FRED WILSON – AFRO KISMET

Posted on 2019-04-15

Fred Wilson’s Afro Kismet lays bare questions of visibility: where are Africans in historical accounts of early Europe? How have the narratives institutionalized by museums erased the presence of black individuals of the past and present? Over seven trips to Istanbul, Fred Wilson researched these questions, continuing the project he started in Re: Claiming Egypt and Speak of Me as I Am, his shows at the 1992 Cairo Biennale and 2003 Venice Biennale. In those works, Wilson revealed the history of black people living in each respective region — histories made obsolete in the Western collective imagination. He continues to interrogate
the peripheral treatment of such histories in Afro Kismet, this time mining the history of Istanbul.

Opposite – Melt / Spurt, 2014

Exhibition runs through to April 27th, 2019

Maccarone
300 South Mission Road
CA 90033
Los Angeles

maccarone.net

  

SAM GILLIAM – STARTING: WORKS ON PAPER 1967 – 1970

Posted on 2019-04-15

In the late 1960s, as he was engaging in the experiments that led to his breakthrough Beveled-edge and Drape paintings, Gilliam was also honing methods of working on paper with watercolors and ink that constitute an important facet of his practice 50 years later. Starting includes over a dozen important examples of these early works, which can be divided into three typologies: folded and stained works; works in which thicker, expressionistic application of medium dominates; and calligraphic ink and wash works created in response to, and as documents of, the architectural compositions of the Drape paintings. The exhibition provides a remarkably personal and intimate portrait of an artist discovering the full breadth of his powers. (It also features a typewritten manuscript of one of his poems from the era.) Its stylistic variety reflects the changing contexts and circumstances in which Gilliam was working, as well as his preternatural curiosity and fierce commitment to his practice.

The earliest works in the show, from 1967, feature dense arrays of blue, brown, and yellow applied in series of overlapping splatters. Their energy belies the scale of the compact sheets of sketchbook paper on which they are made, and their density of color allows Gilliam to maximize the potential of these small surfaces, resulting in works that hint at a surprising sense of monumentality. The natural rhythms that animate them come directly from the source, as they were produced by the artist en plein air. Gilliam would bring his baby daughter to Rock Creek Park, located near the family’s home in Washington, D.C., and work while she slept alongside him. He experimented with the relationship between color and movement, responding to the visual textures of the trees and the moods of the landscape, as well as encounters with then-contemporary paintings by Mark Rothko and Morris Louis, which he was seeing in galleries in New York.

Opposite – Untitled, 1967

Exhibition runs through to April 27th, 2019

David Kordansky Gallery
5130 W. Edgewood PL.
CA. 90019
Los Angeles

davidkordanskygallery.com

  

JULIAN STAŃCZAK – DON’T TALK, JUST LOOK

Posted on 2019-04-08

A leading artist of Op Art, Julian Stańczak (b. 1928 Borownica, Poland – d. 2017 Ohio, United States) created from the 1960s a dynamic and joyous oeuvre. The term Op Art itself was coined by The Times after his first major show, Julian Stańczak: Optical Paintings, held at the Martha Jackson Gallery in New York, 1964 where his paintings, full of colour and optimism, gave nothing of his traumatic childhood.

Opposite – Proportional White, 2010

Exhibition runs through to May 31st, 2019

The Mayor Gallery
21 Cork Street
First Floor
W1S 3LZ London

www.mayorgallery.com

  

RON GORCHOV

Posted on 2019-04-08

Since 1967, Ron Gorchov (b. 1930, Chicago) has worked exclusively on curved surface paintings, rejecting the rectangular format of the conventional canvas. “I wanted to change the context of painting because I opposed the ad-hoc acceptance of the rectangle, wanting a more intentional form that would create a new kind of visual space,” he stated in an interview in 2011. Comprising eleven works executed between 2016 and 2018, including two ‘stacked’ paintings, the exhibition at
Modern Art attests to Gorchov’s longstanding dedication both to painting itself, and to the particular lexicon of forms he has committed himself to over the last six decades.

Opposite – NNA PERENNA, 2017

Exhibition runs through to May 11th, 2019

Stuart Shave/Modern Art
4-8 Helmet Row
EC1V 3QJ London

modernart.net

  

ELMGREEN & DRAGSET – OVERHEATED

Posted on 2019-04-08

A leading artist of Op Art, Julian Stańczak (b. 1928 Borownica, Poland – d. 2017 Ohio, United States) created from the 1960s a dynamic and joyous oeuvre. The term Op Art itself was coined by The Times after his first major show, Julian Stańczak: Optical Paintings, held at the Martha Jackson Gallery in New York, 1964 where his paintings, full of colour and optimism, gave nothing of his traumatic childhood.

Opposite – Overheated, 2019

Exhibition runs through to April 28th, 2019

Massimo De Carlo
12 Pedder Street – 3F Pedder Building
Hong Kong

www.massimodecarlo.com

  

ANNA BJERGER – SILENCE

Posted on 2019-04-01

Bjerger’s search for motifs begins with piles of books, magazines and old photographs. Redundant images get a new life in Bjerger’s universe. There isn’t a typical Anna Bjerger painting. People see the themes they want to see. To some, she paints forests and mountains, to some it’s paintings of girls. Bjerger’s subject matter is wide ranging. She paints portraits and landscapes but she also paints toilet rolls. When she does paint sunsets or other seemingly easily accessible subjects, it’s probably for a very different reason than we imagine. It can be a detail or a whole that catches Bjerger’s attention, whether it’s a tennis ball or a landscape it’s always painted with equal respect. For Bjerger’s exhibition Silence she used a square format as a starting point. The format has been essential for Bjerger’s search for both subject and composition through the series.

Opposite – Rock, 2019

Exhibition runs through to June 15th, 2019

Galleri Bo Bjerggaard
Flæsketorvet 85 A
DK-1711 Copenhagen
Denmark

www.bjerggaard.com