New and previously unseen paintings, sculptures and works on paper in group show at Stephen Friedman Gallery
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, November 22, 2024


New and previously unseen paintings, sculptures and works on paper in group show at Stephen Friedman Gallery
Group Exhibition: The Place I Am, 5–6 Cork Street, London. 24 November – 22 December.



LONDON.- Stephen Friedman Gallery presents 'The Place I Am', a group show celebrating its gallery artists and the breadth of the programme. Bringing together new and previously unseen paintings, sculptures and works on paper, the exhibition takes its name from Peter Bennet’s eponymous poem, which examines the link between identity and sense of place.

Artists include Mamma Andersson; Juan Araujo; Tonico Lemos Auad; Leilah Babirye; Jonathan Baldock; Stephan Balkenhol; Sarah Ball; Claire Barclay; Caroline Coon; Melvin Edwards; Andreas Eriksson; Manuel Espinosa; Denzil Forrester; Tom Friedman; Kendell Geers; Sky Glabush; Pam Glick; Jeffrey Gibson; Wayne Gonzales; Hulda Guzmán; Channing Hansen; Holly Hendry; Thomas Hirschhorn; Jim Hodges; Izumi Kato; Ilona Keseru; Rivane Neuenschwander; Woody De Othello; Ged Quinn; Deborah Roberts; Anne Rothenstein; Yinka Shonibare CBE RA; David Shrigley; Jiro Takamatsu; Caroline Walker; Kehinde Wiley; Clare Woods; Yooyun Yang and Luiz Zerbini.

The second exhibition to take place at the gallery’s new location on Cork Street, the show explores how home can exist beyond its physical place. The gallery is a home; a community where geographically and stylistically diverse influences gather and thrive.

Works by Andreas Eriksson, Sky Glabush, Pam Glick and Luiz Zerbini are inspired by the landscapes immediately around them and are diverse visual representations of their settings. Inspired by his rural surroundings in Sweden, Eriksson devises meditative paintings that provide a window onto the outside world. Also rooted in abstraction, Glick’s colourful grids and mazes project the energy of Niagara Falls, just a few miles away from her studio. Also working in bright and luminous colours, Zerbini’s joyful depictions of the lush and tropical flora and fauna in Brazil are juxtaposed with Glabush’s hypnotic and mysterious landscapes.

Dreamlike and surreal representations of place feature throughout the presentation. Caroline Coon’s large new painting, Dawn in the City: Is Ziki available... ? (2023), is a continuation of her ongoing series portraying brothels and sex workers. Having worked for a short time in the industry, Coon now paints these scenes through a feminist lens, destabilising the hierarchy between sex workers and their male customers. In this painting, a seemingly exhausted city-worker is seated before an imagined version of London, making an early morning call.

Similarly surreal, with a particular focus on interiors, Mamma Andersson also presents a new painting. The artist is inspired by filmic imagery and theatre sets. Typical of Andersson’s practice, the piece features silhouetted details, thick paint and textured washes.

Caroline Walker has a continued interest in the dynamics of family life and, in particular, the role of women in contemporary society. Exploring the sense of belonging, the artist presents ordinary scenes of everyday life that spotlight the frequently overlooked work that women do. Sarah Ball’s practice is focused on gender and identity, with sensitive and intimate portrayals of her subjects. In this new work, Edie (2023), Ball depicts her daughter. A monumental new work by Kehinde Wiley also features in the exhibition. The artist’s vibrant and naturalistic paintings of contemporary African-American and African-Diasporic men and women subvert the hierarchies and conventions of classical portraiture.

Wayne Gonzales’ meticulously crosshatched paintings examine the American cultural landscape. In this new painting, the artist uses an image of a house as a mirror to reflect the viewer’s own subjectivity. Loaded with associations, the symbol of the house is ambiguous while inviting feelings of nostalgia. Similarly working with memory and sentimentality, Jim Hodges explores themes of love and death, fragility and temporality. Simple and poetic, and executed with minimal means, Hodges’ works express a sentiment of deeply felt experience and encourage a visceral and communal response. The show will, for the first time, feature new gallery artist Clare Woods. Woods’ visceral paintings hover between abstraction and figuration and destabilise traditional art historical genres including landscape, portraiture, and still life.

Poem credit: Peter Bennet, 'The Place I Am', from 'Nayler & Folly Wood'.

Stephen Friedman Gallery
Group Exhibition: The Place I Am
November 24th, 2023 – December 22nd, 2023










Today's News

November 24, 2023

Long lost painting from New York City heist recovered after 60 years

Gagosian announces thematic group exhibition in collaboration with Jeffrey Deitch

Is this the world's highest-grossing photograph?

Edward S. Curtis's seminal The North American Indian stole the show in two days of Fine Books and Manuscript auctions

Hall is suing Oates. Over what is a mystery.

AGSA acquires celebrated and influential British artist Chris Ofili painting, The Swing

Bob Contant, dedicated bohemian bookseller, dies at 80

Ketterer Kunst to offer Richter's first and Palermo's last work

Heritage's December arms & armor event honors the Americans who flew for France in World War I, the Lafayette Escadrille

Haegue Yang's ambitious sculptural ensembles take centre stage at HAM's exhibition halls

Mark Purllant awarded BADA Art Prize 2023

Adrian Paci's ninth solo exhibition with kaufmann repetto opens today

Casey Kaplan representing Amanda Williams & Art Basel Miami Beach 2023

New and previously unseen paintings, sculptures and works on paper in group show at Stephen Friedman Gallery

Explore Seattle's rowing legacy at the museum of history and industry's 'Pulling Together' exhibit

Museum of the Moving Image will celebrate Todd Haynes with 2023 Moving Image Award for Career Achievement

Mid-Americana Gallery Auction serves up a visual feast of folk and outsider art at Soulis Auctions

Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education announces appointment of new executive director

Octavia Art Gallery will soon be opening 'Carmen Almon: The Botany of Desire'

'Buena Vista Social Club,' a story of second chances, gets one more

Theater to see in NYC this holiday season

At 40, J. Crew shakes off a midlife crisis

Buddy Holly poster and Jimmy Buffett painting steal the show in Heritage's $2 million music memorabilia event

Heritage Auctions announces 'Celebrating 100 Years of Disney! (1923-2023) Part II Signature Auction'

Tips That Can Increase your Winning Chances At Slot Online Games

Things You Should Be Mindful Of When You Play Online Slots

GameFi: NFTs, Play-to-Earn, and the Blockchain Revolution in Gaming

Microblading Aftercare: Essential Tips for Long-Lasting Results




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Holistic Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful