open framework for interpretation and juxtaposition.

Neo Rauch, Rondo (Installation View), via David Zwirner
Neo Rauch, Rondo (Installation View), via David Zwirner

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Paris – James Rosenquist: “Four Decades” at Thaddaeus Ropac Gallery Through January 7th, 2017

Tuesday, November 1st, 2016

James Rosenquist, Reflector (1982), via Thaddaeus Ropac
James Rosenquist, Reflector (1982), via Thaddaeus Ropac

Over the last 40 years, painter James Rosenquist has continued to mine and manipulate the languages of consumer capitalism, mass-market branding, and the formal techniques of sign-painting, creating works that push these same linguistic elements to points of near-disintegration.  His pieces, huge swirling arrangements of color and line, smash commodities and natural forms together, combining food, buildings, and other objects into confounding, hybridized arrangements.  This ongoing experimentation with the canvas as a space of critical examination and surrealist detuning takes up the full expanse of Thaddaeus Ropac Gallery’s Pantin exhibition space, joined by a series of collages at its space in The Marais.

James Rosenquist, Coup d'Oeil - Speed of Light (2001), via Thaddaeus Ropac
James Rosenquist, Coup d’Oeil – Speed of Light (2001), via Thaddaeus Ropac

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Berlin – Chiharu Shiota: “Uncertain Journey” at Blain Southern through November 12th, 2016

Monday, October 31st, 2016

Chiharu Shiota’s Uncertain Journey (Installation View)
Chiharu Shiota’s Uncertain Journey (Installation View)

Chiharu Shiota’s Uncertain Journey, on view at Blain|Southern Berlin through the 12th of November, is an awe-inspiring meditation on memory, fate, and belonging.  Evocative and beautiful, this installation fills the gallery’s main atrium with a swarming mass of red yarn that creeps up the walls and envelops the viewer in a network of red.  Entering into the space, one is swept up in a ghostly web that spreads between the forms of skeletal boats.  Shiota is known for her immersive installations, such as The Key in the Hand (2015), in which she creates new visual planes as if she were painting in mid-air.  The artist has created this site-specific installation in Berlin eight years after she last exhibited in her home city, reprising a body of work that earned her impressive attention at last year’s Venice Biennale. (more…)

London – The Turner Prize Exhibition at Tate Britain Through January 2nd, 2017

Sunday, October 30th, 2016

Anthea Hamilton, Project for a Door (After Gaetano Pesce) (2016), vi Art Observed
Anthea Hamilton, Project for a Door (After Gaetano Pesce) (2016), vi Art Observed

With the early weeks of the fall art season comes the opening of the annual Turner Prize exhibition, bringing together works from each of the artists’ nominated for Britain’s highest honor for contemporary art.  This year’s exhibition, one of the more cohesively selected, and consistently inventive in recent years, has already earned impressive accolades, with a striking quartet of artist’s each exploring constructions of space and identity through diverse historical, technical, and material connections. (more…)

Berlin – Mike Nelson: “Tools that See” at neugerriemschneider Through November 5th, 2016

Friday, October 28th, 2016

Mike Nelson, Tools that See (Installation view)
Mike Nelson, Tools that See (Installation view), All images via the artist and neugerriemschneider.

Mike Nelson’s Tools That See (Possessions of a Thief) 1986-2005, on view at neugerriemschneider is a material chronicle of the tools the artist has used over the past 30 years. Immediately recognizable as an homage to the ready-mades of Marcel Duchamp, Nelson’s pieces carry the same force of reality-bending humor as earlier iterations of found object art and the readymade.  The familiar items, ones a viewer may see strewn around a site of construction, are rendered as images withdrawn from their tactile elements, contained in glass frames and elevated on dense wooden pedestals. (more…)

New York – Pedro Reyes: “Doomocracy” at Brooklyn Army Terminal Through November 6th, 2016

Wednesday, October 26th, 2016

Pedro Reyes, Doomocracy (Installation View), via Art Observed
Pedro Reyes, Doomocracy (Installation View), via Art Observed

Doomocracy, the long-anticipated collaboration between Pedro Reyes and Creative Time, has opened at the Brooklyn Army Teminal in Sunset Park, bringing a timely “house of horrors” to a city preparing for both the thrills and chills of the Halloween season, and an election cycle that has been often been fraught with a similar sense of doom and gloom.

