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 Tuesday, November 4, 2025 | 
 
	 
 
	
     
      
      
 
 
 
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	| John Lurie at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center |  
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		John Lurie, Heroine Leads To Harder Drugs, 2005. 14 x 10 1/4". Watercolor and pen on paper. Courtesy the artist.
		 
        
 
 
							
	
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LONG ISLAND, N.Y.-  P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center is pleased to present John Luries first solo museum exhibition. While many know Luries work in film, television, and music, he has also been a visual artist since the 1970s. This exhibition will focus on approximately 80 recent watercolors and works on paper. John Lurie: Works on Paper is on view through August 14, 2006 in P.S.1s Kunsthalle gallery.
 
 By combining text and images in surprising and quixotic ways, Lurie creates a personal mythology that blurs distinctions between real experiences and the imaginary. Through strange and ironic lines like New York is for idiots and If you marry me we can live here, the watercolors are both brash and sensitive, honest and cavalier, implying a sense of fantastic narrative and extended moments. A menagerie of animals figure into Luries work. Rabbits, buffalo, horses, pigs, birds, and dogs are painted singularly as striking icons or as characters that talk back to their masters with smart-mouth attitude. His animals are not the personified creatures of childrens books, but rather rough and tumble beasts imbued with mythic stature.
 
 An artist, musician, and actor, John Lurie (b. 1952) has been a crucial member of the New York cultural scene for more than thirty years. He starred in a number of feature-length films by Jim Jarmusch, such as Stranger than Paradise (1984) and Down by Law (1986), and appeared in Permanent Vacation (1980). He has scored the music for over 20 films and received a Grammy nomination for Best Instrumental Composition Written for a Motion Picture for Get Shorty (1995). In 1978, he formed the acclaimed jazz-punk band The Lounge Lizards, which showcased the musicians Evan Lurie, John Medeski, Steven Bernstein, and Calvin Weston. His 1991 comedy series Fishing with John is now a cult classic. In 2000, he released a blues album under the pseudonym Marvin Pontiac. Lurie recently exhibited his artwork at Roebling Hall and Anton Kern galleries in New York, and Galerie Daniel Blau, Munich.
					 
 
	
	
    
				
    
					
	
	
			     
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