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WUM NEWS NEW YORK: Rachel Uffner Gallery To Present Works by Artists Leonard Hurzlmeier & Pam Lins at Frieze NY '16

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Leonhard Hurzlmeier,Black Beach Beauty (Blue Suite, Cobalt), 2016, oil on canvas, 39.37 x 27.56 inches; Pam Lins, model, 2015, glazed ceramic, 6 5/8 x 5 7/8 x 8 1/4 inches. Images Courtesy of Rachel Uffner Gallery
The NYC-based gallery Rachel Uffner Galleryhas announced participation at Frieze New York 2016 [May 4th-May 8th] at Randall's Island Park featuring works [Booth D20] by Munich-based artist Leonard Hurzlmeierand NY-based artist Pam Lins.

Hurzlmeier will be presenting a suite of six new paintings entitled "The Blue Suite." 

Hurzlmeier's practice slows down the process of looking. Building on the history of portraiture, he plays with our perceived notions of what it is to look at a portrait (á la cubism).  

The discomfort created by Hurzlmeier's voyeurism of real-life women is balanced by his use of art historical methodology, abstraction, and humor.

For Frieze New York, Pam Lins will be presenting a project conceived of during David and Roberta Logie Fellowship at Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University from 2013-14. 

Enzo Mari tables from his open-source manual Autoprogettazione 1974 are combined with ceramic sculptures that the artist recreated from photographs of a classroom at VKhUTEMAS, the school of art, architecture, and design founded in Moscow in 1920. 

Lins' conceptual practice is manifested in the laborious recreation of objects seen only in photographs.  

Both the meaning of the objects as well as the formal elements are blurred when revealed only in a photograph - the recreation of these objects encourages us to re-examine our perception. 

The viewer must walk around the sculptures to see the color that Lins has just added to one side - the side hidden in a black and white photograph.

Michael Bell-Smith, Sascha Braunig, Petra Cortright and Travess Smalley at Frieze NY '16

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Petra Cortright,ntkern fantasia strip, 2016, polyurethane, resin, stainless steel and paint, 17 × 16 × 15 1/2 in. Photo credit: Steven Rimlinger via Foxy Production

WUM NEWS NEW YORK–The East Broadway-based gallery in Manhattan Foxy Production has announced participation this year at Frieze NY 2016 at Randall's Island Park from May 5th-8th, 2016 featuring [Booth C28] works by Michael Bell-Smith, Sascha Braunig, Petra Cortright and Travess Smalley.

WUM NEWS L.A.: Honor Fraser Presents default, Ten Artists Featuring New Symbols of Readymades

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Victoria Fu,Belle Captive II, 2013. Video with sound 6 min. loop (still) Edition of 8 +2 AP.Image Courtesy of Honor Fraser
Often seen in early online publishing platforms like Angelfire or WordPress, defaults are preselected options computer programs provide when no alternative is specified by the user. 

As artist Guthrie Lonergan notes on his webpage Hacking vrs. defaults (2007), the most banal websites are generally constructed from these preselected options. 

In desktop computer programs like Photoshop and iMovie, defaults allow users to digitally mimic complex aesthetic techniques like color gradients with the click of a mouse. 

The result can be described as what artist Michael Bell-Smith referred to in his 2013 talk "Image Employment" at MoMA PS1 as the "readymade affect."

In 1915, Marcel Duchamp first applied the term "readymade" to his sculpture "Prelude" to a "Broken Arm," a store-bought snow shovel suspended from the ceiling. 

By using the term readymade to describe an aesthetic affect achieved via digital defaults, Bell-Smith aligns intangible phenomena online with tangible objects in physical space, positioning the default in direct dialogue with the historical readymade. 

The artists in this Honor Fraser collective show utilize mass-produced objects, found images, video, or basic computer software default settings as readymades, thereby raising questions about the status of images and the concept of the unique art object in the broader culture.

Trisha Baga (b. 1985) creates layered, immersive installations with found objects, video, and photographs often incorporating items from her studio.

When Jesse Stecklow (b. 1993) found a discarded dog feeder on a sidewalk, he approached Morgan Canavan (b. 1989) to help him reinterpret its function. 

Using The Financial Times as a starting point, Canavan rearranged images from the newspaper to create new layouts that he then scanned and printed onto metal sheets. 

Placing a dog whistle inside, Stecklow repurposed the erstwhile feeder as a base for Canavan's "newspapers."

Cheryl Donegan (b. 1962) is equally influenced by technology and fashion. Sourcing video from YouTube or shooting original footage with her iPhone, Donegan uploads edited videos to the social media platform Vine for her ongoing video Vines. 

Intended to be viewed at 480 pixels on a smartphone screen, the videos' low resolution yields pixelated and distorted images when scaled up to a monitor.

In the series Belle Captive, Victoria Fu (b. 1978) employs stock videos, photographs, and sound that she finds on the Internet. 

As with many of Fu's works, the presentation of the videos in the series incorporate the surrounding architecture and artist-designed architectural elements to give structure to ephemeral digital images. 

Removing the subjects from their original backgrounds in found stock videos and photographs, Fu places the figures in front of soft, soothing washes of color that are reminiscent of Color Field paintings and reference the history of cameraless films.

To make his new video series Events, Appointments, & Errands, Guthrie Lonergan (b. 1984) collected personal photographs from photo sharing websites like Flickr. 

Operating like a slideshow or PowerPoint presentation, the videos float from one still image to the next. Calling attention to hackneyed techniques for creating "dynamic" presentations of still images, Lonergan uses rudimentary animation techniques available in iMovie to zoom in or pan out. 

Collectively known as Miami-Dutch, Lauren Elder (b. 1990), Brian Khek (b. 1989), André Lenox (b. 1990), Evan Lenox (b. 1990), and Micah Schippa (b. 1988) devised their name from references to a near-extinct language (Miami-Illinois) and a dialect known as Jersey Dutch that disappeared generations ago. 

Although they all lived together during their time at the Art Institute of Chicago, they are now scattered across the country and rely on the internet to sustain their collaborations. 

Mirroring principles of the "creative economy," Miami-Dutch mine culture to create new symbols to distill contemporary experience.

Erin Jane Nelson (b. 1989) prints fabric with found and original digital images then pieces it together with found clothing, baubles, keepsakes, and detritus in elaborate quilts.

Recalling paintings and sculptures by artists like Frank Stella and Jeff Koons, Adam Parker Smith's (b. 1978) bombastic sculptures extrude from the wall like an exaggerated form of bas relief. 

Smith strategically overlays and weaves readymade materials and objects to create real-world layers that mimic the digital layers familiar to those who use Photoshop.

Stacks and boxes of vintage Time Life Books collections fill corners of Mungo Thomson's (b. 1969) studio. 

Procured from e-commerce websites like eBay, the book sets cover topics from Special Effects to Gems to Home Repair and Improvement. The sculptures evoke ideas about the legitimation and transmission of knowledge during an age of transition from books to websites, libraries to the Internet.

WUM NEWS NEW YORK: Anish Kapoor at Gladstone Gallery: "Today You Will Be In Paradise"

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Anish Kapoor, Internal Object in Three Parts, 2013-2015
Installation view: Anish Kapoor & Rembrandt at the Rijksmuseum, 2015-2016.
Photo Courtesy of Gladstone Gallery
The prestigious Gladstone Gallery in New York City has announced that celebrated artist Indian-born, London-based Anish Kapoor will be exhibiting his most recent works across both of the Gallery’s Chelsea locations from May 4-June 11, 2016.

This two-part exhibition entitled "Today You Will Be In Paradise" demonstrates Kapoor’s ongoing exploration of the formal and conceptual framework that has informed his artistic practice for over three decades, bringing together the highly engineered and more organic processes within his oeuvre. 

The exhibition will feature a series of reliefs and sculptures composed of tumultuous layers of red and white silicone and paint, as well as concave voids in polished stainless steel and matte fiberglass. 

At once austere and intimate, messy and refined, Kapoor’s work dually confronts and expands conditions of matter, perception, and metaphor.

“Internal Object in Three Parts” (2013-15) is a three-panel relief in painted silicone and wax and was exhibited this year at the Rijksmuseum in “Anish Kapoor & Rembrandt.” 

The reliefs appear visceral and daunting, reminiscent of mangled, bloody flesh-like forms. 

In these heavily layered paintings, Kapoor amplifies the material associations of the red malleable wax he has explored in depth in earlier mechanized installations such as “My Red Homeland” (2003), “Svayambh” (2005), and “Shooting into the Corner” (2009). 

