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

New York – Mel Bocher and Alighiero Boetti: “Verba Volant Scripta Manent” at Totah Gallery Through May 15th, 2016

April 28th, 2016

Alighiero Boetti, Oggi Ventiduesimo giorno dell'ottavo mese dell'anno millenovecentootantotto (1988), via Art Observed
Alighiero Boetti, Oggi Ventiduesimo giorno dell’ottavo mese dell’anno millenovecentootantotto (1988), via Art Observed

There’s a tangible spirit of enthusiasm in the opening exhibition for Totah Gallery in the Lower East Side, a dual exhibition exploring the work of Alighiero Boetti and Mel Bochner in concert.  The pairing, at face value, seems obvious; a pair of artist’s whose roughshod textual inversions made established their roles in the language and semiotic turns in art during the 1970’s.  Yet proprietor and principle curator David Totah’s investment in the broader material aspects of both artist’s careers unfolds here into a nuanced exhibition that rewards deeper readings and lingering views on each composition.  It’s a point of focus that he will continue at the space, driving research-heavy installs that blend history with personal encounter, always emphasizing exchanges between the artists and his own relationships with them.

Mel Bocher and Alighiero Boetti, Verba Volant Scripta Manent (Instsallation View), via Art Observed
Mel Bocher and Alighiero Boetti, Verba Volant Scripta Manent (Installation View), via Art Observed Read More »

London – Mark Wallinger: “ID” at Hauser and Wirth Through May 7th, 2016

April 27th, 2016

Mark Wallinger, Ego (2016), via Art Observed
Mark Wallinger, Ego (2016), via Art Observed

Taking over Hauser and Wirth London for his first solo exhibition with the gallery, Mark Wallinger has brought a nuanced collection of both new and recent works, showcasing the artist’s unique interests in the associative and perceptual variations of one’s encounter with the surrounding world, mixing together explicit psychoanalytic technique with less concrete forms that trace the body’s relation to the urban environment, or the preservation of time through similar modes of engagement.   Read More »

New York – Alexis Rockman: “A Natural History of Life in New York City” at Salon 94 Through May 5th, 2016

April 26th, 2016

Alexis Rockman, Cervid Cervacles (Jacob Riis Beach, Queens), (2015), via Salon 94
Alexis Rockman, Cervid Cervacles (Jacob Riis Beach, Queens) (2015), via Salon 94

Alexis Rockman’s work is expressly involved in the correlations between image and ground, material and subject, often pulling from the biological intersections of human and animal, flora and fauna, or land and water, that define the landscapes of modernity.  Shifting this focus to a more microcosmic level, the artist has opened a show of drawings of New York City wildlife, a project that heightens his sense of delicate relations between nature and its inhabitants, on view at Salon 94. Read More »

New York – Tacita Dean : ‘…my English breath in foreign clouds’ at Marian Goodman, New York Through April 23, 2016

April 23rd, 2016

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Tacita Dean, A Concordance of Fifty American Clouds (2015-2016), via Sophie Kitching for Art Observed

The Marian Goodman Gallery, New York presents ‘…my English breath in foreign clouds’, a comprehensive survey of Tacita Dean’s recent works: a collection of clouds observed from Los Angeles, three 16mm films including the striking ‘Event for a stage’ (2015) and ‘Portraits’ (2016), an intimate one on one with David Hockney smoking in his studio, as well as a photographic series newly printed on Cibachrome paper, ‘Gaeta 2015 – Fifty photographs, plus one’ (2015) which subtly links Cy Twombly’s house and studio in Italy with the poetics of his thinking process.

