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Art Paris returns to Grand Palais for its 27th edition

January 15, 2025

From 3 to 6 April 2025, Art Paris returns to the Grand Palais, where the newly renovated nave and balcony spaces will allow the fair to host 170 exhibitors from 25 different countries. At this edition, the fair’s events programme will be even more ambitious with new themes, exhibitions, prizes and panel discussions. The Art Paris VIP programme, a regular feature, provides a choice of 31 exhibition visits and tours reserved exclusively for guest collectors and art professionals, highlighting the effervescent Parisian cultural scene.

The 2025 selection embodies the unique identity of Art Paris, a fair that is both regional and cosmopolitan and, as ever, a place of artistic discovery: 60% of the exhibitors are from France with 40% of international galleries. Moreover, 36% of this edition’s participants are new to the fair. Such figures illustrate how Art Paris showcases the wealth and depth of the French gallery ecosystem, from big name international galleries to unique modern and contemporary art galleries around France. Art Paris is also committed to supporting young galleries, notably with Promises, the sector focussing on emerging artists. This year, Mennour, Semiose and Christian Berst will be joining regular exhibitors, such as Continua, Lelong & Co., Loevenbruck, Meessen, Nathalie Obadia, Michel Rein, Almine Rech and Templon, among others.

New galleries joining the 2025 fair are: Sabrina Amrani (Madrid), Beck & Eggeling and Pasquer (Dusseldorf, Paris), Lange + Pult (Zurich), Senda (Barcelona), Rüdiger Schöttle (Cologne), Tang Contemporary (Beijing), Waddington-Custot (London), Wilde (Geneva) and W&K – Wienerroither & Kohlbacher (Vienna, New York), amongst others.

photo: © Marc Domage

Márta Kucsora at Patricia Low reviewed by Sandrine Welte

January 13, 2025

 
“One must still have chaos in oneself to be able to give birth to a dancing star” - Friedrich Nietzsche 


Opened in late November, the current show at Patricia Low’s Venice branch presents an intriguing overview of recent works by the Hungarian artist Márta Kucsora. In direct proximity to the resplendent Ca’ Rezzonico, the gallery introduces Kucsora’s paintings in a fitting setting that displays the canvases in dialogue with the sublime urban architecture against which the artist’s constantly evolving formations of organic abstraction echoes the genesis and nature of the Lagoon city. 


Few are thus the places better suited than Venice to celebrate Kucsora’s singular body of works. A city built on water, the so-called “Serenissima” has never ceased to inspire artists from near and far, an imaginary locus too improbable to conceive, too impossible to imagine. Suspended between sky and sea, while hovering across an infinite palette of chromatic hues, the Queen of the Adriatic has exerted her spell since time immemorial, giving rise to centuries of artistic production that stand unique in human history. Composition, movement and colour turned into the elements of a golden age of Renaissance painting, which now find a new artistic language in Kucsora’s oeuvre. Cascading networks of ever-morphing organic impressions, her works suggest allusions to cellular structures and cosmic views, likewise encapsulating the dimensions of life between micro and macro. In their elusive fluidity, the canvases insinuate motion, an eternal becoming, never pausing but always advancing —a metaphorical image of Venice herself. Everything appearing in Less Orderly Ways as the poignant title of Kucsora’s solo show at Patricia Low Gallery promises. 


If the laws of nature are said to determine the origin of being, Márta Kucsora has found a way to harness their intrinsic force for painting as she orchestrates creations that are born from a painterly process wholly her own. Conceived in a fluid choreography between chance and control, hers are canvases that speak to an ambiguous, amorphous state of existence to which the artist lends a new visual language through her unique technique of brushless painting. Using diverse chemicals that either attract or repel each other, the finely calibrated layers of pigments unravel as animated topographies, complex tangles of colour and shape whose evocative visual evolution comes as both an invitation and challenge for the beholder to step into a pictorial space of visceral allure.
 

