Archive for the 'Show' Category

New York – Jeppe Hein: “Changing Spaces” at Rockefeller Center Through September 9th, 2022

Tuesday, July 19th, 2022

Jeppe Hein, Changing Spaces (Installation View), via Art Observed
Jeppe Hein, Changing Spaces (Installation View), via Art Observed

This summer, artist Jeppe Hein has installed Changing Spaces, an interactive public art installation on Rockefeller Center’s Center Plaza, a swirling torrent of “liquid architecture” that continues the artist’s use of space and phenomenon to encourage visitors and passerby to stop and interact with the work. (more…)

London – Nicola L. at Alison Jacques Through July 23rd, 2022

Monday, July 18th, 2022

Nicola L., We Don't Want War (1974-75), via Alison Jacques
Nicola L., We Don’t Want War (1974-75), via Alison Jacques

Marking the first large-scale exhibition of artist Nicola L. in the UK, Alison Jacques brings together an expansive selection of works by the artist. The show, presented in partnership with the Nicola L. Collection and Archive, Los Angeles, anticipates a forthcoming monograph, published by Apartamento in Autumn 2022, and a major survey at Camden Art Centre in 2024. (more…)

London – Michelangelo Pistoletto at Simon Lee Through July 16th, 2022

Tuesday, July 12th, 2022

Michelangelo Pistoletto, Uomo che guarda attraverso la gabbia (2018), via Simon Lee
Michelangelo Pistoletto, Uomo che guarda attraverso la gabbia (2018), via Simon Lee

Marking a newe perspective on the storied output of artist Michelangelo Pistoletto, Simon Lee Gallery has opened a show of recent works by the Italian artist. For his fifth exhibition at the gallery, the artist presents a series of mirror paintings that reflect on themes of captivity, isolation and restriction at a fractured moment in contemporary history. (more…)

Zurich – Michael Williams: “Frogs 1-9” at Eva Presenhuber Through July 23rd, 2022

Monday, July 11th, 2022

Michael Williams, Frogs 9 (2022), via Eva Presenhuber
Michael Williams, Frogs 9 (2022), via Eva Presenhuber

Over the course of his work, painter Michael Williams has developed a suite of interconnected paintings out of a drawing, not uncommonly focused on a human figure or surrogate. In the case of Frogs 1 – 9, the source is Untitled (Frog) (2019–2020): a small sheet given over to a greying man-cum-jester, hollowed nostrils shaped like an electrical outlet and mouth agape, forming an unlikely heart as he pinches a small frog.  Here, at Eva Presenhuber’s Vienna exhibition space, this image becomes the ground for a series of interventions and reinventions of the image, spanning both drawing and painting.

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New York – Ajay Kurian: “Missing Home” at 47 Canal Through July 9th, 2022

Friday, July 8th, 2022

Ajay Kurian, Tiresias (2022), via 47 Canal
Ajay Kurian, Tiresias (2022), via 47 Canal

On view this month at 47 Canal, Brooklyn-based artist Ajay Kurian has produced a body of work that delves into the constructions of personality and place that underscore conceptions and understandings of home. Installing a body of works that concentrate on concepts of denial and assimilation, generational trauma and dislocation, the work on view this month takes a long route through the symbolisms and abstractions that underscore a conception of the body and self.

Ajay Kurian, Missing Home (Installation View), via 47 Canal
Ajay Kurian, Missing Home (Installation View), via 47 Canal (more…)

Zurich – Fischli Weiss: “Airports and Cars” at Galerie Eva Presenhuber Through July 11th, 2022

Thursday, July 7th, 2022

Fischli Weiss, Untitled (Paris Air France) (1998), via Eva Presenhuber
Fischli Weiss, Untitled (Paris/Air France) (1998), via Eva Presenhuber

