Archive for the 'Show' Category

AO On-Site: The Opening of Miami Art Week, November 29th, 2016

Wednesday, November 30th, 2016

Thomas Bayrle at ICA Miami (Installation View), via Art Observed
Thomas Bayrle at ICA Miami (Installation View), via Art Observed

As dealers, artists and insiders continue to arrive en masse to South Florida, the first days of Miami Art Week have kicked into full gear, with a first round of openings and events setting the pace for the week before Art Basel Miami Beach opens to the public tomorrow. With both first looks at several fairs and a number of premiere openings, Tuesday night’s proceedings were a first look at the hectic week ahead.

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AO Preview – Miami Beach: Miami Art Week and Art Basel Miami Beach, November 30th – December 4th, 2016

Sunday, November 27th, 2016

Josef Albers, Homage to the Square Zwischen Zwei Blau (Between Two Blues) (1955), via David Zwirner.jpg
Josef Albers, Homage to the Square: Zwischen Zwei Blau (Between Two Blues) (1955), via David Zwirner

As 2016 winds into its final weeks, the art world will once again head south for the annual fairs and festivities of Miami Art Week, headed by Art Basel Miami Beach, its satellite fairs, and other openings, events, parties and performances spread across the Biscayne Bay.  Taking up almost a full week this December, the increasingly diverse offerings should offer a packed last week of major sales and shows before the art world closes out the fall season.

Gao Ludi, Untitled (2015-2016), via White Space
Gao Ludi, Untitled (2015-2016), via White Space

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New York – Pipilotti Rist: “Pixel Forest” at New Museum Through January 15th, 2107

Friday, November 25th, 2016

Pipilotti Rist, Pixel Forest (2016), via Art Observed
Pipilotti Rist, Pixel Forest (2016), via Art Observed

Pixel Forest, the first New York City museum survey dedicated to the work of Swiss artist Pipilotti Rist, has opened this month at the New Museum, turning three floors of the museum into a swirling progression of images and senses, colors and lights.  Twisting and moving through a series of works from the full breadth of Rist’s career, the show melds classic pieces with new commissions, well-regarded installations with new information and conversations across the expanse of her practice. (more…)

New York – William Eggleston: “Selected Works from The Democratic Forest” at David Zwirner Through December 17th, 2016

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2016

William Eggleston, Untitled from The Democratic Forest, c. (1983-1986), via Art Observed
William Eggleston, Untitled from The Democratic Forest, (c. 1983-1986), via Art Observed

There are few photographers who have left a mark on their medium in the way that William Eggleston has over the course of his career.  Pioneering an approach to the photograph as meticulous as it is seemingly effortless, Eggleston’s work has charted a path and progression through both his own chosen craft and the American landscape.  Capturing subdued, yet sublime moments of life across the country, from momentary pauses in urban bustle to the somber stillness of the American rural South.  Now, the Tennessee-born artist is revisiting his landmark project The Democratic Forest at David Zwirner in New York, a look back at the artist’s career that simultaneously marks his first exhibition since joining the gallery for global representation.

William Eggleston, Untitled from The Democratic Forest, (c. 1983-1986), via Art Observed
William Eggleston, Untitled from The Democratic Forest, (c. 1983-1986), via Art Observed

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Paris – Maurizio Cattelan: “Not Afraid of Love” at The Monnaie de Paris Through January 8th, 2017

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2016

Maurizio Cattelan, Novecento (1979), via Art Observed
Maurizio Cattelan, Novecento (1979), via Art Observed

“This exhibition is the very first, after the Guggenheim show, that has more than three of my works altogether: it is a special editing of things I’ve done before retiring. Let’s say it is a post-requiem show, where, like in a Poe’s novel, I’m pretending to be dead, but I can still see and hear what happens around.” So states Maurizio Cattelan in the opening of his press release for Not Afraid of Love, a “comeback at work” that brings together a sizable collection of the artist’s irreverent sculptures and installations at the Monnaie de Paris, a show that stands as both a look back at the artist’s work and a renewed perspective on just what the art world has been missing since Cattelan took a step back from producing art several years ago.

Maurizio Cattelan, Untitled (2007), via Art Observed
Maurizio Cattelan, Untitled (2007), via Art Observed

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Somerset – Louise Bourgeois: “Turning Inwards” at Hauser & Wirth Through January 1st, 2017

Monday, November 21st, 2016

Louise Bourgeois, My Blue Sky (1989-2003), via Hauser and Wirth
Louise Bourgeois, My Blue Sky (1989-2003), via Hauser & Wirth

During the last decade of her life, Louise Bourgeois began immersing herself in the techniques of soft-ground etching, rendering delicate lines and twisting, nuanced forms on a series of copper plates before transferring the images to paper.  Combining a number of the artist’s long-running pictorial interests in conjunction with her often inventive approach to both her tools and her own personal history, the works stand as a striking, yet subdued, re-interpretation of her own practice, branching out into new modes of practice in her final years.