In these panels the corporeal forms seethe with raw, vertiginous, lurching effect, as shapes come into form as both contingent matter and restless proposition.

In Kapoor’s syncretic practice, organic forms and materials are juxtaposed with polished, geometric sculptures that both expand and compress a viewer’s sense of space. 

This exhibition will feature one monumental earth and resin sculpture on a marble pedestal, as well as the reflective and polished voids for which Kapoor is well known. 

Both minimal and heavily worked surfaces prevail, as opposing forces retain and reflect light with resounding formal and phenomenological effect. 

Asking that the viewer become as much aware of the sculpture’s shape and volume as his or her own bodily form is a touchstone of Kapoor’s work.

Anish Kapoor was born in 1954 in Bombay, India, and has lived and worked in London since 1973. 

Recent major solo exhibitions of his work have been presented at the Château de Versailles, Versailles; the Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center, Moscow; Sakıp Sabancı Museum, Istanbul; Martin Gropius Bau, Berlin; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney; Le Grand Palais, Paris; National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi; Museo Guggenheim Bilbao, Bilbao; the Tate Modern, London; and Fondazione Prada, Milan. 

Kapoor received the Premio Duemila in 1990 for his British Pavilion at the 44th Venice Biennale and was awarded the Turner Prize in 1991; he was awarded a CBE in 2003 and a Knighthood in 2013 for dedication to visual arts.

Van Doren Waxter To Feature Solo Booths at Frieze NY and Basel Unlimited with works by Alan Shields

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Alan Shields,Home Steady, 1973, watercolor, stitching, rope on handmade paper, 20 1/2 x 20 1/4 inches. Image Courtesy of Van Doren Waxter
The NYC-based Van Doren Waxter has announced participation with two presentations of work by celebrated artist Alan Shields (1944-2005) in a solo booth for Frieze Spotlight '16, and an installation for Art Basel's Unlimited '16 section.

Following a two-decade period of dominance by the Abstract Expressionists, New York’s art world was primed for new modes of thinking. 

Few expected that a 1969 show at Paula Cooper Gallery of the work of an unheralded transplant from the Midwest would prescribe the jolt.

Born in Kansas and raised on his family’s farmland, Alan Shields approached a growing interest in Post-Minimalism—a movement co-opted by installation and land artists like Richard Serra and Robert Smithson—with a synthesis of material assemblages that synthesized the lingering hippiedom of the 60s and non-Western imagery with ideas from Color Field painting and conceptualism into a radical, thoroughly sui generis amalgam.

Shields engaged in an extensive and diverse practice, leaving behind a body of work that includes sculptures, paintings, prints, works on paper and wearable work, among other experiments with handmade paper, string, cotton pulp, steel and stop-motion animation. 

Unlike marquee name artists who doggedly sought a marketable style, Shields was governed only by his Catholic interests. 

Insofar as he adopted a signature style, it might be his complete rejection of stretched canvases, favoring far more the negative space formed by his tactile constructions.

Influenced by the theories of the designer and inventor BuckminsterFuller, Shields (who had studied civil engineering) created work to be, as he said, “more spiritually uplifting.” 

This translated into suspended sculptural paintings which incorporate thread, rope, string and beads, each work meant to be activated as the viewer moves around them.

At Frieze New York, Van Doren Waxter will exhibit a selection of 21 pieces, including an early sewn work on raw canvas, Go Round Rubber Ring (1968), which signals Shield’s interest in systems from which he never wavered. 

Rectangles, stars, pyramids and circles populate his work provide its framework and inform later pieces.

Gradually, Shields developed his sense of riotous color applied in large fields and punctuated by drawing with thread and over-painting, as in Oskar Thryller wilsondar (1971) or Who Sez It’s Dirty (1973), one of several watercolor on paper towel pieces included here. 

Inverted Gumdrop (1972-73) is a fine example of his use of cotton belting, which he painted and wove into unique shapes that could be seen from multiple viewpoints.

For Basel’s Unlimited section, Van Doren Waxter will exhibit Maze (1981-82), the largest and most ambitious work of Shield’s career.

This interactive installation integrates Shield’s deep interest in painting, sculpture and performance into one dynamic work. 

Elements and motifs from Shields’ canvases and hanging grid works resonate within Maze. 

Large, bright swathes of mottled color punctuated with multi-colored dots, triangles and stripes are strung together on an armature of painted poles. 

Two egresses encourage the viewer to enter and seek an exit, guided through the interior of painted canvas walls and webs of cotton belting. 

The interior is simultaneously opaque and transparent as some portions of the labyrinth are obscured and others revealed, presenting a new perspective with each turn.

Maze was exhibited at Van Doren Waxter in 2012 as Into The Maze, an action event created and choreographed by Stephen Petronio and set to a piece of music composed by Tom Laurie, inspired by a short melody written by Alan Shields

Conceived as a duet between eight dancers and Shields’ fantastical installation.

Shields, who died at his home on Shelter Island in 2005, left behind a legacy which continues to reverberate.  He was the recipient of a 1973 Guggenheim Fellowship. 

His works are included in the collections of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Tate Britain, London; the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum; the Metropolitan Museum of Art; and the Whitney Museum of American Art, among many others.

Was Venezuelan-American Artist Marisol a Pop Artist or Not?

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Maria Sol Escobar. Photo by Jack Mitchell via Getty Images
Marisol in 1964 with her sculpture “The Kennedy Family.” Photo by Sam Falk/The New York Times
Via The New York TimesBy William Grimes

Marisol, a Venezuelan-American artist who fused Pop Art imagery and folk art in assemblages and sculptures that, together with her mysterious, Garboesque persona, made her one of the most compelling artists on the New York scene in the 1960s, died on Saturday April 30th, 2016 in Manhattan. She was 85.
The cause was pneumonia, Julia M. Ruthizer, her executor, said.

María Sol Escobar, who adopted Marisol as her name when she began exhibiting in New York in the late 1950s, introduced a distinctive new element to the emerging Pop Art lexicon. 

Influenced equally by pre-Columbian art and the assemblages of Robert Rauschenberg, she began constructing tableaus of carved wooden figures embellished with drawings, fabric and found objects.
“The Family,” exhibited at the Stable Gallery in 1962, showed a painted-wood family reminiscent of Dorothea Lange’s photographs of the Dust Bowl: a seated mother holding a baby, her three children standing at her side, all staring stiffly at the viewer. 

They wore real shoes and sneakers. It was a down-market counterpart to her 1960 work “The Kennedy Family,” which made the first family look like a set of tribal totems.

Critics were puzzled. 

Was Marisol a Pop artist or not? The critic Lucy Lippard, in “Pop Art” (1966), said no, calling her work “a sophisticated and theatrical folk art” that had nothing to do with Pop. 

It was often overtly political and funny — “clever as the very devil and catty as can be,” John Canaday wrote in The New York Times of her 1967 exhibition featuring sculpture caricatures of the British royal family, President Lyndon B. Johnson and other eminent figures. She drew on celebrity images, as well, creating sculptures of John Wayne and Bob Hope.
Marisol often appeared at parties beside Andy Warhol, who turned the camera on her in his underground films “The Kiss” (1962) and “13 Most Beautiful Women” (1963). 

She returned the favor by creating a seated Warhol out of wooden boxes and table legs.

As Warhol did, Marisol turned self-absorption into an art form, incorporating casts of her own body parts and images of her face into works like “The Party,” whose 13 figures and two servants all derived from her own features. 

She also fused commercial products with her work, most notably in “Love” (1962), in which a cast of her own open mouth received an upended Coca-Cola bottle.
Like Warhol and his disciple Jeff Koons, Marisol was aloof and opaque, a master of the gnomic pronouncement. 

“I don’t think much myself,” she told the critic Brian O’Doherty in The Times in 1964. “When I don’t think, all sorts of things come to me.”
Marisol’s first show at Sidney Janis in 1966 drew the largest crowds in the history of that gallery. 

She was enormously popular but interviewers found her elusive, and her personal aura nearly eclipsed the art.
The “Marisol legend,” Grace Glueck wrote in The New York Times Magazine in 1965, depended in no small part on “her chic, bones-and-hollows face (elegantly Spanish with a dash of Gypsy) framed by glossy black hair; her mysterious reserve and faraway, whispery voice, toneless as a sleepwalker’s, but appealingly paced by a rich Spanish accent.”
Seemingly indifferent to the public and the demands of an art career, Marisol periodically headed off to remote corners of the globe for years at a time, confounding her dealers.
“She was an incredibly significant sculptor who has been inappropriately written out of history,” said Marina Pacini, the chief curator at the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, where she organized a traveling survey of Marisol’s work in 2014. 

