Archives For Exhibitions

Mar 9

Exhibition: Kiki Smith at Pace Gallery NYC

Maybe one of the most beautiful and moving art exhibitions I have seen in years… Kiki Smith’s exhibition titled Wonder is indeed just that. Mixing sculpture, tapestry & paintings on handmade glass this installation is really a grand summation of her work and breathtakingly beautiful. Just go…

Kiki Smith
Wonder
Feb 28, 2014 – Mar 29, 2014 @ Pace New York

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New York – Pace Gallery is pleased to present Kiki Smith: Wonder, a major exhibition that presents the artist’s investigation of the natural and spiritual worlds through works made of aluminum, bronze, fine silver, textile, stained and hand-blown antique glass, and paint. On view at 510 West 25th Street from February 28 through March 29, 2014, Kiki Smith: Wonder is the artist’s first major New York gallery show in four years and marks the 20th anniversary of the artist’s first solo exhibition at the Pace Gallery.

In a series of works from 2011 to 2014, Smith again explores the rich terrain of expressions of human and animal forms as well as celestial bodies and nature. Decay, rebirth, and eternal cycles of the seasons, nature, and eclipses recur throughout Kiki Smith: Wonder in works that illustrate Smith’s ability to move fluidly between materials with vastly different characteristics and properties.

Among the works in the exhibition are a series of sculptures, up to 13-feet across, of hoarfrost, the cyclically recurring crystallization of water vapor. Where artists for decades have rendered depictions of hoarfrost as decorations of landscape, Smith makes the ephemeral phenomenon the subject of works themselves. Fabricated from fine silver or stainless steel, the interlocking two-dimensional panels are arranged in seemingly random formations and reflect on the passage of winter to spring.

Smith’s current glassworks are seen in several major pieces that extend up to 16 feet across: Prelude, of felled trees, Raptor I and Raptor II, of birds in flight, and Rogue Stars, a series of eight stars made of opal white and antique glass. Although Smith has worked with glass for 20 years, she has refocused on the medium though recent public commissions, including her Art Production Fund installation of 2012, Kiki Smith’s Chorus, and the 16-foot East Window for the Museum at Eldridge Street / Eldridge Street Synagogue, both in New York and from 2012

via Pace Gallery

 

Exhibition: Kiki Smith at Pace Gallery NYC

The biggest retrospective ever on the work of the influential photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson, the father of the decisive moment, is now up at the Centre Pompidou. This exhibition promises to be the definitive look at the great photographers work that influenced generations of documentary and street shooters. If you can’t make it to Paris there is a very large book from the exhibition here.

Henri Cartier-Bresson 12 February – 9 June 2014, Galerie 2 – Centre Pompidou, Paris

 

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“Taking a photograph means putting head, eye and heart in the same line of sight,” said Henri Cartier-Bresson.

Ever since Cartier-Bresson began to exhibit and publish his pictures, some have attempted to define the scope of this principle as a single stylistic entity. His genius for composition, his ready grasp of situations and his dexterity in capturing them at just the right instant are generally summed up in the idea of the “decisive moment”. Ten years after the death of the photographer in 2004, now that the thousands of prints he left to posterity have been meticulously collected and classified by the foundation bearing his name, while his archives of notes, letters and publications are now accessible to researchers, it appears clearly that while it serves to qualify some of his best-known pictures, the “decisive moment” is too limited to give the full measure of his work as a whole. In complete contrast to a unified, simplified view, the Centre Pompidou retrospective endeavors to show the wide variety of the photographer’s career, his successive changes of direction and his different periods of development, with the aim of showing that there was not just one but several Cartier-Bressons. While his great iconic works are presented, obviously, if his diversity is to be appreciated it also means taking lesser known images into consideration, reassessing certain photo-reports and highlighting collections of his paintings, drawings and incursions into the realm of the film: endeavors that also shed much light on his relationship with the image and, by default, on what he was looking for in photography.

