Fair and Loathing: Coincidences, Trends and a Coupla WTFs
Fair and Loathing: Big Paintings
Fair and Loathing: Art? Not Art?
Fair and Loathing: Small and Mid-Size Paintings
Fair and Loathing: Mid-Century Abstraction
Simon Hantai painting at Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York City, with Brancusi sculpture; ABMB
Do not adjust your screen. The color is fine. It's just that today's post consists largely of work in black and white. I mentioned in the opener that I'd seen a lot of this combination. Black and white makes a wowser of a presentation, particularly when all the galleries around you are bathed in color or screaming with reflective surfaces. The wonder is that so many galleries in so many venues opted for the achromatic palette. The work, however, is diverse.
One other thing that's not diverse about this post is the gender of the artists. It's mostly men. I love the work, but the skew is shameful. Don't blame the reporter.
Detail below
Walead Beshty at Regen Projects, Los Angeles; ABMB
Closer view of work below
Jack Whitten (from 1997) at Zeno X Gallery, Antwerp; ABMB
Detail below
Detail below
Brent Wadden at Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York City
Detail below
Installation view above with another individual work below
Julian Stanczak (from 190-91) at Mitchell-Innes + Nash, New York City; ABMB
Closer view below
Nathaniel Axel at Karma Karma, New York City; NADA
Closer view below
James Minden at Muriel Guepin Gallery, New York City; Miami Project
Detail below of incised surface
Gabriel Orozco at Marian Goodman Gallery, New York City; ABMB
Detail below: graphite on plaster on linen on wood
Individual painting below
Reed Danziger at McKenzie Fine Art; at Pulse
Closer view below
Ted Larsen at Robichon Gallery, Denver; Miami Project
A black and white wall at Barbara Methes Gallery, with from left: Dadamaino. Lucio Fontana, Piero Manzoni
Closer view of Manzoni below
Closer view of Manzoni below
Detail below
(What you can't tell from the picture is that the concave piece was set into the wall so the perception of depth and dimension was disorienting in the best possible way)
Michelle Stuart at Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects, New York City; ABMB
Stuart's solo installation was one of my favorites at ABMB and, indeed, in all the fairs. The work, graphite or earth on/in paper, is largely from the Seventies. Many of the works were made from clays and earths gathered at specific locations
The slight orange cast is a reflection in the graphite of the work you glimpse two images above
Detail of surface below
Next and final post: Structure and Material
If you are enjoying these posts from Miami, please consider making a yearly donation of $20 to support my blog. The cost in money and time to attend and report on the fairs is significant for an artist with an ongoing studio practice. A link to PayPal is on the right sidebar close to the top of the page. Any amount is welcome. Thank you.
2 comments:
NOW...I want to paint....YOU really inspired me!
THANKS!
Thank you! Beautiful!
Post a Comment