“In the 1960s, she had more press and more visibility than Andy Warhol.”

María Sol Escobar was born on May 22, 1930, in Paris, to a wealthy Venezuelan family. 

Her father, Gustavo, dealt in real estate. Her mother, the former Josefina Hernández, committed suicide when her daughter was 11.

She grew up in Paris and Caracas. After the family moved to Los Angeles in 1946, she attended the Westlake School for Girls and studied art with Howard Warshaw at the Jepson School. 

She went to Paris to study at the École des Beaux-Arts but left after a year and took courses at the Art Students League of New York, where the naïve, decorative style of Yasuo Kuniyoshi, one of her teachers, was a decisive influence. 

She also studied with Hans Hofmann at his schools in New York and Provincetown, Mass., but abandoned Abstract Expressionist painting for sculpture after seeing examples of pre-Columbian art at a gallery.
Leo Castelli included her in a group show with Jasper Johns and Rauschenberg in 1957 and that same year presented her first solo show. 

It could have been an immediate springboard into art-world fame if she had not bolted for Rome, where she lived for two years.
On her return to New York, her shows at the Stable and Sidney Janis galleries tuned her into a star. 

She was included in “The Art of Assemblage” in 1961 at the Museum of Modern Art, which gave her her own room in the showcase exhibition ”Americans, 1963.” 

Gloria Steinem profiled her in Glamour. In 1968 she exhibited work at both the Venice Biennaleand Documenta in Kassel, West Germany.
She then went on a two-year jaunt around the world. 

When she returned, the art scene had changed, and she no longer fit in. 

She turned to more mythic, folk-oriented work, carving mahogany fishes, and explored a more private world in semi-surreal works on paper, filled with violent imagery, bearing titles like “Lick the Tire of My Bicycle” and “I Hate You Creep and Your Fetus.”
In recent years, revisionist critics and curators have rediscovered her work. 

She was the subject of a retrospective at the Neuberger Museum of Art in Purchase, N.Y., in 2001, and her work was included in two exhibitions in 2010: “Seductive Subversion: Women Pop Artists, 1958-1968,” at the Brooklyn Museum, and “Power Up: Female Pop Art,” at the Kunsthalle in Vienna. 

Ms. Pacini’s exhibition, “Marisol: Sculptures and Works on Paper,” traveled to El Museo del Barrio in Manhattan.
Marisol, who leaves no immediate survivors, might or might not have cared about the renewed attention. 

When asked in 1964 how she would like her work to be seen by critics and the public, she seemed puzzled by the question.

“I don’t care what they think,” she said.

NYT Correction: May 4, 2016
An obituary on Tuesday about the artist Marisol misstated the given name of an artist with whom she studied. He was Yasuo Kuniyoshi, not Kazuo. The obituary also misidentified the location of El Museo del Barrio, where the exhibition “Marisol: Sculptures and Works on Paper” was presented. It is in Manhattan, not in the Bronx.  

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WUM NEWS NEW YORK– The Broadway-based nonprofit, The Venezuelan American Endowment for the Arts, VAEA's Chairman, Ali Cordero Casal announced on May 2nd that VAEA's 2016 Páez Medal of Art will be posthumously awarded to Venezuelan-American artist Maria Sol Escobar also known as Marisol who was born in Paris in 1930 and died in New York on April 30th, 2016.

Marisol became internationally known for her sculptures and pop art works. After studying painting at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris (1949) and then at the Art Students League (1950) and the Hans Hofmann School (1951-4) in New York, she developed an interest in Mexican, Pre-Columbian and American folk art and turned her attention to sculpture. 

In her early work she fashioned small, animated figurines out of bronze, terracotta and wood, often placing these pieces in compartmentalized, glass-fronted boxes. I

In 1961 she began to incorporate drawing, painting, and objets trouvés into complex, life-size figure arrangements. 

Cast fragments of her own body and images of her face frequently appear in her works from this decade, many of which address the position of women in modern society. 

Marisol's images of contemporary culture, at once deadpan and satirical in tone, were produced in the context of Pop art; the personal, enigmatic, often primitive elements of her work, however, set it apart from the mainstream of the movement. 

In the early 1970s she carved small, exotic fishes out of mahogany, with her own face on them, and produced a series of prints and drawings. 

In the 1980s she returned to large-scale figural assemblages, creating a series of portrait 'homages' to well-known contemporary artists and personalities. 

Her works have been acquired by prominent international collections such as The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Museum of Modern Art, The Whitney Museum of Art among others. 

Most recently, in 2014 El Museo del Barrio of NYC included Marisol in their "Women in Art" Series with the exhibition Marisol, Sculptures and Works on Paper, which VAEA was proud to support.

WUM NEWS NEW YORK: Considerations in the Now by German Artist Jorinde Voigt at David Nolan Gallery

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Jorinde Voigt, Defragment IIConsiderations in the Now 2016, ink, copper leaf, gold leaf, indian ink, crayon, pastel, pencil on paper 40 1/4 x 26 in. Images Courtesy of David Nolan Gallery
Space-Study (4), 2015/16. Ink, gold leaf, oil pastels, pastel, pencil on paper, 20 1/16 x 14 3/16 in.

The NYC-based gallery David Nolan and coinciding with Frieze Week '16 Chelsea's will be presenting [May 4th-June 11th] an exhibition entitled "Considerations in the Now" featuring recent drawings by German-born, Berlin-based artistJorinde Voigt, along with earlier large-scale collage-based work from 2012. This is her third solo show at David Nolan.

Working principally within the medium of drawing, Voigt's works have been likened to musical scores, scientific diagrams, or notational thought models. 

Using a precisely coded system of mark making, the artist gives pictorial form to an array of natural or psychological phenomena. 

In recent series, Voigt has applied her unique visual method in the deconstruction of works of literature and philosophical texts, highlighting specific words and passages that resonate with her. 

Voigt deems that language alone fails to adequately describe the complexities of what she perceives around her, and it is in her art that she finds a means to visually express her personal experience of the world.

Her mostrecent solo exhibitions have been presented at Kunsthalle Krems, Austria (2015); Museo d'Arte Contemporanea, Rome (2014); and Langen Foundation, Neuss, Germany (2013) all of which were accompanied by extensive publications.

WUM NEWS ORLANDO: Barbara Tiffany and Leslie W. Hardy at OMA

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The Encounter Series: Barbara Tiffany and Leslie Hardy at Orlando Museum of Art
On view through May 22nd, 2016 at the Martha DeNeen Gallery at the Orlando Museum of Art, OMA is the exhibition by Barbara Tiffany and Leslie W. Hardy entitled "The Encounter Series."

Barbara Tiffany is the Director of Painting and Drawing at the Crealdé School of Art, and is one of Central Florida’s most accomplished realist painters. 

This exhibition brings together a selection of Tiffany’s paintings with the paintings of one of her accomplished students, Leslie W. Hardy.  

Both artists paint carefully observed scenes inspired by the people, places and things that are significant in their daily lives. 

While Hardy is not an artist by profession, she has had a lifelong passion for art and belief in its importance to the quality of life. 

Tiffany’s style reflects her affinity for the focused realism of the Dutch old masters like Johannes Vermeer.  

Her intimate still life paintings and interiors are imbued with a warmth and luminosity that invites the viewer to meditate on the simple objects and settings she presents. 

Similarly to the tradition of still life painting in past centuries, the objects and arrangements in Tiffany’s compositions often have symbolic meanings that are both personal and open to the viewer’s interpretation.

Hardy’s paintings are lively visual responses to life and the world around her. 

Her subjects are inspired by her home and garden, as well as by the people and places she sees while traveling. 

Whether she is painting a floral still life, Irish landscape or a farmer’s market on Martha’s Vineyard, she seeks to capture the subject’s visual excitement with bold colors and a fresh painterly style.

Artsy Editorial: What Sold at Frieze New York

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Frieze NY 2016. Images Credit: Adam Reich for Artsy
Frieze NY 2016
Via ArtsyBy Alexander Forbes

An hour and a half into the VIP preview of Frieze New York last Wednesday the news hit. 

John Kasich would end his bid to be the Republican nominee for president of the United States, leading Donald Trump, against all predictions, to become the party’s presumed candidate for the White House. 