On view this month at Galerie Eva Presenhuber presents Airports and Cars, the gallery’s fourth exhibition by Peter Fischli and the late David Weiss. Fischli Weiss began the Airports series in 1987 and continued it for 25 years, a project that saw them repeatedly photograph and document the various scenes and landscapes of international airports, focusing on tarmacs and loading zones—the abstract-opaque logistical space, which passengers predominantly glimpse through panes of glass and see themselves detached from. (more…)

Berlin – Karin Sander: “What You See is Not What You Get (22 Exhibitions)” at Esther Schipper Through July 16th, 2022

Tuesday, July 5th, 2022

Karin Sander, What You See is Not What You Get (22 Exhibitions) (Installation View), via Esther Schipper
Karin Sander, What You See is Not What You Get (22 Exhibitions) (Installation View), via Esther Schipper

On view at Esther Schipper in Berlin, artist Karin Sander presents an enigmatic and unique installation under the title What You See is Not What You Get” (22 Exhibitions). Combining a body of work to explore intriguing questions of space and presence, the artist presents bodies of work curated and then withheld from the public.

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Los Angeles – Valention Carron: “Barking Painting Sighs Heavenly” at David Kordansky Gallery Through July 1st, 2022

Friday, July 1st, 2022

Valentin Carron, Child and Dog (2022), via David Kordansky Gallery
Valentin Carron, Child and Dog (2022), via David Kordansky Gallery

This month at David Kordansky’s Los Angeles gallery space, artist Valentin Carron presentss Barking Panting Sighs Heavenly, an exhibition of new sculptural works that continues the artist’s exploration of sculpture as a mode of representation, not only of the body and figure, but equally of relations and understandings of social and cultural construction. (more…)

RIP – Ground-Breaking Abstract Artist Sam Gilliam Has Passed Away at Age 88

Tuesday, June 28th, 2022

Sam Gilliam at Mnuchin
Sam Gilliam at Mnuchin, via Art Observed

Artist Sam Gilliam, known for his work in abstraction and for his ground-breaking experimentations in freeing the canvas from the confines of the stretcher, has passed away at the age of 88. Rising to prominence in the late 1960’s from his early work as a school teacher, the artist was known for his dynamic and expressive works, which combined lyrical strokes and painterly movements with three-dimensional arrangements of cloth, which the artist titled “Drapes.” (more…)

New York – Alex Israel: “Sunset Coast Drive” at Greene Naftali Through June 25th, 2022

Tuesday, June 21st, 2022

Alex Israel, Sunset Coast Drive (2022), via Greene Naftali
Alex Israel, Sunset Coast Drive (2022), via Greene Naftali

On view this month at Greene Naftali, the gallery plays host to Sunset Coast Drive, its second solo show presenting the works of Alex Israel. An outing that looks to deepen the artist’s ongoing ongoing engagement with the culture and aesthetics of his native Los Angeles, it mines the sparkling optimism exported by its entertainment industry, while presenting imagery subject to close scrutiny.  (more…)

AO On-Site – Basel: Art Basel at the Messe Basel, June 16th – 19th, 2022

Thursday, June 16th, 2022

Folkert de Jong at Sofie van de Velde
Folkert de Jong at Sofie van de Velde

Marking it’s return to its usual spot in early summer, the 2022 edition of Art Basel has opened its doors for its early hours, preparing for a public opening this weekend with an expansive offering of works from European galleries and those further afield. Open once again at the Messe Basel, the fair continues its reputation as a flagship for the international fair brand, with over 200 leading galleries and more than 4,000 artists from five continents. Emphasizing it’s place as a central force in the run of events and fairs worldwide, Basel’s return to form is a tentpole in a run of reopenings in the wake of the Covid-19 shutdowns.

