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miuccia-nada:

Tseng Kwong Chi, Keith Haring in Pop Shop, NY
4140 ♥ / April 22, 2013
2796 ♥ / April 20, 2013

Why I am leaving Gagosian

0 ♥ / March 7, 2013
bluejeanstshirt:

Great art work I saw at Dumbo Art Festival 2012
2 ♥ / October 25, 2012
tmagazine:

The artist Nick Cave in his Chicago loft. (Photo by Jason Schmidt)
163 ♥ / October 25, 2012
blackcontemporaryart:

Glenn Ligon: Neon  ChelseaOct 26 - Dec 8, 2012
Luhring Augustine is pleased to announce Neon, Glenn Ligon’s first solo exhibition with the gallery. Throughout his career, Ligon has pursued an incisive exploration of American history, literature, and society across a body of work that builds critically on the legacies of modern painting and recent conceptual art. He is best known for his landmark series of text-based paintings, made since the 1980s, which draw on the writings and speech of diverse figures including Jean Genet, Zora Neale Hurston, Mary Shelley, and Richard Pryor. Since 2005 Ligon has made neons that push his practice into new, unexpected territories while remaining in dialogue with his text paintings. This is the first exhibition that brings together a significant number of these neon works, many of which have never before been exhibited in New York.Warm Broad Glow (2005), Ligon’s first exploration in neon, uses a fragment of text from Three Lives, the 1909 novel by American author Gertrude Stein. Ligon rendered the words “negro sunshine” in warm white neon, the letters of which were then painted black on the front. The resulting “black light” emitting from the piece plays with the notions of light and shadow, defamiliarizing the usual appearance of neon while highlighting the social and political complexities of the phrase. Two works in the exhibition are derived from neon sculptures by Bruce Nauman. One Live and Die(2006) stems from Nauman’s 100 Live and Die (1984). Ligon has taken one pair of phrases from the Nauman piece and faithfully reproduced it in cobalt blue neon painted black. Impediment(2006) is another work inspired by Nauman, in this case the piece My Name as Though It Were Written on the Surface of the Moon (1968). Simultaneously a pun referring to being “called names” and a visual representation of slurred speech, Impediment presents a nuanced investigation of the multivalent nature of language and its more virulent uses. Double America (2012), a new work created for the exhibition, continues a series of works that employ the word “America”. This latest iteration seems at first glance to feature a mirror image of the word, but on closer inspection it becomes apparent that the pieces are imperfectly conjoined. This simple repositioning continues the strategy of reusing, recycling, and recontextualizing language that has long been a touchstone of Ligon’s practice. Glenn Ligon lives and works in New York. He received a Bachelor of Arts from Wesleyan University in 1982, and attended the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program in 1985. A mid-career retrospective of Ligon’s work, titled Glenn Ligon: AMERICA, opened at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York in March 2011, and traveled to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth. Ligon has also had solo museum exhibitions at the Power Plant, Toronto (2005), the Studio Museum in Harlem (2001), the Kunstverein Munich (2001), the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (2000), the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia (1998), the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (1996), the Brooklyn Museum of Art (1996), and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C. (1993). 

Image: Glenn Ligon, Rückenfigur, 2009, Neon
43 ♥ / October 23, 2012
blackcontemporaryart:

Glenn Ligon
Excerpt, 2009
neon and black paint2.8 x 55.5 inches (7.1 x 141 cm)Ed. of 5
68 ♥ / October 23, 2012
varonjournal:

Exclamation Mark,
American sculptor Richard Artschwager’s work exemplified the essence of pop, conceptual and minimalistic art.
-Post by Michael Xufu Huang
13 ♥ / October 23, 2012
likeafieldmouse:

Bruce Nauman - Dream Passage (2010)
4807 ♥ / October 6, 2012
bhsutton:

Beautiful Jean-Michel Basquiat painting at the Musée d’Art Contemporain in Marseille.
2929 ♥ / October 5, 2012
pacegallery:

Artist Hiroshi Sugimoto poses in front of his photographs at the launch of Pace London on October 3rd, 2012.  You can see more photographs from the opening of Rothko/Sugimoto: Dark Paintings and Seascapes on our official facebook page.
Photo Credits: Chris Jackson/Getty Images for Pace London
26 ♥ / October 5, 2012
artruby:

Dollar bill drawing of Matthew Barney by Jeremy Hara.
115 ♥ / September 29, 2012

Sharon Hayes x The Whitney Musuem of American Art

Sharon Hayes

There’s So Much I Want To Say To You

I absolutely love that exhibit

So Powerful 

0 ♥ / September 8, 2012
Regarding Venus - Sarah Charlesworth
The ‘Venus’ figure in an art historical scene and the west’s obsession with the black body  
6 ♥ / September 8, 2012
Bruce High Quality - Las Meninas
This photograph is sick especially is your familiar with the formal composition of Velásquez’ Las Meninas
3 ♥ / September 8, 2012
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