DONALD JUDD – PAINTINGS 1959–1961

Posted on 2021-12-13

While Judd’s oeuvre is defined principally through his three-dimensional work—which he conceived in opposition to the essential properties of both conventional painting and sculpture—he began his practice as a painter while also taking graduate courses in art history at Columbia University in New York. In addition, he supported himself as a critic: beginning in 1959, and continuing for the next five years, he wrote prolifically for Art News and Arts Magazine, publishing incisive essays and reviews of contemporary art during a momentous era. Judd’s paintings make manifest the understanding of postwar modernism that he articulated in his writing.

Opposite – Untitled, 1960

Exhibition runs through to January 22nd, 2022

Gagosian
555 West 24th Street
NY 10011
New York

gagosian.com

  

TRACEY EMIN – VIDEO WORKS, 1995—2017

Posted on 2021-12-13

Tracey Emin, Video Works, 1995-2017 at Xavier Hufkens is the first comprehensive survey of her prolific film work, showing her well known short films such as Why I Never Became a Dancer (1995) and How It Feels (1996) alongside more obscure, rarely seen before works such as Niagra (1997).
Opposite – Why I Never Became a Dancer, 1995

Exhibition runs through to January 23rd, 2022

Xavier Hufkens
6 rue St-Georges | St-Jorisstraat
1050 Brussels
Belgium

www.xavierhufkens.com

  

SPACE-TIME CONTINUITY

Posted on 2021-12-13

This December, the exhibition ‘space-time continuity’ at the gallery’s new space on Bahnhofstrasse 1 will examine the dialogue between Max Bill, artist, designer, theorist, writer, curator and pedagogue, and a group of his contemporaries who explored a similar territory to his own art and ideas. Many of the works on display are from Max Bill’s private collection, indicating personal friendships as well as aesthetic exchanges. ‘space-time continuity’ is a testament to Bill’s proximity with, and attentiveness to, his artist peers and shows how he was at the very centre of the conversation to develop a radical new art. The artists featured in this exhibition alongside Max Bill include Josef Albers, Hans Arp, László Moholy-Nagy, Kurt Schwitters, Fritz Glarner, Sophie Taeuber-Arp and Georges Vantongerloo amongst others.

Opposite – Installation view

Exhibition runs through to January 22nd, 2022

Hauser & Wirth
Bahnhofstrasse 1
8001 Zürich

www.hauserwirth.com

  

TONY LEWIS – NOISE! YOURSELF, ALSO DISTRAIN

Posted on 2021-12-06

Tony Lewis presents four new large scale vibrant drawings, where graphite and coloured pencils generate dynamic shapes on paper, displayng the artist’s signature glyph alphabet, influenced by his fascination with stenography Continuing to explore the Gregg Shorthand system and its connection to sound and language, Lewis uses shorthand notation that translates sounds
into curving and bisecting lines. Lewis develops his exploration of ontology and the epistemology of language into a wider investigation that reflects upon the hierarchical systems within society and the complexity of the black American experience. The Gregg Shorthand system is a light-line stenography consisting of a phonetic shorthand based on elliptical and bisecting lines, invented by John Robert Gregg in 1888. It was the most popular form of pen stenography in the United States and is still in use today, albeit less so than before due to mainstream digitalization.

Opposite – Noise, 2021

Exhibition runs through to January 12th, 2022

MASSIMODECARLO
55 South Audley Street
W1K 2QH
London

www.massimodecarlo.com

  

AMANDA WALL – BUTTERFLIES

Posted on 2021-12-06

A figure lies back, their hand behind their head, head turned to the side like they’re trying to see you, their neck cranked. Long legs lanky, and then big feet, sprawling toward the viewer, in a colour field haze that has the momentum of distorted perspective Wall is so known for. The feet coming at you, right there, toes that fit in your mouth. “There are definitely fetishistic elements to my work. It’s an aesthetic I really love that speaks to the limits of intimacy,” Amanda Wall affirms. The smoothness of the skin, hands, feet, gives almost a rubbery quality, but not the uncanny flesh of realistic sex robots. This is a living, breathing person. You can tell. Wall’s paintings have a wet quality that is somewhere in the field of gloss. The sheen in her work has depth. This is the point. There is that sheen depth in the portrait of a figure’s face. There is that sheen depth in the quality of how Wall paints the backgrounds, colour fields these characters float in. In another painting, the long-legged figure is sprawling once more, now in an inflatable. Red and pink, a toy that is neither a donut or a flamingo. On one side of the painting is a chiaroscuro effect, the shadows giving more of a sense of three dimensional space, the figure quite realistic; on the other side, less contrast, and more like a painting. Wall explores this sense of split worlds, like time or space is bifurcating, and all that is there to witness it is a head with a bow, staring at you with that one, penetrating eye, and a body crouching down.

Opposite – Blow up heart, 2021

Exhibition runs through to January 15th, 2022

Almine Rech
20 rue de l’Abbaye
B-1050 Brussels
Belgium

www.alminerech.com

  

KIM DACRES – BLACK MOVES FIRST

Posted on 2021-12-06

In the traditional game of chess, Black moves second, not first. Marked by a strategic disadvantage from the onset, Black involuntarily falls into responsive and defensive play. This extended metaphor becomes inverted with Dacres’ exhibition, Black Moves First, which unveils a powerful composition of eight new sculptures that proffer a novel twist on the timeless game of chess, which, in this version, is devoid of kings, pawns, or male signifiers. Instead, the eight women of the Crown family move first with white, the viewer, to respond.

Opposite – Black Moves First, 2021

Exhibition runs through to January 2nd, 2022

GAVLAK
340 Royal Poinciana Way, Suite M334
FL 33480
Palm Beach

www.gavlakgallery.com