David Hammons at Xavier Hufkens
David Hammons at Xavier Hufkens

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New York – Anna-Sophie Berger: “Sin” at JTT Through June 18th, 2022

Tuesday, June 14th, 2022

Anna-Sophie Berger, Lady Wealth (2022), via JTT
Anna-Sophie Berger, Lady Wealth (2022), via JTT

On view this month at New York’s JTT Gallery, artist Anna-Sophie Berger presents a selection of new works that draw on bodies, space and perception to create striking visual and psychological effects. Using a fusion of everyday materials posed in unique new permutations, her body of work is a striking and potent investigation of how these items construct a shared reality, or perhaps just the sense of one.  (more…)

New York – Anne Imhof: “Avatar” at Galerie Buchholz Through July 2nd, 2022

Monday, June 13th, 2022

Anne Imhof - Avatar 06
Anne Imhof, Avatar (Installation View), all images by Aleph Molinari for Art Observed.

Continuing her experimentation with spatial arrangement and irreverent institutional takeovers, Anne Imhof has transformed the uptown gallery space of Galerie Buchholz for her new exhibition, Avatar. A simulacra of an institution of learning, the exhibition plunges the viewer into an alternate universe that embodies the industrialized cut-and-paste production of knowledge and identity. The exhibit  an avatar for these spaces of socialization, and a representation of the avatars people adopt while navigating  them. Presenting physical signifiers in opposition to surreal juxtapositions of other works, the show explores the role of space in the production of power, sites of cultural socialization, and its interrelations to social constructs.  (more…)

VENICE — MARLENE DUMAS: “OPEN-END” AT PALAZZO GRASSI THROUGH JANUARY 8TH, 2023

Friday, June 10th, 2022

IMG_0216
Marlene Dumas, The Martyr (2002-04). All images via Art Observed.

The Pinault Collection’s Palazzo Grassi presents Open-End this summer, a major monographic exhibition of work by Marlene Dumas, the Cape Town-born artist renowned for her portraiture exploring the depth, breadth and intensity of human emotion. Coinciding with the 59th Venice Biennale, the solo-exhibition features over 100 works from 1984 to 2021, including previously unseen paintings such as Persona (2020). Curated by Caroline Bourgeois and the artist herself, open-end spans 33 rooms across two floors of the 18th-century Pinault Collection space alongside the Grand Canal in Venice. (more…)

New York – Francis Bacon: “Faces & Figures” at Skarstedy Through June 25th, 2022

Thursday, June 9th, 2022

Francis Bacon, Seated Woman (1961), via Skarstedt
Francis Bacon, Seated Woman (1961), via Skarstedt

On view this summer, Skarstedt has assembled a striking selection of work by painter Francis Bacon, titled Faces and Figures. The exhibition unifies a group of masterworks spanning the 1950s to the 1970s. Featuring depictions of some of his most beloved friends, lovers, and muses—Peter Lacy, George Dyer, Muriel Belcher, and Henrietta Moraes—along with an intimate self-portrait and a portrait of Pope Pius XII, the exhibition traces poignant moments of loss and companionship that underscores the artist’s masterful blending of art and life.  (more…)

Paris – Lawrence Abu Hamdan: “Errata” at Mor Charpentier Through June 18th, 2022

Tuesday, June 7th, 2022

Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Errata (Installation View), via Mor Charpentier
Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Errata (Installation View), via Mor Charpentier

Marking his second solo show at mor charpentier, British-Lebanese artist Lawrence Abu Hamdan continues a body of research on sound as legal evidence, focusing on the unbreakable relationship between testimony and the technology used to record it. Interested in the blind spots of global justice systems, the artist examines sound as a means to reveal historic acts of erasure and rupture. Here, that concept centers around the Nuremberg Trials, and the structures of justice and witnessing this process created and perpetuated.

Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Errata (Installation View), via Mor Charpentier
Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Errata (Installation View), via Mor Charpentier

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Los Angeles – Lynda Benglis: “Excavation” at Blum & Poe Through June 25th, 2022

Monday, June 6th, 2022

Lynda Benglis, Yellow Tail (2020), via Blum & Poe
Lynda Benglis, Yellow Tail (2020), via Blum & Poe

On view this month Blum & Poe, the gallery presents Excavation, marking the second solo exhibition of works by Lynda Benglis, continuing the artist’s work in soaring, swooping strokes of bronze. Alluding to themes of referencing the artist’s past in relation to her current work, and referring to the interchanges of positive and negative space as if one was digging or displacing earth, similar to the cast-making process.  (more…)

Los Angeles – Kevin Beasley: “On site” at Regen Projects Through June 22nd

Friday, June 3rd, 2022

Kevin Beasley, Wood shed (on improvisation) (2022), via Art Observed
Kevin Beasley, Wood shed (on improvisation) (2022), via Art Observed

This month at Regen Projects, artist Kevin Beasley brings forward a selection of dynamic new works that marks his first solo gallery show in LA. With a multidisciplinary practice that incorporates sculpture, drawing, installation, sound, music, and performance, Beasley probes the material and cultural conditions that shape our perception of history. His ability to alchemize ordinary material—specifically personal artifacts and articles of clothing—into sculptures that are simultaneously transcendent and familiar has placed him at the vanguard of artistic and cultural thought. That practice continues here. (more…)

New York – Celeste Rapone: “Nightshade” at Marianne Boesky Through June 11th, 2022

Thursday, June 2nd, 2022

Celeste Rapone, Muscle for Hire (2022), via Marianne Boesky
Celeste Rapone, Muscle for Hire (2022), via Marianne Boesky

On view at Marianne Boesky this month in New York, artist Celeste Rapone brings to bear a number of unique new canvases that underscore her investigation of painted space, and its ability to place itself directly between the imagined and the real. Marking Rapone’s first solo show with the gallery the artist continues to examine the potential of painting through the human form. Drawing inspiration from her native New Jersey, Rapone seeks to communicate both personal and collective feelings of anxiety, longing, and nostalgia experienced in contemporary life.

Celeste Rapone, Nightshade (Installation View), via Marianne Boesky
Celeste Rapone, Nightshade (Installation View), via Marianne Boesky

Rapone’s works focus on the figure, often centering on women protagonists whose bodies impossibly contort and twist up to the confines that Rapone creates within the painting, or at other times capturing a tender exchange between a pair of figures. Rapone produces her works without preliminary drawings, gradually building the compositions of her paintings through a dynamic interplay between scale, color, pattern, and the shapes of the human form. In the settings of her paintings, the artist populates the space with an array of allusions, pulling from art history, pop culture, autobiographical sources, and drawing influence from the stylized figuration introduced by the Chicago Imagists.

Celeste Rapone, Nightshade (Installation View), via Marianne Boesky
Celeste Rapone, Nightshade (Installation View), via Marianne Boesky

Celeste Rapone, Living Room (2022), via Marianne Boesky
Celeste Rapone, Living Room (2022), via Marianne Boesky

Ranging in scale, each work within the show is unique and multifaceted in its development. At times, Rapone has a narrative in mind from which a thematic environment evolves for her characters to navigate. In others, the onset of a work is driven by formalist concerns, in which the artist begins with a unique color configuration or an abstract composition of shapes that then influence the formation of a painting’s scene. The resulting forms of her figures, whose bodies defy the rules of proportions and scale, are both undeniably present and vulnerable within the canvases. These forms and figures swirl throughout the space, turning into a careful balance of constructed image and observations of life. Delving into a space that exists between the artist’s eye and constructed world, here she turns the body into a site for the negotiation of memory, site, longing and history.

The show closes June 11th.

