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

  

ROZA TERENZI – LET’S RIDE

Posted on 2019-04-08

Australian producer Roza Terenzi drops on to Dekmantel with a quasi-cosmic, tropospheric slab of deep rave. The blend of breakbeats, distorted rhythms, and quirky yet sublime analog melodies evoke the senses, making this an exciting label debut from one of the underground’s rapidly rising stars.

shop.dekmantel.com

  

RAY KANDINSKI – WAKE UP

Posted on 2019-04-08

Each copy contains seeds of the titular cactus (Stenocactus crispatus) along with two stamped inserts providing instructions for growth & care.

Hand-stamped white label pressed on 140g black vinyl. Limited edition of 300, hand-numbered.

cactustraxx.bandcamp.com

  

SINKANE – EVERYBODY

Posted on 2019-04-08

From the upcoming album Dépaysé, released on 31st May 2019 via City Slang.

shop.cityslang.com

  

KAWS PINK PLUSH BFF

Posted on 2019-04-08

KAWS drops a pink plush version of his BFF Companion character.
Released 12 p.m EST, April 9th.
Limited edition of 3000.

kawsone.com

  

WILLIAM EGGLESTON – 2¼

Posted on 2019-04-08

The works in the 2 ¼ series are notable within Eggleston’s oeuvre for their distinct format. He shot the photographs using a two-and-one-quarter-inch medium-format camera, resulting in images that exist between the registers of portraiture and landscape, dissolving the boundaries between the two. The individuals, cars, parking lots, and local stores and businesses that the artist depicts in the series speak to the uniformity of postwar material culture while revealing the distinct character and idiosyncrasies of the people and places that populate the American landscape. Through Eggleston’s lens, a rusted-over Cadillac dealer’s sign becomes both a potent emblem of industrial decline and a lushly toned formalist colourscape of rich blues and bronzes. Vermeer-like, Eggleston exhibits a sensitivity to the powerful yet diffuse light that permeates these spaces. Several images from the series capture cars parked in litter-strewn lots, immersed within this special saturated glow.

Opposite – William Eggleston, Untitled, c. 1977, Courtesy Eggleston Artistic Trust and David Zwirner, © Eggleston Artistic Trust

Exhibition runs April 12th through to June 1st, 2018

David Zwirner
24 Grafton Street
London
W1S 4EZ

www.davidzwirner.com