The Voting Booth installation, courtesy Will Star Shooting Stars for Creative Time
The Voting Booth installation, courtesy Will Star Shooting Stars for Creative Time

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London – Jeff Koons at Almine Rech Gallery Through January 21st, 2017

Tuesday, October 25th, 2016

Jeff Koons (Installation View), via Art Observed
Jeff Koons (Installation View), via Art Observed

Opening its new exhibition space in London during Frieze Week, Almine Rech has tapped Jeff Koons for a series of new pieces to christen the space.  The show, which draws heavily on Koons’s recent work in his Gazing Ball series, shown alongside a small selection of polished steel Ballerina sculptures, marks an interesting continuation of the series. (more…)

Berlin – Dana Schutz: “Waiting for the Barbarians” at Contemporary Fine Arts Through October 29th, 2016

Monday, October 24th, 2016

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Dana Schutz, Red (2016), All images via Anna Corrigan for Art Observed

Now through the 29th of October, the CFA in Berlin hosts an exhibition of new work by Dana Schutz, Waiting for the Barbarians, retaining the artist’s prior interest and investment in absurdist and dark humor and pushing it onto new ground.  Where earlier work depicted often surreal or unlikely scenarios, Schutz’s new series is far more concerned with depicting the absurdity of current political and social realities. This is the artist’s fifth solo exhibition with the CFA. (more…)

New York – Julie Mehretu: “Hoodnyx, Voodoo and Stelae” at Marian Goodman Gallery Through October 29th, 2016

Sunday, October 23rd, 2016

Julie Mehretu, Conjured Parts (head), Aleppo (2016), via Art Observed
Julie Mehretu, Conjured Parts (head), Aleppo (2016), via Melis Sonmezler for Art Observed

Pushing her particular brand of gestural and highly-nuanced awareness of the picture plane, artist Julie Mehretu’s new exhibition at Marian Goodman in New York is a powerful entry in the artist’s ongoing exploration of abstraction.  Realizing intricate networks of marks, twisting and turning around each other to create swarms and clusters of sinewy, undulating forms, Mehretu’s practice is an ever-evolving study of process in its own right.  Yet her new pieces, showing through the end of the month, present a new sense of both technical urgency and depth of the visual field, combining to create a series of striking new works. (more…)

New York – Simon Denny: “Blockchain Future States” at Petzel Gallery through October 22nd, 2016

Friday, October 21st, 2016

denny-blockchainfuturestates-petzel-2
Simon Denny, Blockchain Future States (Installation  View), all images via Petzel Gallery

Simon Denny’s latest exhibition at Petzel Gallery is an ambitious investigation into the cryptocurrency Bitcoin and its underlying blockchain technology, delving into the utopian ideals and potential opportunities that blockchain poses, taking on this treatment through an examination of three forerunners of the technology and their visions for the future.

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New York — Matthew Barney: “Facility of DECLINE” at Gladstone Gallery Through October 22nd, 2016

Friday, October 21st, 2016

Matthew Barney, Case BOLUS -A value (sweetloaf)/ O value (sweetloaf), - JIM BLIND (andro.) -rec. majora -rec. minora, 1989-91
Matthew Barney, Case BOLUS -A value (sweetloaf)/ O value (sweetloaf), – JIM BLIND (andro.) -rec. majora -rec. minora (1989-91), All images are by Osman Can Yerebakan for Art Observed.

Reflecting back on his relentlessly shape-shifting, enigmatic career and ever-evolving material practice, Gladstone Gallery has re-staged Matthew Barney’s Facility of DECLNE, the artist’s first solo exhibition with the gallery, shown for the first time in 1991.  While the iconic Cremaster Cycle stands as Barney’s emblematic body of works, the show offers an intuitive reflection on the artist’s initial works, presenting the New York art world a with rare opportunity to trace his initial works leading up to the monumental series, and to explore the threads that would later weave and wind their way through the complex and multi-faceted narrative of the film series, particularly his interest in systems of visual, subliminal and rhetorical structure and their orchestration both as performative operations and constructed series of images. (more…)

New York – Carroll Dunham: ‘”Drawings: 1982-96″ at Gladstone 64 Through October 22nd, 2016

Friday, October 21st, 2016

Carroll Dunham, Pink Mound with Eruption (5/18/93, 5/19/93) (1993), via Art Observed
Carroll Dunham, Pink Mound with Eruption (5/18/93, 5/19/93) (1993), via Art Observed

On view throughout Gladstone Gallery’s 64th Street exhibition space, Carroll Dunham’s Drawings track the early stages of the artist’s evolution and interests, introducing concepts that would continue to inform and reshape his practice over the coming years.  Displaying a body of works from 1982 to 1996, the works on view employ a variety of materials, including wood, papyrus, wax crayon and charcoal.  Though lesser known, Dunham’s early drawings speak to his originality and desire to explore a single medium to its full potential. (more…)