The first part of the exhibition, covering 1926 to 1935, was marked by his contact with the Surrealist group, his early beginnings in photography and his major trips across Europe, Mexico and the USA. The second part, which begins in 1936 on his return to America and ends in 1946 with another trip to New York, deals with his political commitment, his work for the Communist press, his anti-fascist activism, the cinema and the war. The third part begins with the founding of the agency Magnum Photos in 1947 and ends at the beginning of the Seventies, when Cartier-Bresson stopped doing photo-reports.

The retrospective follows Cartier-Bresson’s career from Surrealism to May 68, including the Spanish Civil War, the Cold War, decolonization and the economic boom of the “Trente Glorieuses”, and provides a new interpretation of the work of France’s most famous photographer, a long way from all the legends and clichés. Through over five hundred photographs, drawings, paintings, films and documents bringing together well-known and unfamiliar pictures alike, the exhibition aims to present a history of his extraordinary work, and thereby of the 20th century.

Curator : Mnam/Cci, Clément Chéroux

via Centre Pompidou

Photography is at its best when it becomes more than just the thing photographed. Jackie Nickerson gives us both photograph as human sculpture and a faceless portrait of the thankless tasks preformed by the farm workers of Zimbabwe; which then becomes a metaphor for the invisible workers everywhere who provide the modern world with all its material desires. See this incredible series: TERRAIN

TERRAIN

JANUARY 16 – FEBRUARY 15, 2014 @ JACK SHAINMAN GALLERY
513 WEST 20TH STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10011

 

  

 

“Jackie Nickerson began photographing Zimbabwean farm workers in 1996 as a way to change the perception that those who work in African agriculture are dis-empowered, un-modern people. The resulting series, Farm, focused on the unique and beautiful clothing the workers made for themselves, and by doing so highlighted the worker’s identity, individuality, and ultimately their modernism.

This was published by Jonathan Cape in September 2002. German edition, ‘Leben Mit Der Erde’, published by Frederking and Thaler, 2002; French edition, ‘Une Autre Afrique’, published by Flammarion 2002.

For her most recent series, TERRAIN, Nickerson turns her attention to the roles in which workers play in the production and commodification of agricultural goods. TERRAIN focuses on the synergy between cultivation, workers and the environment, employing a reduced artistic language to draw attention to important debates around crop specialization, subsistence farming and food security.

Nickerson was born in Boston, USA in 1960 and divides her time between Ireland and southern Africa. Her work is held in many important private and public collections and has been exhibited in venues which include the Santa Barbara Museum of Art; Museum of Modern Art, Salzburg; Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels; National Portrait Gallery, London and the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin.”

She is represented by Jack Shainman Gallery in New York.

via http://www.jackienickerson.com/

Exhibition: Jackie Nickerson Photographs

 

Philip-Lorca diCorcia is one of the greatest photographers of his generation. His series East of Eden was his response to the George Bush era’s wonderful banking crisis, which of course we now call the Great Recession.  ( To date no one has gone to jail for the collapse of the USA and the world economy )

Think about it…

Iolanda, 2011 Courtesy of the artist and David Zwirner Gallery

On East of Eden, a series he started in 2008.

“That was obviously a traumatic year for alot of people,” he said. “I felt I needed to respond to the situation, to what was the culmination of George Bush’s era. So this idea of the Fall, this ejection from Eden, is what inspired the pictures, a sense that everybody’s optimism and fever to have a great life had been completely overturned. And to some degree, as in the Biblical story, it was knowledge that did it.”

“Suddenly people realised that they don’t get everything for free; that you can’t have a mortgage that you don’t have to pay back; that you can’t constantly leverage your life on your credit card. And we’d been led into two wars that were disastrous failures and misguided to begin with. I just took that as a jumping-off point for the imagery.”

via  Jobey, Liz. “The Lost Eden.” Financial Times Magazine. (August 31, 2013): 24-27 [ill.]

 

The Photographs of Philip-Lorca diCorcia

In Art School the saying goes; “If you can’t make it good make it big. If you can’t make it big paint it red”.  But with this stellar cast of painters, big paintings are big for a reason. This is a must see all-star show. Every painting is a home run.

January 28 – March 2, 2014
Wilkinson Gallery
New York Academy of Art
111 Franklin Street New York, NY 10013

 

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Exhibition: New York Academy of Art: The Big Picture