 
Pastes, lacquers and paints of varied density and viscosity perform a sublime dance upon their encounter on the linen canvas, thereby entering an impassioned struggle that ultimately results in compositions of rhythmic depth. By this, they reverberate with a creative thrust, an echo from within the intriguing chromatic designs that seem to explode in spontaneous collision. In a world determined by the pretence of linear historiography, Kucsora’s canvases unfurl as clinamina in a nod to Lucretius’ stipulation on the unpredictable swerves of atoms that occur at no fixed place or time. Similarly, her works come about in an innovative process indebted to a degree of serendipitous coincidence, in an unexpected updating of the Surrealists’ dictum of the “chance encounter of a sewing machine and an umbrella on an operating table”.1 On these grounds, Kucsora’s brushless paintings are evocative of Max Ernst’s vast experiments with the process of image-making across grattage, frottage or decalcomania that would eventually lead him “au-delà de la peinture” –“beyond painting”. In a similar way, rather than enforcing her artist’s self, Kucsora grants autonomy to the final outcome, acting as a mediator and medium for the image-to-be by navigating, guiding, directing the dance of pigments in an intricate conversation between brain and hand as the actual matter takes precedence in the realisation of the work. 


As a delicate choreography, deliberately geared towards the execution of her works, Márta Kucsora’s gesture equally recalls the basic tenets of Abstract Expressionism with its greats such as Jackson Pollock, Helen Frankenthaler or Janet Sobel, whose radical approach to painting pushed the actual performance on canvas centre-stage. Of unprecedented corporeal, bodily investment in the process of creation, the movement promoted a new artistic language, severing ties with a past rooted in figurative traditions. As a consequence, these artists afforded a novel narration liberated from the idiom of graphic representation, breaking free from a mere “pictorial depicting” while at the same time challenging a long-overcome notion of ekphrasis as the meticulous translation of the visual to the verbal. The unspeakable semantics of the image, correspondingly, demonstrated the limitations of language for refusing a literal “reading” of the picture. In the same manner, Kucsora’s mesmerising compositions demand to be experienced rather than merely looked at, sensed rather than comprehended as a singular story. They exist in a multiplicity of the shifting image, an impossible duplicity of always becoming while yet already being. In their complex evolution, the tangles, networks and patterns arrest the gaze, while drawing the viewer into the vortices of colour. Theirs is an invitation to look in an ocular re-enactment of the choreography that witnessed their conception. Each work unfurls as a visual spectacle, a living process that performs itself time and again on the surface of the canvas.

Time then is the marker of their condition, serendipitous formations that build, contract, expand –assisted by the artist whose knowing hand determines the final image. Time arrested, transfixed. The instability of the ever-morphing re-composition of matter overcome. Correspondingly, the thinly executed layers of pigments constitute inter- and surfaces for an archaeology of the canvas. By this, the image unfurls byits carefully constructed and powerfully executed stratae, where the crevices and voids insinuate an in-betweenness and liminality towards new forms of being and becoming. Standing in front of Márta Kucsora’s works thus comes as an intimate encounter, confronting the beholder with their own presence, since offering a look into the micro and the macro, infinity on either end of the spectrum of life. Inevitably, they tear open the fissures of existence to expose the fundamental questions of Being in its barest, rawest form.
 

 
From Their Origin (2023), Disconnected From the Rest (2024) or Something Becoming Conscious (2024) are the evocative titles, gleaned from literature, in an extension of the notion of chance. In a motion that mirrors the genesis of her canvases –between chance and control –the artist allows for serendipity to decide upon opening the respective volumes at a random page to find inspiration for the subsequent assemblage of terms into evocative compositions. This extension of her creative practice forges an intricate bond between word and image, furthering the experimental as well as experiential reach of her canvases that stimulate the viewer in both visual and cognitive ways. Associations are set floating, a sensation of fluid thought arrested for the fraction of a moment in Márta Kucsora’s paintings where states of being coalesce, metamorphise, explode. 


And here Venice appears again. This time as the liminal state of being, an eternal in-betweenness that translates into a temporal arrest on the surface of Kucsora’s works. The infinite flow of being and becoming, the liquidity and elusiveness of existence inadvertently brought to a halt on the canvas, one moment in time preserved against the infinite number of potential different outcomes.
 