Trump’s promises to “make America great again” have won over a plurality of the country’s voters who choose to sport an elephant lapel pin. 

But for many in the art world, the business world, and the world at large, the prospect of a Trump presidency has, at best, generated unease.

The possibility of President Trump and near certainty among analysts that an economic down cycle is pending has sent jitters across the art market and wider macroeconomy spanning from New York to Hong Kong. 

Around half as much art, by value, is estimated to sell at New York’s major spring auctions this week as this season last year. 

And at art fairs (among which Frieze New York is no exception), purchases of higher-priced works have been slower and less abundant than in years past. 

Young galleries sold well at Frieze last week, with works priced at around $15,000 or below. 

For established galleries, results were more modest than in past years. With much of the market’s froth tamped down due to uncertainty, it was a better schooled and pickier upper echelon of collectors who made most of the week’s high-priced purchases.

“Collectors right now can spend money and they will, but they want the best work available,” said Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac’s José Castañal on Friday. 

The gallery had, by that time, sold three works by Georg Baselitz, a medium-sized sculpture from Tony Cragg, and an Erwin Wurm“Fat Bus.” (Wurm, along with Brigitte Kowanz, will rep Austria at next year’s Venice Biennale.) 

Though the director noted that even one sale of a major artist such as Baselitz can put a gallery in the black for a fair like Frieze, boomtimes these are not. 

“Sometimes people think that just because you have established artists, it’s easier to sell, but people buying established artists also have a different way of buying,” said Castañal.

Over at Almine Rech’s stand, managing partner Paul de Froment noted a similar trend in the gallery’s sales. 

“For the past two years, it’s been a little bit slower, both at Frieze and in the art market in general,” said Froment. 

The gallery’s booth at Frieze presented a trio of major artists from the Neo-Geo movement—Peter Halley, John M. Armleder, and Olivier Mosset—as well as a pair of works by a younger artist from its program, Mark Hagen.

Froment noted on Friday that he had sold works by each of the artists presented (among which several by Mosset), despite the slowdown in the market. 

And he credited that success to the gallery’s consistent focus on quality. 

“When you see what happened on Wall Street two days ago based on the announcement that Donald Trump would be the Republican nominee, it certainly adds insecurity into the market,” said Froment, noting that he was keeping a particular eye on the markets during this period of instability. 

“But I think if you put good art on the walls, it’s not something that you have to worry about too much. That’s what we try to focus on, because that’s where we have influence.”

Hauser & Wirth has no doubt taken a similar approach to quality in recent years. 

Its biggest success at Frieze New York came by way of two works from the Philip Guston estate, which the gallery began representing last September. 

Guston’s oil Black Coast (1977) and a drawing from his series of sleeping figures from the same decade both sold for undisclosed prices. 

“Frieze New York has grown up,” said gallery partner and vice president Marc Payot. 

“The fair has taken its place among the best in the world,” he added, with the gallery’s sales throughout the week being characterized as “robust.” 

Those included a pair of Roni Horn’s cast glass sculptures at $975,000 apiece as well as Paul McCarthy’s SC Western Red River, Red (2016), the first work in a new series entitled “Stagecoach,” for $750,000.

Collectors last week remained ready to pull the trigger on works at the lower end of the spectrum. 

This was evident by the strong, early sales seen across Frieze’s fresh-faced compatriot, NADA New York, and at Frieze itself in the Frame and Focus sections, which host younger galleries and artists, offering curated presentations.

Lower East Side gallerist James Fuentes sold no fewer than 12 works by Benjamin Senior  priced from $6,000 to $15,000. 

“We’ve always known Benjamin is really special,” said gallery director James Michael Shaeffer. 

Fuentes began working with the artist while he was still at the Royal College of Art, giving him his first show at the gallery in 2011. 

“Even though that was only five years ago, thinking about what art was doing at that time, to choose this was not at all cool,” added Shaeffer. (That has, of course, changed thanks to the strong trend back towards figurative painting that has taken over the conversation around emerging art in the past couple of years.) 

Shaeffer noted that while they’re not eager to react to trends in the market, Senior will have a solo show at the gallery this coming winter. 

“We work with each of our artists one on one,” he said. “It just happened to sync up with what was happening in the market,” he said.

Even more effusive about his positive experience at the fair was Sultana founder Guillaume Sultana

“It’s totally a dream,” said the Parisian gallerist of his third outing at Frieze New York. 

“Things are very busy and I’ve only been selling to new people.” 

Sultana had sold all of the new works by Pia Camil featured in the booth for €9,000 to prominent collections from Miami and London. 

“She’s had a great amount of visibility because of her recent New Museum show, but these ceramic pieces are completely new,” he said of the works, which consist of ceramic masks placed on plinths created out of the slatted walls stores use to hang their wares. 

Also selling well were new paintings by Jacin Giordano, priced between €5000–12,000. 

The works are based on Native American culture and see the artist carve into many layers of acrylic in a way that recalls woodcutting. 

(So smitten with his purchase was one collector that he had to stop back by the booth to admire his new work: “I’m looking at it and thinking to myself. Oh my god, what did I buy; it’s wonderful. Tell Jacin I love him.”)

Sultana said the success at Frieze New York was a welcomed relief. 

“In Europe, it’s a very bad time in the economy,” said the gallerist. 

“We had a very hard time last winter in Paris. Nobody was coming to the gallery.” 

While the election might have some spooked from major acquisitions in the U.S., in his hometown Sultana has felt the continued effects of the November 13th terrorist attacks, which killed 130 individuals. 

“American collectors don’t want to travel to Europe at the moment. 

It’s so sad because terrorism can happen anywhere,” noted Sultana, adding that galleries had reported that Americans had shied from traveling to Brussels during Art Brussels and Independent in April and that some had discussed canceling their plans to attend Art Basel. 

“I hope it’s going to change with time,” he said, suggesting that in the meantime, this might be accounting in part for his added success at Frieze, as New York collectors continue to spend closer to home.

Galerie Max Hetzler’s Samia Saouma noted a similar contraction in the number of American visitors to the previous week’s Gallery Weekend Berlin, despite record attendance overall. 

“People are insecure about what the elections will bring, not only in this country but also the Brexit, and the refugee crisis across all of Europe. It’s a transition period,” explained Saouma. 

The gallery showed works mainly by three artists, Albert Oehlen, Edmund De Waal, and Raymond Hains, in its first outing at Frieze New York. 

And while she reported making some sales during the fair’s run, Saouma also suggested that this transitional moment in the political and economic scene should spark transition in the art world as well. 

“We need to rethink the whole thing as gallerists,” she said. 

“There is an art fair fatigue. There’s an inflation of art” in New York, added the dealer, who noted the auctions as well as the “many excellent galleries with very, very good shows” in Manhattan taking attention away from those at the fair in a way that happens less so in places like Miami and Basel.

Sean Kelly Gallery director Janine Cirincione had a different perspective on how the art world should react to the changing macro-environment. 

“We know that from now until the election it’s going to be dukes up. We don’t know what to expect on any given day. We don’t know how that will affect world markets,” said Cirincione. 

And while the rest of the world gets nervous about what might transpire, “we just have to fasten our seatbelts a little bit and get ready for a bumpy ride. We all knew the constant trajectory upward wasn’t realistic in the long term.”

Cirincione equates the current jitters as something of an art world recency bias. 

Players feel particularly down now because they’re biased to compare their performance to the recent several-year-long sprint upward, rather than to economy’s consistent cyclical patterns of growth and contraction. 

Selling Antony Gormley’s sculpture Daze II (2014) for £350,000, Callum Innes’s painting Exposed Painting Delft Blue (2016) for £40,000, Los Carpinteros’s watercolor Espuma Cúbica (díptico) (2016) for $50,000, and Hugo McCloud’s mixed media work on paper Untitled (2016) for $37,500, as did Sean Kelly on opening day, isn’t a bad day’s work, after all. 

It just reflects the activation of a core base of art lovers without the added bonus of buyers brought on by surging economic indices. 

“Hedge fund guys will be the first ones out of here when they get nervous,” said Cirincione. 

“But working with people who are buying for the right reasons, for the love of collecting, is something that is very sustainable, even in uncertain times.”

American Artist Tabor Robak's Generative Animations of Infinite Duration at Team (bungalow), Venice CA

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 Tabor Robak,Skypad, 2016, generative animation from custom-built PC, infinite duration
single-screen, dimensions variable, edition of three.
Images Courtesy of Team
 
Junk Drawer, 2016, generative animation from customized PC, infinite duration, single screen, 20 x 20 inches, edition of three
Team (bungalow) in Venice, California has announced an  exhibition to be inaugurated this weekend by Brooklyn-based artist Tabor Robak entitled"Sunflower Seed" [May 15 to June 26, 2016] featuring the artist's latest digital artworks each of which generates its imagery live via a dedicated custom-built PC. 

