NEW YORK, NY.- Olney Gleason announced representation of London-based artist Pablo Bronstein (b. 1977, Buenos Aires) in collaboration with Herald St and Galleria Franco Noero. The artists debut exhibition with the gallery will open at 297 Tenth Avenue, New York, in September 2026.
The upcoming exhibition will feature a suite of monumental clocks exquisitely rendered in acrylic on paper, deepening Bronsteins longstanding fascination with the history of aesthetics and bourgeois material culture. The exhibition marks Bronsteins return to New York, where he staged a solo exhibition at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2009.
Recent solo institutional presentations include The Temple of Solomon and Its Principal Contents, comprising imagined designs for the biblical structure, at Waddesdon Manor in Buckinghamshire, UK, in 2025. Bronstein is currently included in the Chengdu Biennale in China through August 2026. His work remains on view at Tate Britain following a major collection rehang in 2023, as well as at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
Pablo Bronstein works across drawing, printmaking, film, and performance. He combines anachronistic elements to create architectural fantasies, exploring constructions of history, identity, and fiction. Merging stylistic elements from a range of periods and movements, Bronstein presents newly invented imagery as if it were documentary evidence, unraveling projections of human desire and imagination.
Bronstein lives and works in London. He earned a BA Fine Art from the Slade School of Art, London (2001) and an MA Visual Arts from Goldsmiths College, London (2004). His work is collected in depth by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Tate, United Kingdom; Centre Pompidou, Paris; The British Museum, London; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; and RISD Museum, Providence, among others. He has staged solo exhibitions at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; RISD Museum, Providence; Tate Britain, London; Tate Modern, London; OGR Torino, Italy; Sir John Soanes Museum, London, and elsewhere.