- Sandrine Welte, art historian, independent curator based in Venice

 
 
1 The phrase was taken from Isidore-Lucien Ducasse, who working under the pseudonym of Compte de Lautréamont published his seminal work Les Chants de Maldoror in 1869.
 
 
all artworks © the gallery and the artist(s)

A look back on our year at GalleriesNow

December 20, 2024

2024 has been incredibly busy at GalleriesNow, with almost 3,000 exhibitions promoted during the year. We launched the new individual user memberships to give access to extra benefits and functionality - we improved and rebranded the GalleriesNow app to enhance the experience for galleries and art enthusiasts alike. We’ve also forged new partnerships to produce further city-wide print maps with renowned fairs including Westbund Art & Design, SP-Arte, and Art Paris, adding to the ones we already create with Frieze and with Art Basel.

As always we are proud to continue supporting young and emerging art spaces through our Young Gallery Initiative and to be a member of the Gallery Climate Coalition.

As we look ahead to the New Year, we’re excited to continue strengthening our relationships, and look forward to having an even better 2025. Wishing you a joyful holiday season and a prosperous New Year!

Miami & Palm Beach Gallery Map with Art Basel out now!

December 5, 2024

We are delighted to announce the Miami & Palm Beach Gallery Map with Art Basel.

The map guides you around all the best exhibitions to see across Miami and Palm Beach - with over forty-five locations and more than eighty exhibitions featured.

Pick up your copy at the Fair or view it online here.

2024’s ArtReview Power 100

the galleries that ArtReview has judged to be the most influential

Japanese Art History à la Takashi Murakami

November 29, 2024

STOP PRESS…
on Tuesday December 10 at noon, Takashi Murakami will launch an exclusive 200-item-only T-Shirt Drop at the Gagosian Shop in Burlington Arcade!

NıCOLETTı now represents Ana Viktoria Dzinic

NıCOLETTı is delighted to announce the representation of London-based artist Ana Viktoria Dzinic (b. 1994, Schwelm, DE).

Ana Viktoria Dzinic investigates methods of image construction and their relationship with processes of subjectivity formation. Combining photographic paintings, multi-media installations and performances, Dzinic’s work explores the way in which the modes of production and circulation of technical images affect the apprehension and comprehension of self. Through various strategies of display that include script-based installations, protocols, or series of paintings on fabric using techniques such as industrial printing, dyeing, layering and trompe l’œil, the artist questions the validity of inherited dialectics between process hiding and process revealing, original and copy, indexical and represented, branded and authentic. Dzinic’s practice unfolds through distinct series of works, establishing each time a new aesthetic trait that reveals a different type of image economy.

Ana Viktoria Dzinic lives and works in London, UK. She holds an MFA from Goldsmiths, University of London, UK (2022).

Hauser & Wirth now represents María Berrío

November 26, 2024

Hauser & Wirth is pleased to announce its representation of Colombia-born, Brooklyn-based artist María Berrío (b. 1982) in collaboration with Victoria Miro.

Drawing on childhood memories, dreams, mythological themes and issues at the forefront of contemporary culture, Berrío’s intricate large-scale collages push the limits of conventional portraiture and landscape painting. Her imaginative, dreamlike works are often populated by women set in ethereal spaces that seem to exist outside of conventional time and space. Inspired in part by South American folklore, her art places humans and nature in a harmonious coexistence, suggestive of a delicate ecology in which the personal and collective seek balance. Berrío’s work explores the ways history shapes individuals and communities; in her amalgamation of memory, fact and fiction, she blurs the boundaries between reality and fantasy to address the many struggles and contradictions of our present day.

Berrío’s technical prowess is demonstrated through the singular process of layering hundreds of pieces of cut and torn Japanese paper on which she adds shadows and delicate details in watercolor, graphite, and ink to achieve richly textured, multi-dimensional surfaces. This unique approach–which she has been honing over the past two decades––allows her to evoke both the fragility and the strength of the female figures she depicts. By making these figures life-sized, the artist compels viewers to confront them eye to eye, entering a world that is as emotionally resonant as it is visually captivating. Beneath the beauty of her compositions, replete with an air of wistful nostalgia, Berrío alludes to the political and social struggles that effect the most vulnerable members of society.