As a result, the works are durationally infinite, the likelihood of any moment repeating itself a statistical impossibility. 

This body of work represents a notable departure from past exhibitions, which primarily consisted of looped data. 

Additionally, whereas earlier pieces have always contained identifiable points of visual reference – appropriating imagery from both real-world and digital sources – the contents of Sunflower Seed are the product of the artist’s newfound interest in the seemingly oxymoronic possibility of programming abstraction.

The show’s title obliquely refers to a coding technique called the “random seed,” a numerical sequence used to trigger a number generator. 

Although true randomness is impossible to program, this method allows for the appearance thereof. 

In the case of these artworks, Robak has chosen the exact date and time, down to the millisecond, to act as seed digits, introducing a peculiar and invisible relationship to real-world temporality. 

The word “sunflower” evokes nature, and draws a parallel between organic growth and the artist’s coding, both of which operate according to differing kinds of parameters and algorithms.
 
These pieces recall certain aesthetic elements from the history of painting, but Robak’s intention is not to comment on that medium – instead, he attributes those similarities to comparable creative ambitions, resulting in shared compositional and coloristic choices. 

By rediscovering elements of the more traditional medium in this neoteric context, the artist explores the powerful potential of computers as not only tools, but active agents in art-making – in a sense, he is teaching machines to paint.

The temporally uninhibited access these works provide viewers to the “creative act,” explicates the shortcomings of mechanically unassisted human production. 

The artist is not, however, unaware of the sacrifices his work makes to participate in the technological vanguard: Sunflower Seed carries a permeating sense of nostalgia, founded in the impermanence of the on-screen imagery, and, implicitly, the transience of all technological innovation.

Robak's previous exhibitions have been rapturously received, including reviews in The New York Times, New York Magazine, The New Yorker, Art Observed, Modern Painters, Interview and Mousse. He was also the subject of a feature article in the November 2015 issue of Artforum.

WUM NEWS BASEL: Exceptional Gallery Exhibitions Bringing Workplace Into Focus at Design Miami/Basel '16

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Future Work/ SO-IL, 2015/ Courtesy of SO-I, Photographer Benoit Pailley.Image Courtesy of Design Miami/ Basel
From June 14-19th, 2016,Design Miami/ Basel'16 will feature a number of exceptional gallery exhibitions that bring the workplace into focus.

These presentations include Jean Prouvé's own design office, designed in 1948, coming to the fair with Galerie Patrick Seguin

The demountable structure is populated with the original desks, chairs and shelving used in the Atelier Jean Prouvé Design Office, offering insight into one of the twentieth century's most influential designers.

Galerie Alain Marcelpoil brings another prominent designer's workplace to the fair in the form of André Sornay’s personal office desk. Designed by Sornay in 1936, the desk incorporates a bookcase, ceiling light and radiator mask.

Dansk Møbelkunst Gallery will show decorative brass sconce lighting fixtures designed for the canteen area of the Aarhus Oil Factory in 1938 by Palle Suensen, who was responsible for the design of the entire office building and its interiors.

Looking to the future of office design, architecture firm SO-IL will consider the disruption caused to the office environment as the realm of work seeps into the dwelling space in an immersive Design Curio installation.

In the first of a series of spotlights focusing on the experts that help make Design Miami/ the world's leading forum for design, we train our lens on Philippe and Matthias Jousse, owners of Jousse Entreprise.

Philippe Jousse first used his eye in the field of photography as French artist and fashion photographer Guy Bourdin’s occasional assistant. 

Shortly thereafter, he discovered the work of Jean Prouvé and developed a passionate interest in postwar furniture. 

In the early 1980s, he gave up all his other activities and became involved in promoting designers who, at the time, were either forgotten or overlooked: Jean Prouvé, Charlotte Perriand, Alexandre Noll, Jean Royère, Mathieu Matégot, Pierre Jeanneret, Georges Jouve and Serge Mouille.
In 2002, Matthias Jousse joined the gallery where he championed major names of the 1970s by organizing exhibitions of artists such as Michel Boyer, Atelier A, Roger Tallon, Maria Pergay, Pierre Paulin and Philippon & Lecoq.

Philippe and Matthias Jousse are now acknowledged as leading experts in French and international design ranging from postwar modernists to contemporary ceramists, and their interest in and passion for Pierre Paulin comes to fruition this week as they launch a solo exhibition of his work to coincide with the Centre Georges Pompidou's first ever retrospective of the influential and prolific French designer's work from the 1960s and 70s.

For Design Miami/ Basel 2016, Jousse Entreprise will be presenting an exploration of mid-century French design up to the 1970s, with rare works by the leading figures of the era. Jousse's exhibition will include pieces by André Borderie, which will be complemented with the launch of a new monograph dedicated to the designer's ceramics.

L.A. Louver Artist Don Suggs To Showcase His 10th Solo at the Gallery

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Don Suggs"Paradise" his 10th solo show at L.A. Louver Gallery, Venice, CA. Image Courtesy of the Gallery
From May 25tnh to July 1st, 2016 the Venice-based prestigious gallery L.A. Louverwill present a solo exhibition entitled "Paradise" by L.A.-based artist Don Suggs

His 10th solo show at the Gallery features paintings and archival inkjet prints created over the past two years.

Maneuvering between painting and photography, realism and abstraction, Suggs explores the role imagery plays in our perception of nature. 

As the basis for this conceptual inquiry, Suggs returns to his familiar circular abstractions and landscape photography.

At the core of the exhibition is an ongoing series of archival inkjet print titled “Paradise Prints,” which the artist first began in 2010. 

Created in editions of five, each of the prints features a black and white landscape that Suggs superimposes with a colorful circular abstraction. 

During annual trips touring the American West, Suggs seeks out source imagery. He composes his photographs “in camera” favoring a composition that is vertically aligned on a central axis, which will provide room along the axis for the circular form to be implanted later. 

Suggs does not manipulate or alter the original camera composition, and rather simply removes all color from the photograph. 

The circular abstraction that Suggs inserts over the black and white image both disrupts and informs the scene. 

“Sometimes it may give us back the native colors of the scene, or the color composition may impart suggestions of things hidden but implied in the photo. The thing that blocks our view is an opening in the picture to further meaning,"said Don Suggs.

In a further development, Suggs has produced a series of “Paradise Paintings” that follow the same compositional principles as his prints, but with full color application. 

Instead of a black and white landscape at the base, the artist renders the background in oil paint and with a heightened sense of color. Similar to the prints, Suggs overlays a circular abstraction, also painted in oil, to provide a clue into understanding what lies beneath.

Don Suggs was born in Fort Worth, Texas, and grew up in San Diego, California. Suggs received his BA from the University of California, Los Angeles, where he studied art, film and psychology, and remained at the UCLA earning both a MA in 1971 and MFA in 1972. 

Suggs has won two National Endowment for the Art Grants, in 1973 and 1991.

Storm King Presents Dennis Oppenheim: Terrestrial Studio

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Dennis Oppenheim, Entrance to a Garden, 2002. Painted steel angle, perforated stainless steel, bolts, landscaping material. 6 x 10 x 8'. ©Dennis Oppenheim. Courtesy Dennis Oppenheim Estate.Photo credit: Jeffrey Sturges.
On view through November 13th, 2016 the Storm King Art Center will be exhibiting Dennis Oppenheim: Terrestrial Studio, an exhibition featuring outdoor and indoor sculpture, installation, sound, film, and photography as well as two major earthworks conceived by the artist, but never fully realized in his lifetime. 

Terrestrial Studio is organized in close collaboration with the Dennis Oppenheim Estate and includes works on loan and in Storm King’s collection. 

The exhibition is installed in several locations across Storm King’s landscape including the South Fields, Meadows, and Museum Hill, as well as inside the Museum Building. It is organized by Storm King Director and Chief Curator, David R. Collens; Curator Nora Lawrence, and Assistant Curator Theresa Choi. 

Also on view is the fourth installment of Storm King’s Outlooks series, featuring site-specific outdoor installations by Josephine Halvorson. Terrestrial Studio will be shown through November 13, 2016. Outlooks: Josephine Halvorson will be shown through November 27, 2016.