Anicka Yi Wins the 2016 Hugo Boss Prize at the Guggenheim

Friday, October 21st, 2016

Hugo Boss Prize at the Guggenheim, via Art Observed
Hugo Boss Prize at the Guggenheim, via Art Observed

The Guggenheim celebrated the 20th Anniversary of the Hugo Boss Prize this evening, hosting the bi-annual arts award gala last night in its iconic atrium space, and reflecting back on the string of nominees and winners over the past two decades, among them Matthew Barney, Paul Chan, and Lorna Simpson.  This year, Anicka Yi became the latest artist to receive the prestigious honor, receiving the $100,000 prize and an exhibition at the museum this coming spring.  Yi was nominated alongside Tania Bruguera, Mark Leckey, Ralph Lemon, Laura Owens, and Wael Shawky.

Hugo Boss Prize at the Guggenheim, via Art Observed (more…)

AO On-Site – Paris: FIAC Art Fair at the Grand Palais, October 20-23rd, 2016

Thursday, October 20th, 2016

FIAC at the Grand Palais, via Art Observed
FIAC at the Grand Palais, via Art Observed

The Foire International d’Art Contemporain (FIAC for short), has opened its doors in Paris, bringing another year of sales and shows to the grounds of the Grand Palais, and continuing to expand its scope and scale.  Marking its 43rd year in operation, the fair’s reputation and mark on the market calendar has grown in leaps and bounds in the last several years, all under the guidance of director Jennifer Flay, and the 2016 edition looks to sustain this sense of forward momentum.

Leandro Ehrlich, Changing Rooms at Luciana Brito, via Art Observed
Leandro Ehrlich, Changing Rooms at Luciana Brito, via Art Observed

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New York – Sol LeWitt at Paula Cooper Gallery, in Conjunction with a Show of Works by LeWitt and Liz Deschenes, Through October 22nd, 2016

Wednesday, October 19th, 2016

Sol LeWitt, Wall Drawing #368: The wall is divided vertically into five equal parts. The center part is divided horizontally and vertically into four equal parts. Within each part are three-inch (7.5 cm) wide parallel bands of lines in four directions in four colors. In each of the other parts, three-inch (7.5 cm) bands of lines in one of the four directions. The bands are drawn in color and India ink washes. Red, yellow, blue, ink, India ink 3”
Sol LeWitt, Wall Drawing #368: The wall is divided vertically into five equal parts. The center part is divided horizontally and vertically into four equal parts. Within each part are three-inch (7.5 cm) wide parallel bands of lines in four directions in four colors. In each of the other parts, three-inch (7.5 cm) bands of lines in one of the four directions. The bands are drawn in color and India ink washes. Red, yellow, blue, ink, India ink 3” (1982), via Art Observed

Spread across all three of Paula Cooper’s Chelsea spaces, the gallery has embarked on a major celebration of the work of Sol LeWitt, posing a series of exhibitions that explores the range of the artist’s conceptual oeuvre, both as a solo artist, and in his historical impact on the development and evolution of art in both the 2oth and 21st Century.  Combining this diverse range of perspectives and interpretations of the artist’s work, the show is a fittingly nuanced exploration of an artist whose work continues to influence the progression of the field today, almost fifty years after his first exhibitions of work.

Sol LeWitt, (rip) R724, The area of Florence between the Piazza della Unita Italiana la chiesa S. Frediano and il Porticato dell ‘Ospedale di S. Maria Nuova, 1976
Sol LeWitt, (rip) R724, The area of Florence between the Piazza della Unita Italiana la chiesa S. Frediano and il Porticato dell ‘Ospedale di S. Maria Nuova (1976), via Paula Cooper

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New York — Karin Schneider: “Situational Diagram” at Dominique Lévy Through October 20th, 2016

Monday, October 17th, 2016

Karin Schneider, Situational Diagram (Installation view), via Dominique Lévy
Karin Schneider, Situational Diagram (Installation view), via Dominique Lévy

Brazilian-born, New York-based artist Karin Schneider is currently the subject of a solo exhibition, titled Situational Diagram, at Dominique Lévy this month, delving into artistic and philosophical potentials for  “grasping” an artwork, both materialistically and ideologically.  Schneider, who co-managed the experimental Lower East Side artist-run initiative Orchard Gallery between 2005 and 2008, embarks on a series of black canvases, which offer the artist a degree of freedom to leave narratives open-ended, and to allow relationships and commerce to leave their mark on the painting’s surface.  Each work is subject to a specific agreement with its potential collector, where Schneider’s monochrome-heavy works utilize art history—particularly Minimalism—as a vessel to scrutinize social and consumerist dynamics in art through color and form. (more…)