– D. Creahan

Read more:
Celeste Rapone: Nightshade [Exhibition Site]

 

New York – Veronica Ryan: “Along A Spectrum” at Paula Cooper Gallery Through June 4th, 2022

Wednesday, June 1st, 2022

Veronica Ryan, Along A Spectrum (Installation View) via Paula Cooper
Veronica Ryan, Along A Spectrum (Installation View) via Paula Cooper

On view this month, and corresponding with her work on view at the Whitney Biennial this summer, artist Veronica Ryan brings a body of new compositions to Paula Cooper this month, underscoring a unique and open-ended series of material dialogues that showcase the artist’s investigation and interpretation of the language of the modern day. Capping off a whirlwind two years including an impressive series of shows and her recent recognition with an OBE, the show at Paula Cooper offers a rare but concise look at the concerns and questions her work poses.  (more…)

New York – Robert Rauschenberg: “Venetians and Early Egyptians, 1972-1974” at Gladstone Through June 18th, 2022

Tuesday, May 31st, 2022

Robert Rauschenberg, Untitled (Early Egyptian) (1973), via Gladstone
Robert Rauschenberg, Untitled (Early Egyptian) (1973), via Gladstone

Marking an expansive exploration of Robert Rauschenberg’s sculptural output at the peak of his ability, Gladstone Gallery and the Robert Rauschenberg have collaborated on a series of shows exploring his Venetian and Early Egyptians series. Spread across Gladstone’s Chelsea galleries, this show reveals Rauschenberg’s significant place in helping to define the history of post-Minimalist sculpture, seeing beyond what others decided should be the limits of art. Rauschenberg’s career was defined by the longing for work that existed beyond simple distinctions of medium, form and genre, often using found objects and collages of material to create hybridized material sites. The Venetian and Early Egyptian series blur the line between sculpture and painting, between waste and conservation, and between everyday objects and artworks. (more…)

New York – Richard Prince: “Hoods” at Gagosian Through June 25th, 2022

Thursday, May 26th, 2022

Richard Prince, Hoods (Installation View)
Richard Prince, Hoods (Installation View), all images via Art Observed

On view this month at Gagosian in Chelsea, artist Richard Prince has collected a body of work spanning over 30 years of practice, focusing in particular around his explorations of the iconography and imagery of American car culture. Titled Hoods, the show features a range of works that see Prince working with modified and customized car hoods, using their sculptural design as a point of entry for broader investigations of Americana, identity and time. Hoods will feature more than thirty works made over the span of twenty-five years, from 1988 through 2013, all personally selected by the artist for this exhibition, and which showcases loans from major institutions and private collections, including the Brant Foundation, New York and Greenwich, Connecticut; the Broad, Los Angeles; Colección Jumex, Mexico City; Glenstone, Potomac, Maryland; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Pinault Collection, Paris; and Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; as well as from the collection of the artist.

Richard Prince, What's What (1989)
Richard Prince, What’s What (1989)

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New York – Nicole Eisenman: ‘Untitled (Show)’ at Hauser & Wirth Through July 29th, 2022

Wednesday, May 25th, 2022

Nicole Eisenman, Maker's Muck (2022)
Nicole Eisenman, Maker’s Muck (2022)

Over the course of their career, the painter Nicole Eisenman has proved a master at the construction of new worlds, mixing together figurative rigor with an animated and expressive counter-world, arriving on a body of work that alternatives between lush, cartoonish bodies and meticulous depictions of close friends and sitters. For their first show at Hauser & Wirth in New York, the artist takes this mode to new heights, culling together an expansive range of sculpture, painting and drawing that underscores Eisenman’s ability to both reflect and refract reality in alternate measure. (more…)

New York – Lauren Halsey at David Kordansky Through June 11th, 2022

Tuesday, May 24th, 2022

Lauren Halsey, My Hope (2022)
Lauren Halsey, My Hope (2022)

Presenting a range of sculptural inventions, clusters of material, and incisive observations of the cultural landscape of the African-American experience, artist Lauren Halsey uses her work to imagine new possibilities for art, architecture, and community engagement. Combining found, fabricated, and handmade objects, her work maintains a sense of civic urgency and free flowing imagination, addressing crucial issues confronting Black people, queer populations, and the working class. This mode of work finds expressive footing in her new show at David Kordansky’s recently opened New York exhibition space, bringing together a range of work to create a shifting and colorful view of South Central LA.

Lauren Halsey, My Hope (detail) (2022)
Lauren Halsey, My Hope (detail) (2022)

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