Dennis Oppenheim: Terrestrial Studio includes work by Dennis Oppenheim (1938-2011) from different points in his diverse and substantial career. 

First rising to prominence for earthworks in the late 1960s, Oppenheim ventured outdoors not only to transcend the physical confines of the exhibition space, but also to work beyond the limitations of the gallery setting. 

A fiercely creative artist, he produced work that cannot be encompassed within the boundaries of any single movement or style. 

The exhibition at Storm King is focused on works that are in a continuous dialogue with the natural world and artificial or built environment. 

The title, Terrestrial Studio, is a term Oppenheim used to describe his artistic relationship with outdoor space. As this exhibition demonstrates, he introduced into his work earth materials, his body, memory, sound, film, and performance.

Storm King President John Stern says, “We are proud to host the first monographic museum exhibition of Dennis Oppenheim’s work in the United States since 2007. 

Oppenheim was a brilliant and prolific artist who enjoyed making works in outdoor spaces, and he continues to inspire a younger generation.”

The exhibition is accompanied by a dedicated website. 

A fully illustrated publication includes an interview from 2006 between Dennis Oppenheim and Willoughby Sharp, which is being published for the first time; and an essay by Storm King Curator Nora Lawrence.

Originally from the Bay Area in California, Dennis Oppenheim moved to Brooklyn, New York, in 1967. 

In 1968, he established a permanent live-work studio south of Canal Street in lower Manhattan. 

An early practitioner of earthworks, body art, and Conceptual art, he later became known for his ambitious public installations and sculptures. 

In a series of works produced between 1970 and 1974, Oppenheim used his own body as his medium, challenging the concept of the self to explore the boundaries of personal risk, transformation, and communication. 

In 1981, his work moved in a new direction with complex, mechanized constructions that functioned as metaphors for the artistic process. 

By the mid-1980s, Oppenheim made sculpture based on the transformation of everyday objects. From the mid-1990s until his death in 2011, he focused on the production of large-scale permanent structures that combined sculpture and architecture. 

Oppenheim received a BFA from the California College of Arts and Crafts, Oakland, in 1965, and an MFA from Stanford University in 1966. 

He received a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship in 1969, National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships in 1974 and 1982, and a Lifetime Achievement Award at the Vancouver Sculpture Biennale in 2007. 

His works have been included in major group exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Centre George Pompidou, Paris; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; and several editions of the Venice Biennale and Documenta, Kassel.

WUM NEWS LONDON: First UK Solo Show of Slovak Artist Maria Bartuszová (1936-1996) at Alison Jacques Gallery

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Maria Bartuszová at Alison Jacques Gallery, London.The works of Maria Bartuszová - sculptures created by using rubberized materials and plaster to form unique casts, or by using water and plaster to minimize gravity - trigger extraordinary and moving impressions. These biomorphic sculptures, in which branches sometimes pass through plaster, are striking in their beauty, their seeming perfection, even, and also, in their vulnerability, precariousness, and fragility.'
 -Christine Macel."Maria Bartuszová: Her times, her age" Maria Bartuszová: Provisional Forms, Museum of Modern Art Warsaw: Chicago University Press, 2015, p.153. Image Courtesy of the Gallery
On view through May 21st, 2016 is the solo show of Slovak artist Maria Bartuszová (1936 - 1996), in collaboration with Gabriela Garlatyová, curator of the Estate of Maria Bartuszová, Košice at the London-based Alison Jacques Gallery.

The works selected for the show span Bartuszová's entire career dating from the early 1960s through to 1996. 

The majority of Bartuszová's works were made in plaster, a material that possesses an inherent temporal beauty. 

Inspired by nature many of her works appear to take shape as the result of gravity, compressing and expanding to simultaneously reference movement and hesitation. 

The artist's work was produced in a Czechoslovak environment removed from contact with European events, yet despite this isolation she collected the monographs of Brancusi, Fontana, Hepworth, Moore and Noguchi which inspired her practice alongside a variety of other sources such as architectural designs and scientific and technical photographs.

Bartuszová's themes are intuitive, mental and spiritual concepts, which overlap in communication in the course of creative time and thus create a living organism of her oeuvre. 

They include technological procedures of 'gravistimulated casting' of plaster in elastic forms, which are also conceptual constructs of her haptic and organic sculptures of the 1960s and 1970s. 

From the late 1960s Bartuszová produced sculptures that could be taken apart and re-assembled intuitively (such as Folded Figure I, 1965-90) and in 1976 she ran workshops for blind and visually-impaired children, creating works that enabled participants to become familiar with different shapes, textures and forms. 

In the 1980s her sculptures focused on pure, oblong forms, eggs and shells that were later altered (broken, crushed or creased). The aggressive and powerful gestures of imprinting or tearing appeared in many of the works produced from the 1980s onwards as Bartuszová began to work with the technique of 'pneumatic shaping'. 

In this process the artist created casts with elastic rubber balloons, which she then covered in plaster, causing the balloons to burst under pressure and leave only the negative space of the destroyed forms.  

Two cube-like structures and the rounded composition of 'Perforated Torso' (both exhibited) illustrate the result of this process. 

The exhibition also features two unique works in which small egg-like formations bound with string appear to emerge out of wall mounted perspex orbs. 

Bartuszová's interest in birth is illustrated in these works, as she references not only origin in the germination of a seed but also the simple idea of how we are naturally bound to each other. 

The artist explains 'For me, full round shapes can serve as a symbol of what is alive, soft, adaptable, as well as vulnerable and at risk.' (Quotation from Garlatyová, Gabriela. Maria Bartuszová: Provisional Forms, Museum of Modern Art Warsaw: Chicago University Press, 2015).

WUM NEWS CHICAGO: Gist & Gesture, Artists Centered Around Performativity in Visual Arts at Kavi Gupta

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Barbara Kasten,Metaphase 5, 1986, Cibachrome, 37" x 29.375," edition 10 of 10. Image Courtesy of the Artist and Bortolami, New York via Kavi Gupta

Roger Brown,Theatre, 1968, Oil on canvas, 60" x 61."© The School of the Art Institute of Chicago and the Brown family.Image Courtesy of Kavi Gupta. Photo by James Connolly 
From June 4th to August 6th, 2016, the prestigious Chicago-based gallery Kavi Gupta will be presenting a collective summer show [Curated by Katherine Harvath] entitled "Gist & Gesture" featuring artists Roger Brown, Catherine Sullivan/Katarzyna Wińska and Teatr Opera Buffa, Edie Fake, Barbara Kasten, Aay Preston-Myint, and Nicholas Sullivan whose works are centered around performativity in visual arts including painting, objects, photographs and other projects that utilize dramatic techniques. 

Taking the position that depiction and artifice serve an important social function, the exhibition brings together artworks that use illusion to striking effect.

Being an artist is like being a stand up comedian, all alone on the stage or in the studio, communicating, boiling down ideas to transferable form. 

These artists display a constellation of approaches, some literally referencing the methods of theater—others using more generally its tools of gesture, vignette, light and shadow. 

The stage and the canvas have in common their given form, a set of boundaries within which stories can be told, this exhibition investigates where these two mediums borrow technique from one another.

Roger Brown’s paintings of the late 1960’s used movie theater settings to showcase surreal imagery. Dreamlike images are bracketed by curtains and other architectural flourishes, which are in turn bracketed by the brisk edge of the canvas. 

Brown’s letters home show his love of theater, he detailed the great productions he was seeing in Chicago. He also designed the set for a 1979 Chicago Opera Theater production of Così Fan Tutte. 

His interest in theatrical productions carries into his later work, with urban facades like movie sets, silhouetted figures, and sunsets like theatrical backdrops.

Gist & Gesture marks the debut of a new installation, film, and theater work by Catherine Sullivan, Katarzyna Wińska and her Warsaw-based theater company Teatr Opera Buffa, and Beata Pilch from Chicago’s Trapdoor Theatre. 

The work nests three theatrical sources: excerpts from Opera Buffa’s play Eternal Rest, set in a spa for workaholics; the archive of renowned experimental theater director Tadeusz Kantor; and actions from Beata Pilch’s twenty–year repertoire. 

Edie Fake’s intricate gouache and ink drawings offer us buildings as allegory. Architectural spaces give way to abstraction, impossible spaces woven into the flats of film and television.

Barbara Kasten has been celebrated for her quasi-constructivist, Bauhaus-inspired photography for many years. 