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New York: Ellsworth Kelly “Photographs” at Matthew Marks Gallery Through April 30th, 2016

April 23rd, 2016

Ellsworth Kelly, Barn, Long Island (1968), via Matthew Marks Gallery
Ellsworth Kelly, Barn, Long Island (1968), via Matthew Marks Gallery

The late Ellsworth Kelly’s photographic works are the subject of the artist’s first posthumous gallery exhibition in New York this month, offering a unique and alternative perspective on an artist already seen as one of the most influential and prominent abstractionists of the 20th Century.  The show, on view at Matthew Marks in Chelsea, showcases over thirty gelatin silver prints, originally taken between 1950 and 1982, the first ever devoted to Kelly’s photographic endeavors.  Kelly finished preparing these prints and planning the exhibition shortly before his death on December 27th, at the age of ninety-two.  Here, these photographs offer a fitting perspective of the artist’s own aesthetic inclinations, and his unique perspective for the world around him. Read More »

Los Angeles – Alex Israel and Brett Easton Ellis at Gagosian Gallery Through April 23rd, 2016

April 21st, 2016

Alex Israel & Brett Easton Ellis, Born and Not Made (2016), © Alex Israel and Bret Easton Ellis; image(s) courtesy iStock and Gagosian Gallery Photography: Jeff McLane
Alex Israel & Brett Easton Ellis, Born and Not Made (2016), all images © Alex Israel and Bret Easton Ellis; courtesy iStock and Gagosian Gallery Photography: Jeff McLane

Marking one of the art world’s more unique collaborations in recent years, Alex Israel has partnered with writer Brett Easton Ellis to create a series of large-scale acrylic and ink canvases, reveling in the unique iconography and landscapes of Los Angeles.  The show, which opened earlier this Winter at Gagosian’s Beverly Hills location, combines Ellis’s distinctively modern texts with Israel’s particular blend of pop-influenced wit, here manifested in sprawling scenes from the varying spheres and vistas of Los Angeles’s shifting landscape.

Alex Israel & Brett Easton Ellis (Installation View)
Alex Israel & Brett Easton Ellis (Installation View)

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New York — T. J. Wilcox: “Equivalents” at Gladstone Gallery Through April 23rd, 2016

April 20th, 2016

T. J. Wilcox, Word on a Wing (The Girl) (2016)
T. J. Wilcox, Word on a Wing (The Girl) (2016), all images via Osman Can Yerebakan for Art Observed

“Staring at the starry field, I ardently hoped…” intones T. J. Wilcox in Word on a Wing (Altar Boy), one of four poems the artist penned for Equivalents, his first exhibition at Gladstone Gallery.  On view through April 23rd, the exhibition urges its audience to stare upwards, much in the same way as protagonist of Wilcox’s poems, to break with the conventional exhibition viewing experience.  Dispersed throughout the high ceilings of the otherwise empty gallery interior are hybrids of steel, Plexiglass and projected video, glaring in the dimly-lit space. Read More »

New York – Fischli/Weiss: “How to Work Better” at The Guggenheim Museum Through April 27th, 2016

April 18th, 2016

Fischli Weiss, Rat and Bear (Sleeping) (2008), via Art Observed
Fischli/Weiss, Rat and Bear (Sleeping) (2008), via Art Observed

The Guggenheim has opened its doors to Swiss collaborative Fischli/Weiss for the retrospective show How to Work Better, exploring the pair’s lighthearted, often satirical manipulations of reality and art history through their unique modes of creation. Read More »

New York – Qiu Xiaofei: “Double Pendulum” at Pace Gallery Through April 23rd, 2016

April 17th, 2016

Qiu Xiaofei, Vortex (2015)
Qiu Xiaofei, Vortex (2015), all photos via Rui Tang for Art Observed

Double Pendulum, the first solo exhibition of Qiu Xiaofei in North America, is currently on view at Pace Gallery on 510 West 25th Street. Showcasing a group of new paintings, the exhibition presents the artist’s transition towards an abstract expression through a range of colors that complicate the relationships between foreground and background. Read More »

New York – Hernan Bas: Bright Young Things Is On View at Lehmann Maupin Through April 23, 2016

April 16th, 2016

 

Hernan Bas, Champagne Corks Bobbed in the Pool That Morning, 2016

Hernan Bas, Champagne Corks Bobbed in the Pool That Morning, 2016

Bright Young Things is Lehmann Maupin’s ongoing exhibition for a new body of work by Detroit and Miami-based painter Hernan Bas.  Amongst the most particular and earnest contemporary figurative painters, Bas has established himself over the past years as a craftsman of distinctive visual narratives, in which the lavish and relentlessly indulgent daily life of western aristocracy meets the styles of mannerist painting, employing passionate color spectrums and surreal architectural forms. Read More »