RICHARD SERRA

Posted on 2016-06-06

This exhibition features four new large-scale steel sculptures and an Installation Drawing by Richard Serra.

Richard Serra’s (b. 1938) first solo exhibitions were held at the Galleria La Salita, Rome, 1966, and, in the United States, at the Leo Castelli Warehouse, New York, in 1969. His first solo museum exhibition was held at the Pasadena Art Museum in 1970. Serra has since participated in documenta 5 (1972), 6 (1977), 7 (1982), and 8 (1987), in Kassel; the Venice Biennales of 1980, 1984, 2001, and 2013; and the Whitney Museum of American Art’s Annual and Biennial exhibitions of 1968, 1970, 1973, 1977, 1979, 1981, 1995, and 2006.

Opposite – NJ-1, 2015

Exhibition runs through till July 29th, 2016

Gagosian Gallery
522 West 21st Street
NY 10011
New York

www.gagosian.com

  

CORY ARCANGEL – CURRENTMOOD

Posted on 2016-06-06

Reflecting the temporal nature of web-based culture and the American artist’s own transient interests, the new works in this exhibition present something like a ‘listicle’ image dump self-portrait of Arcangel (who often shares his browsing habits on social media via the hashtag #currentmood).

The exhibition takes place at Lisson Gallery London and extends online through an advertising campaign. IRL (Internet slang for “In Real Life”), at 27 Bell Street, new works are presented, created via a variety of media and drawn from a variety of sources, including scans of Ibiza flyers, tracksuits and magazines; default Photoshop image effects; commercial and cell phone photography; low-res screen captures, as well as emulations and re-prints of earlier works by the artist. Encountered within the forum of the exhibition, these are each given equal billing and size despite their varying subject matters and the relative renown of their production methods within the artist’s oeuvre.

Online, the artist will run a series of ads for the show which will appear dispersed across the Internet as ‘promoted content’. In this context, ‘currentmood’ takes the equanimity of Internet culture as its template, embracing the radical disjunctions, open sensibility and non-hierarchical stance in its advances. Arcangel is concerned with the democratization of his own art: by exhibiting the same image both IRL in a white cube and online as ‘click bait’; in the leveling of cultural value, despite variance of image quality; and in his adherence to open source culture (evidenced especially in work titles that double as instructions to make them oneself).

Opposite – Dawgs / Lakes, 2016

Exhibition runs through till July 2nd, 2016

Lisson Gallery
27 Bell Street
NW1 5DA
London

www.lissongallery.com

  

JASON MORAN – STAGED

Posted on 2016-06-06

Moran’s rich and varied work in both music and visual art mines entanglements in American cultural production. He is deeply invested in complicating the relationship between music and language, exploring ideas of intelligibility and communication. In his first gallery exhibition, Moran will continue to investigate the overlaps and intersections of jazz, art, and social history, provoking the viewer to reconsider notions of value, authenticity, and time.

STAGED will include a range of objects and works on paper, including two large-scale sculptures featuring audio from Moran’s STAGED series that were recently exhibited in the 56th Biennale di Venezia. Based on two historic New York City jazz venues that no longer exist (the Savoy Ballroom and the Three Deuces), the sculptures are hybrids of reconstructions and imaginings. Works on paper and smaller objects will be in dialogue with the stage sculptures on many levels: citing performance and process, employing sound, and exploiting the visual history of jazz in America.

Opposite – Three Deuces, 2015

Exhibition runs through till June 30th, 2016

Luhring Augustine
25 Knickerbocker Avenue Brooklyn
NY 11237
New York

www.luhringaugustine.com

  

ALMOST SKATEBOARDS X JEAN JULLIEN

Posted on 2016-06-06

Almost Skateboards has linked up with London-based graphic artist, Jean Jullien to produce this rad guest artist series. Jean Jullien graduated from Central Saint Martins in 2008 and works closely with the musician The Coward.

In 2003 Rodney and Daewon got together for coffee and started talking about the idea of doing something together that will be fun and different. After months and many bad names later, in early July something hit us like a mac truck, a name that we would all agree with, make us happy and that looks good on the walls of the retailers still in business. That name is “Almost a skateboard company” A company that emphasize on fun, creativity and self-deprecation, A home for a family of amazing skateboarders coming together from all parts of the globe.

www.almostskateboards.com

  

MICHELLE STUART – THEATRE OF MEMORY

Posted on 2016-06-06

Widely recognized as one of the very few female pioneers of Land Art, Stuart is known for her nature-based art dating to the late 1960s and 1970s. Comparatively lesser-known are her remarkable photographic works, which constitute a crucial part of her oeuvre and have been her primary focus over the past several years.

Organized by guest curator Gregory Volk, Michelle Stuart, Theatre of Memory: Photographic Works consists of twelve recent large-scale works—including a major wall piece created specifically for this exhibition—as well as two important pieces from the early 1980s that can be seen as precursors to Stuart’s later direction. This exhibition is the first museum treatment of Stuart’s photography-based works.

Opposite – Night Over Alice Springs, 2013

Exhibition runs through to June 26th, 2016

The Bronx Museum of the Arts
1040 Grand Concourse
Bronx
New York 10456

www.bronxmuseum.org

  

JEFFERSON HAYMAN – LIMERENCE

Posted on 2016-06-06

The images of “Limerence” contain deep, powerful landscapes as well as a collection of fascinating vintage objects, including high heels, a golf ball, and an old film camera. These objects appear as if taken from a time capsule; suitable choices as Hayman states one of his mentors and inspirations was Edward Steichen, one of the pre-eminent photographers of the early 20th century. The colors of each photograph unite Hayman’s show as one. With a muted pallet of somber blue, gray, and brown, it does not shout at the viewer, but rather whispers. The desaturated color fields offer a more contemplative sensation and truly call on the viewer to reflect.

Though Hayman most often documents common objects, the soft colors make us linger. We begin to sense a deeper meaning and story behind each photograph, one that feels nostalgic. While each photograph is encased in its own distinctive, artist made or antique frame, they meld together seamlessly, with details from one flowing into the other. The warm, wooden frames lie against a familiar robins egg blue wall, which take us back to cozy nights at home. Hayman is endlessly inspired by story telling and capturing the world as he sees it. In the details of each photograph, he aspires to create a legacy that will outlive him and will continue to have the same haunting effect.

Opposite – THE ASSIGNMENT, 2014

Exhibition runs through to June 11th, 2016

Robin Rice Gallery
325 West 11th Street
New York
NY 10014

www.robinricegallery.com