Using photographic space as a stage, Kasten’s sources have varied widely in scale from studio size set-ups to postmodern buildings peered at through movie sets to assemble tightly choreographed compositions. Their use of light, shadow, and transparency calls up the illusory techniques of live theater and results in a painterly tableau.

Aay Preston-Myint has produced a site-responsive wall drawing for the exhibition. Often using printmaking and staging events to build community, Preston-Myint designed this mural after the veilings and artifice of theatrical vignetting. The piece imagines the gallery wall as a stage, a window out into a human drama.

Nicholas Sullivan presents three new sculptural works. Wells or basins embedded with mirrored Plexiglass, they provide a window out through the floor. Sullivan often utilizes recognizable narrative figures; in this case Snoopy naps on an implied doghouse. 

The wise beagle was a silent guiding force in the child society of Peanuts—here he acts as a mascot for allegory.

Cheim & Read To Showcase Sean Scully's "Circa 70" at a Raw Industrial Setting in Queens

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Sean Scully,Shadow 1970 acrylic on canvas 96 x 144 in.Image Courtesy of Cheim & Read
WUM NEWS NEW YORK–Opening tomorrow, Friday, May 20th, 2016 and on view through July 1st, is the exhibition entitled "Circa 70" by Cheim & Read artist Sean Scully whose little seen but surprisingly relevant body of work will be displayed in a unique setting, at a raw industrial space in Ridgewood, Queens.

The space is in keeping with the itinerant, at times hardscrabble circumstances under which the paintings were made: a squat in an old railway building near London Bridge; a studio at Newcastle University; an annex of the Chelsea School of Art; the first floor of the now-demolished Hunt Hall at Harvard University, where the artist attended graduate school. 

The paintings mark a decisive turning point in Scully’s career, in which he broke away from the Neo-Expressionistic figurative paintings he was making as a student and struck out in a geometric mode of his own devising, a prolific, experimental series of works dominated by grids and stripes.

In these works, a substrate of crisscrossing lines executed in brushed, rolled and sprayed paint merge into overlapping, irregular grids, which are overlaid with bold, solidly colored stripes.

Sometimes the elements beneath the stripes are further complicated by gestural, wavering strokes, creating an emotionally fraught contrast with the rigorously geometric overlay—“AbEx incarcerated,” in the artist’s phrase.

Elsewhere, the paintings are shaped, with a vector replacing the bottom edge of the canvas—a motif derived from camel straps the artist saw in Morocco—or, in one of the hybrid pieces he made while at Harvard, strips of colored felt are woven into a gridded wooden frame.

Looking over the the arc of his career, Scully has remarked that the “balance of power” in his work has shifted from discipline to emotion, from the pent-up rigor of his early canvases to the sweeping, structured outpourings of his paintings today.

Even so, there are innumerable pre-echoes of Scully’s current studio practice—his manipulation of the grid and his command of rolled paint, to name just two—in his experiments of the ‘70s.

With their illusionist depths alternately supporting and defying the boldly asserted picture plane, these paintings confound their decade’s expectations of flatness and reduction, and in doing so, they generate an electrical current connecting generations of painters. 

Sean Scully was born in Dublin in 1945, and grew up in the south of London, where his family moved in 1949.

He has shown extensively, both nationally and internationally, in venues including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the Lentos Kunstmuseum Linz, Linz, Austria; and Kunstmuseum Bern, Bern, Switzerland. 

Danish Artists' Group Superflex: Why We Flooded McDonald's

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Danish artists "Superflex"Jakob Fenger, Rasmus Nielsen and Bjørnstjerne Christiansen"Why WE Flooded McDonald's." Photo and Video Courtesy of Louisiana Channel



Via Louisiana Channel
 
What motivates a Danish artists' group to make a movie where one of the most famous American fast food restaurants is inexplicably flooded in their “post-apocalyptic movie” entitled ‘Why We Flooded McDonald’s’?
 
Superflex starting point was to focus on the idea of the mass-production of food, and they felt that the most heavily branded fast food restaurant was McDonald’s. 

They built the restaurant from scratch, basing it on what a McDonald’s would have looked like in the 1980s, as they believed that this was perhaps the most iconic image of it. 

Every detail – down to the small boxes for Happy Meals – were handmade in a studio in Bangkok. 

The adding of water functioned as a melt-down of the restaurant but at the same time made the different things in it come to life: “All these dead objects start to become actors.” 

Moreover, the water also created limitations in the set, as it was not possible to undo – they could stop more water from coming in, but not reverse the consequences of the water that was already there. 

The film is shot around 2008, where there were “a lot of post-apocalyptic scenarios going on.” 

The financial crisis, global warming and such took up a lot of space in the media, and Superflex wanted to make their own version of this “end-of-the-world” set-up “in a mild Scandinavian way, but still using some kind of global vocabulary – the raising of the water, the most famous fast-food chain.” 

Though the movie is heavy on the use of symbolism, the approach is also quite humorous: “It’s almost like slapstick.”

Superflex is a Danish artists' group founded in 1993 by Jakob Fenger, Rasmus Nielsen and Bjørnstjerne Christiansen

They describe their projects as 'Tools'. A tool being a model or proposal that can actively be used and further utilized and modified by the user. 

Their oeuvre spans from beer (‘Free Beer’) and soda (‘Guaraná Power’) to alternative energy production methods to movies and installations, and their projects are often related to economic forces, democratic production conditions and self-organization. 

Superflex have gained international recognition for their projects and have held solo exhibitions at venues such as Kunsthalle Basel in Switzerland, Schirn Kunsthalle in Frankfurt am Main, REDCAT Gallery in Los Angeles, Mori Museum in Tokyo and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington D.C. 

Furthermore, they have participated in art biennials such as Gwangju Biennial (Korea), Istanbul Biennial, São Paolo Biennial, Shanghai Biennial and in the ‘Utopia Station’ at the Venice Biennale.

WUM NEWS BROOKLYN: The Idiot by Dave McDermott at Brennan & Griffin's Red Hook

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Dave McDermott,The Idiot, Installation view at Brennan & Griffin: Red Hook. Image Courtesy of the Gallery
On view through May 29th, 2016 is the solo show of new work by artist Dave McDermott at the gallery's Red Hook, Brooklyn location.

In his new work, Dave McDermott continues his ongoing allegorical examination of the complexities of human nature and the societies we build to house them, the isolation inherent in those structures, and how we represent those ideas through art itself. 

Double profiles, bust-like heads, pointing hands, female breasts—all are pulled from both distant and recent histories and reorganized as totems within McDermott's lexicon to impart new meaning.

The exhibition takes its name from Dostoyevsky’s The Idiot. The novel’s protagonist, a young prince returning after a long absence to society and its machinations, is seen alternately and sometimes even simultaneously as an idiot and an “intelligent fellow.” Loved and scorned, sought after and shunned, his mind is eventually torn apart by the inability to reconcile his own nature with that of the world and its other inhabitants. 

McDermott finds in the complexities of Dostoevsky’s tale a fitting armature upon which to build his paintings. 

For McDermott, The Idiot acts as a symbol (or perhaps a mantra) for “the idiot” both as artists, a group who in Santayana’s words are “unfit for the world into which they were born"*, and, by extension, art itself, in the contradictions inherent in representing a common world through a private language.

McDermott’s work presupposes an insurmountable opacity in all forms of language—verbal, visual and physical—which results in an ongoing sense of disconnection and isolation. 

But instead of taking this state of affairs as an excuse for ennui or weariness, McDermott’s paintings depict characters seemingly locked in a frantically optimistic effort to overcome it. There is something grand in the refusal to give in, however doomed to failure the endeavor may be.

Like Dostoyevsky’s characters, McDermott’s figures exist in a tentative state, their narrative being occasionally suspended in order to question their very invention. 

They are grouped together on crowded stages—sets on which they reach, gape, fumble and stare, but without ever connecting to one another,  seeming to assume the closest of connections by mere proximity. 

In paintings like “The European Arrangement” the figures on the panel seem locked in a static moment of importance. 

In the four large yarn paintings in the gallery, we see reference to psychological moments referred to in Dostoyevsky’s novel. There is the discomfort of a new meeting and a jagged sense of Modern graphic design in “The Introduction,” and an ebullient joy in “The Fit” that calls Matisse to mind. In “Heroin and Karate,” on the other hand, the artist has stepped completely out of Dostoyevsky’s narrative, and given form and proximity to two pursuits that he has found to be humorously linked in the lives of his contemporaries, often self-described idiots of their own making.

Awkwardness and how it is addressed also play out in both novel and painting. 