María Berrío’s current exhibition, The End of Ritual, is on view at Victoria Miro in London until 18 January.

photo: Kyle Dorosz

Gagosian announces global representation of Kathleen Ryan

Gagosian is pleased to announce the global representation of Kathleen Ryan. Her debut exhibition with the gallery will be held in 2026.

A California-born sculptor, Ryan produces meticulously crafted interpretations of everyday objects that prompt meditation on themes of seduction and repulsion, refinement and excess. Profoundly influenced by her West Coast roots, the artist often focuses on pop-cultural artifacts associated with Los Angeles, such as muscle cars and bowling balls, alongside biological forms like fruit, flowers, and spiderwebs. By applying traditional craftsmanship to natural and industrial materials in a wide range of scales and formats, Ryan unites the organic and the artificial, transforming her subjects into tongue-in-cheek allegories for the entropic cycle of life and death.

While offering a critique of contemporary life and society, Ryan is also fascinated by the wider contexts and histories of visual culture. In Bacchante (2015), a sculptural reinterpretation of a 1627 portrait by Hendrick ter Brugghen, she uses concrete casts of balloons to explore the sensual tension evident in the painter’s depiction of grapes—an impression offset by her clustered forms’ interconnecting chains. In the nostalgia-tinged Satellite in Repose (2019), hand-modeled ceramic forms perch like parrots on the skeletal remnant of a satellite dish, the stalactite-like appearance of their tails lending the entire structure a fossilized look and adding to its ambivalent stance toward technological progress and obsolescence. And in the Generator series (2022–), oyster-like hinged sections of automobile bodies enclose delicate metallic and crystalline spiderwebs.

In Ryan’s series Bad Fruit (2018–), pieces of decaying fruit are wittily reimagined in unexpected materials at altered scale. Mining the American decorative craft tradition of pin-beaded fruit, the artist encrusts each carved form’s surface with glass and acrylic beads to delineate “fresh” parts and semiprecious stone beads such as agate, garnet, and turquoise for “rotten” areas, producing the impression of partial decomposition. Through this conceptual and material disjunction, the series explores ideas of desire and overconsumption that resonate with the illusory excesses of contemporary culture. Bad Melon (2020) is a scatter of giant watermelon chunks built from glass beads, stones, and other objects. The rind of each piece is made of aluminum salvaged from a 1973 Airstream Safari camper, an iconic leisure vehicle redolent of postwar optimism, the surface of which is now rusty and scratched. Through this juxtaposition, the work evokes both the death of an American dream, and the resilient life embodied by coral as it envelops and repurposes a submerged wreck.

Among Ryan’s recent exhibition projects was Spotlight: Kathleen Ryan, at the Institute of Contemporary Art San Francisco. This featured Screwdriver (2023), for which the artist transformed the trunk of a 1968 AMC Javelin into the rind of an orange slice in a huge sculptural cocktail garnish. Ryan’s first museum survey also opened this year, at the Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg, Germany, and will travel to Kistefos Museum, Jevnaker, Norway, in 2025. It gathers thirty of her sculptures from the past ten years, including several newly commissioned works.

Kathleen Ryan was born Santa Monica, California, in 1984, and lives and works in Jersey City, New Jersey.

photo: Jeff Henrikson

Galerie Forsblom announces representation of Gerold Miller

November 13, 2024

Gerold Miller is a German sculptor known for his minimalist and geometric works that explore the intersections of space, form, and perception. Miller’s practice specifically addresses space and time, stagnancy and movement, subject and object, where the viewer and the artwork merge into a unified piece. His works are characterized by precision and clean lines, often employing industrial materials such as aluminum and lacquer. His sculptures and wall pieces blur the boundaries between painting and sculpture, challenging traditional distinctions and inviting viewers into a dialogue with the visual experience.