Louise Bourgeois, Turning Inwards (Installation View), via Hauser and Wirth
Louise Bourgeois, Turning Inwards (Installation View), via Hauser & Wirth

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Paris – “Olympia” Curated by Karma at Galerie Patrick Seguin Through November 26th, 2016

Sunday, November 20th, 2016

parrino
Steven Parrino, Untitled (1991), all images courtesy Patrick Seguin

On-view through November 26th, 2016, Galerie Patrick Seguin presents Olympia, in collaboration with New York-based gallery and bookstore Karma, one in a series of annual shows hosted by the gallery, entitled Carte Blanche, in which international galleries are invited to organize and curate exhibitions at the Paris space.  Drawing on a wide range of artists’ works on paper, the show features pieces by Wade Guyton, Sigmar Polke, Willem de Kooning, Louise Bourgeois, Pablo Picasso, and more. (more…)

New York – Carmen Herrera: “Lines of Sight” at the Whitney Museum Through January 2nd, 2016

Saturday, November 19th, 2016

Carmen Herrera, Green and Orange (1958), via Art Observed
Carmen Herrera, Green and Orange (1958), via Art Observed

Taking over the top floor of the Whitney this fall is Lines of Sight, an exhibition delving into the first thirty years of Cuban-born artist Carmen Herrera’s unique investigations into the color field, minimalist abstraction, and the practice of painting.  On view through 2017, it provides a fitting context for the artist’s ongoing body of work, which now reaches into its seventh decade. (more…)

New York — GCC: “Positive Pathways (+)” at Mitchell-Innes & Nash Through November 23rd, 2016

Saturday, November 19th, 2016

GCC, Positive Pathways (+) Version II (2016)
GCC, Positive Pathways (+) Version II (2016), All images © GCC; Courtesy of the artists and Mitchell-Innes & Nash, NY Photo: Adam Reich

GCC, an art collective tapping on cultural and social implications of change in the Arab Gulf Region, last exhibited in New York in 2014, when MoMA PS1 opened the group’s first American solo exhibition, Achievements in Retrospective, followed by their inclusion in the New Museum exhibition Here and Elsewhere.  The collective, comprised of eight artist-“delegates,” all born or raised in the region, returns to the city for Positive Pathways (+) at Mitchell-Innes & Nash this month, presenting the show’s eponymous sculpture, originally exhibited at the DIS-curated Berlin Biennale this summer, alongside a group of sculptural reliefs created using Thermoforming techniques. (more…)

AO Auction Results – New York: Sotheby’s Post-War and Contemporary Evening Sale, November 17th, 2016

Friday, November 18th, 2016

Gerhard Richter, A.B. Still (1986), final price $33,987,500, via Christie's
Gerhard Richter, A.B. Still (1986), final price: $33,987,500, via Sotheby’s

Concluding the last major week of auction sales before the end of a rollercoaster calendar year, Sotheby’s capped an impressively consistent sale of Post-War and Contemporary artworks last night in New York City, a 64-lot outing that saw the auction house continue to upend expectations in a week that has been defined by unexpected records and several marquee auction records.  The sale reached a final tally of $276,560,750, with 4 of 64 works unsold. (more…)

AO Auction Results – New York: Phillips 20th Century Evening Sale and Christie’s Impressionist and Modern Evening Sale, November 16th, 2016

Wednesday, November 16th, 2016

Claude Monet, Meule (1891), final price: $81,447,500, via Christie's
Claude Monet, Meule (1891), final price: $81,447,500, via Christie’s

Doubling down on Wednesday night, Phillips and Christie’s went back to back on a marathon pair of auctions, Phillips with its 20th Century Sale and Christie’s with its Impressionist and Modern sale, that pushed the fall auction week to near completion with surprisingly potent results, including a new auction record for both Claude Monet and Wassily Kandinsky.   (more…)

New York — Tetsumi Kudo at Andrea Rosen Gallery Through November 16th, 2016

Wednesday, November 16th, 2016

Tetsumi Kudo at Andrea Rosen Gallery (Installation View), All images are by Osman Can Yerebakan for Art Observed.
Tetsumi Kudo (Installation View), All images are by Osman Can Yerebakan for Art Observed.

Following three group exhibitions, contextualizing artist Tetsumi Kudo’s oeuvre in conversation with peers such as Paul Thek, Hannah Wilke, and Alina Szapocznikow, Andrea Rosen Gallery is currently presenting the third solo exhibition dedicated to the late Japanese artist.  Bridging his hometown and Europe through the course of his career, Kudo demonstrated a rare artistic vision and intellectual perspective that led his work to be regarded alongside that of Joseph Beuys, Yayoi Kusama, and Mike Kelley, one of the artist’s foremost admirers and an avid supporter of his work in the West.

Tetsumi Kudo, Portrait D'Artiste dans la Crise (1977)
Tetsumi Kudo, Portrait D’Artiste dans la Crise (1977)

Kudo, heavily influenced by the political turmoil and commercialist phenomena during the post-war era in both the East and the West, began his bird cage sculptures during the mid 1960’s, shortly after moving to Paris, and continued the series until the beginning of the ‘80’s.  Store-bought bird cages, in various sizes and colors, house an ample span of mundane and extraordinary objects and artifacts, each twisted through Kudoo’s uniquely enigmatic perspective and consumed by the intersection of narratives that take place within its barred confines.

Tetsumi Kudo (Installation View)
Tetsumi Kudo (Installation View)

While Japan’s “anti-art” movement in the 1950’s ushered the artist to rebuff dominant art practicism and to experiment with banal and everyday materials, his tenure in Paris immersed his work in a conversation with the avant-garde experimentalism of the neo-Dada circles, in which he organized and performed happenings that blurred the separation between art and reality.

Tetsumi Kudo, Portrait of Artist in the Crisis (1978)
Tetsumi Kudo, Portrait of Artist in the Crisis (1978)

This same sense of attenuated reality persists here, as his sculptures, meticulously installed on pedestals throughout the exhibition space, pushes an engagement with consumer-grade objects en route to portrayal of socio-political and ideological milestones that shaped our understanding of the 20th century.  Western consumerism collides with perceptions of the body, while the historical introduction of such commercial goods to Japanese society remains a dominant narrative point on the surface in these multi-faceted sculptures.

Nevertheless, the scrutiny of European humanism and its impact on colonialism, war, and social alienation also present themselves, woven through the installation by inclusions of phalluses, bodily decay, and images of degradation, references to the cultural impact of the Vietnam War and a future governed by technological mastery.  These sculptures interpret the past and narrate the future through Kudo’s nuanced scope, encapsulating the dichotomies embedded in the human condition.

Tetsumi Kudo (Installation View)
Tetsumi Kudo (Installation View)

Tetsumi Kudo is on view at Andrea Rosen Gallery through November 16, 2016.

— O.C. Yerebakan

Related Link:
Andrea Rosen Gallery [Exhibition Page]

AO Auction Results – New York: Christie’s Post-War and Contemporary Evening Sale, November 15th, 2016

Wednesday, November 16th, 2016

Willem de Kooning, Untitled XXV (1977), via Art Observed
Willem de Kooning, Untitled XXV (1977), which sets a new world record at $66,327,500  via Art Observed

New York City’s week of marquee auctions, and its seemingly unpredictable results, continued tonight, as Christie’s concluded its offering in the Post-War and Contemporary markets, an impressively strong and consistent sale that saw 7 of 61 lots going unsold to reach a final tally of $276,972,500. (more…)

AO Auction Results – New York: Sotheby’s Impressionist and Modern Evening Sale, November 14th, 2016

Tuesday, November 15th, 2016

Edvard Munch, Girls on the Bridge (1902), via Art Observed
Edvard Munch, Girls on the Bridge (1902), via Art Observed

The packed week of New York auctions began uptown tonight, as Sotheby’s capped its Impressionist and Modern Evening Sale this evening to unexpectedly energetic results, reaching a final tally of $157,714,75o, with 9 of the night’s 42 lots offered going unsold.  Auctioneer Helena Newman led a brisk sale over the course of the evening, coordinating quick back and forth bids that kept prices rising and works moving quickly, a performance that earned a number of strong sales in the early lots, and kept momentum high until the last lots of the sale, when enthusiasm seemed to peter out. (more…)

AO Auction Preview – New York Auction Week, November 14th – 17th, 2016

Sunday, November 13th, 2016

Willem de Kooning, Untitled XXV (1977), via Christie's
Willem de Kooning, Untitled XXV (1977), via Christie’s

As the fall season moves towards December, the last major auction week of the year is set to kick off in New York, with a series of sales set to take place that will offer the last major barometer for the auction market’s health in a turbulent, and often unpredictable, year.  Beginning Monday, a series of both Impressionist/Modern and Contemporary Evening auctions will bring the last set of major works to the auction block in the U.S. before the market prepares for the holiday months.

Andy Warhol, Self-Portrait (Fright-Wig) (1986), via Sotheby's
Andy Warhol, Self-Portrait (Fright-Wig) (1986), via Sotheby’s

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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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