Where Dostoyevsky uses his prince as a crux to hold together disparate and seemingly unrelated personalities and segments of society, so does McDermott use his paintings to bring together various histories, textures and methods of working. 

Seemingly quick, expressive brushwork is paired with the labor-intensive application of yarn or sharp edges of overlaid color. Variations in speed within each painting call time into question, as the fast and the slow are both locked permanently into the same shared space on the panels. 

And here, too, on this material level we see the particulate whole take on the appearance of unity, while still remaining at its core a collection of diverse elements. 

Each collaged section of canvas, each strand of yarn, works with the others to form a unified whole, while still refusing to let us forget their singularity and separateness. 

The effect is one that never entirely lets us drop our guard, or default to a single quick categorization. 

As usual, McDermott's blending of image and materiality confers an enigmatic sense of wonder, rather than a didactic lesson in morality or theory.

* George Santayana, The Sense of Beauty (Being the outline of Aesthetic Theory), (Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1896), 41.
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Dave McDermott was born in 1974 in Santa Cruz, CA and currently lives and works in New York. Recent exhibitions include Passing Leap, organized by Yuta Nakajima and Madeline Warren, Hauser & Wirth, New York, NY; Goethe’s Girlfriend, Brennan & Griffin, New York, NY; The Power and Influence of Joseph Wiseman, Grimm, Amsterdam, NL; and others. McDermott is the subject of a new monograph being published by Snoeck and Grimm in Spring 2016, with an introduction by Katy Seigel.

WUM NEWS LONDON: Spanish Artist Manolo Valdés First U.K. Solo Show in 10 Years at Marlborough Fine Art

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Manolo Valdés, Chiara I, 2003, Etching with unique colour collage, edition of 50.Images Courtesy of Marlborough London
Claribel, 2002, Etching with unique colour, edition of 50, 50.8 x 66.04 cm


The prestigious London-based gallery Marlborough Fine Art has announced that Spanish-born, NY-Madrid based artist Manolo Valdés will be having his first solo show in a decade with a Preview Opening scheduled for June 9th at 6PM and will be on view through July 16th, 2016. 

Manolo Valdés (Born 1942, Valencia, Spain) is one of few artists today who has successfully mastered the disciplines of drawing, painting, sculpture and printmaking. 

In each medium he shows himself to be technically skilled, highly original and unceasingly provocative. Valdés began his training as a painter at the age of 15 when he entered the Fine Arts Academy of San Carlos, Valencia.

In 1964 Valdés, Rafael Solbes and Joan Toledo collaborated to form Equipo Crónica, an artistic team that utilized Pop Art to question the Spanish dictatorship of Francisco Franco and the history of art itself. After the group dissolved in 1981, Valdés reinvented himself.

He draws heavily upon Spanish artistic heritage, particularly the work of Velázquez and the informalismo of his immediate predecessors Manolo Millares, Antonio Saura and Antoni Tàpies.  

Using etching, silkscreen and collage techniques, the prints of Manolo Valdés reference these and other masters, including Rembrandt, Rubens and Matisse, creating an intellectual twist that brings significant historical works out of their original context. 

His works can be seen in numerous public and private collections including: Fonds National d’Arts Plastiques, Paris, France; Fundación Caja de Pensiones, Barcelona, Spain; Fundación del Museo Guggenheim Bilbao, Bilbao, Spain; Instituto Valenciano de Arte Moderno, Centre Julio Gonzalez, Valencia, Spain; Kunsthalle, Kiel, Germany; Kunstmuseum, Berlin, Germany; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York; Musée National d’Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, France; Museo de Arte Contemporáneo Internacional Rufino Tamayo, Mexico City, Mexico; Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid, Spain; Museum of Modern Art, New York, New York; Veranneman Foundation, Kruishoutem, Belgium.

L.A. Domestic Scenes Filled With Unseen Immigrant Laborers: The Art of Mexican American Ramiro Gomez

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Gomez says people — including his mother — are starting to send him photos of workers in LA.
Daniel Hajek/NPR. All Images via NPR
Gomez makes life-size cardboard cutouts of laborers — such as this "gardener" on North Beverly Drive — and leaves them on manicured lawns.© Ramiro Gomez/Courtesy of Abrams
Via NPR By Susan Stamberg

Los Angeles is a city of extremes: There are neighborhoods so luxurious only millionaires can afford them and neighborhoods so poor that residents work several jobs to pay the rent. 

Now, a young L.A. painter is bringing these neighborhoods together on his canvases.

Ramiro Gomez paints modernist houses in Beverly Hills, perfectly appointed kitchens and exclusive shops on Melrose Avenue. 

His pictures have nothing, and everything, to do with his background. Gomez's mother is a janitor, and his father works the graveyard shift driving a truck. 

Workers like his Mexican immigrant parents show up in his paintings — part of the invisible landscape of luxury LA.

"Someone will always be working to keep it nice," Gomez says. "Whether it's a home in the Hollywood Hills or Beverly Hills or the Paramount Studios."

Gomez puts those "someones" on his canvases. He shows mostly Latino gardeners tending perfect lawns, maids cleaning tiles in gleaming bathrooms and nannies gathered in the park.

These images show "the lush, easy lifestyle of L.A., which is entirely undergirded by armies of domestic workers," says New Yorker magazine writer Lawrence Weschler. 

He's done a long essay on Gomez for the new coffee table bookDomestic Scenes. The artist always has laborers in his range of sight, Weschler says.

"I can be walking along with him," Weschler says. "He'll just say 'Eight.' I'll say, 'Eight what?' He says, 'There's eight workers I can see in my line of vision. There's that guy over there, there's that guy, and that lady that's there ...'"

The first Gomez painting to catch Weschler's eye was a nearly precise reproduction of a work by David Hockney

The famous English artist began painting rich LA in the 1960s. In A Bigger Splash, Hockney shows turquoise water in a big pool with a diving board and a big splash of water.

In Gomez's version, the water darkens to cobalt and instead of a splash there's a man cleaning the pool. 

He's trawling for debris in the water. And over toward the back, a woman — she's faceless, like all his figures — sweeps the patio near a wall of windows. Gomez calls it No Splash.

"The painting itself was originally going to be called Thursday Afternoon,"Gomez explains, "because those are the times that the pool cleaner and the housekeeper would come into the space."

Gomez, who is 29, knows that from his years working as a nanny in LA; in the expensive house where he worked he watched other servants come and go.

Gomez does riffs on several Hockney paintings. He substitutes leaf-blowing gardeners for wealthy Hockney art collectors

He puts another gardener raking a grassy lawn that Hockney had shown being watered.

Weschler has written extensively about Hockney and thought he'd make an introduction.

"Next thing you know, we're driving up to the Hollywood hills up to Mulholland Drive through Laurel Canyon to meet him," Gomez recalls.

Weschler says Hockney was completely charmed and impressed by Gomez.

"He was excited to see these paintings in a different way," Gomez says. "He loved my choice of figures, he loved how I included the figures, he loved the color choices."

So, two generations after Hockney's take on sunshine-living in Los Angeles, a Mexican-American shows unseen laborers, under those same sunny skies. 

Sometimes Gomez makes life-size cardboard cutouts of his workers, and stands them up on actual manicured lawns.

"Invariably the owner gets pissed off and removes the piece — or, more accurately — orders it removed by the help," Weschler says.

Gomez hopes the domestic workers do remove the cutouts — and take them home to keep. In addition to the paintings and cutouts, he rips pages from glossy magazines and applies his theme. 

In an ad for a shiny black Cadillac SUV, he includes people washing the car.
A Cadillac gets washed in Gomez's 2014 The Next Generation Escalade.
© Ramiro Gomez/Courtesy of Abrams
Gardeners stand in for art collectors in Ramiro Gomez's riff on David Hockney's 1968 painting, American Collectors (Fred and Marcia Weisman). © Ramiro Gomez/Courtesy of Abrams
Gomez denies he's a political painter, but Weschler says Gomez is "wielding painting as a way of getting people to notice, and in some ways I think that's one of the most political things you can do."

People are noticing and buying. In the past three years, California museums and private collectors have bought Gomez works, some for thousands of dollars. 

The grateful son of loving laborers was able to send his parents away for their first vacation. They spent a weekend at a nice hotel in Las Vegas.

"Now they understand that this little 5-year-old that would draw on the wall, and a 15-year-old that would stay after school in art studios, and the 22-year-old that was painting in different materials, now to the 29-year-old that is being featured in NPR and artwork and gallery shows — it's all part of my journey," he says.
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