Gerold Miller (b. 1961) studied sculpture at the Stuttgart State Academy of Art and Design, graduating in 1989. His works have been exhibited and collected by museums and private collections worldwide, including Nationalgalerie in Berlin, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Humlebæk, Denmark, NOMA New Orleans Museum of Art in the US, Kunstmuseum Stuttgart in Germany, Hamburger Kunsthalle in Germany, Museo de Arte Latinoamericano in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Takasaki Museum of Art in Japan, Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain in Paris, Musée de l’Art et de la Histoire Neuchâtel in France, and Museo d’Arte della Svizzera Italiana in Lugano, Italy.

Gerold Miller’s solo exhibition at Galerie Forsblom will be on view from 17 January until 16 February 2025.

Zorawar Sidhu and Rob Swainston join Petzel

November 12, 2024

Petzel is pleased to announce representation of New York-based artist duo Zorawar Sidhu and Rob Swainston.

Sidhu and Swainston use historical printmaking processes to create multi-layered woodblock prints that consider how images are assembled and negotiated through social structures, emerging technologies, and archival materials. Drawing on art historical references, from 18th century history painting to German Expressionist etchings, Sidhu and Swainston use analog methods to re-frame images of protest, social movements, and anthropogenic events circulated through both centuries-old and contemporary news media.

Their 2022 debut exhibition with the gallery, Doomscrolling, served as a response to the experience of bombardment with extreme images of pandemic, violence, protest, and insurrection, chronicling major events in media from May 24, 2020 to January 6, 2021. Sidhu and Swainston note, “Woodblock for us is grounded historically in social movements… it’s the oldest means of mass communication of an image.”

“My collaboration with Rob and Zorawar on Doomscrolling—a year after the Capitol attack in Washington on January 6—showed me their deep engagement with the historical, political, and material dimensions of printmaking. They contribute a vital layer to our work at Petzel,” says Friedrich Petzel. “I’m excited to welcome them to Petzel’s community of artists and I look forward to working with them on their upcoming exhibition and introducing their woodblock prints to new audiences.

“As artists working collaboratively, we understand the value of community and are thrilled to join the Petzel program,” say Sidhu and Swainston.

Sidhu and Swainston have a current exhibition, Doomscrolling, on view at Hall Art Foundation in Reading, Vermont through December 1, 2024. Click here to watch an artist talk by Sidhu and Swainston in conjunction with the show. Sidhu and Swainston will unveil an exhibition of new woodblock prints at Petzel’s Chelsea location in March 2025.

photo: Adam Golfer

Alison Jacques now represents Bona de Mandiargues

Alison Jacques announces representation of the Estate of Bona de Mandiargues (b.1926, Rome; d.2000, Paris).

Bona de Mandiargues is considered a central artist within the Surrealist movement. In recent years, de Mardiargues has been the subject of renewed curatorial interest and international recognition, following her first institutional retrospective at the Nivola Museum in Sardinia (2022). Her work is currently on view at the 60th Venice Biennale ‘Foreigners Everywhere’, curated by Adriano Pedrosa (until 24 November 2024) and ‘Surréalisme’ at Centre Pompidou, Paris (until 13 January 2025).

De Mandiargues lived in Italy, before moving to Paris in 1947. Aged 6, her family moved from the Italian countryside to Modena. She described the move from rural surroundings to city life as traumatic, and she began to draw in response to this change in her environment. De Mandiargues went on to study at Accademia di Belle Arti, Venice, where her uncle, the poet and artist Filippo de Pisis (1896-1956) became her mentor. In Venice, she was introduced to influences she carried with her throughout her career; from the early Christian mosaics of Ravenna, the late medieval and early Renaissance painting from the Sienese and Ferrarese schools, to the Surrealists including Giorgio de Chirico.

Alison Jacques will present a solo exhibition of Bona de Mandiargues' work in 2025.

artwork: Bona de Mandiargues, Senza titolo, 1980 © Estate of Bona de Mandiargues

Anna Boghiguian awarded 2024 Wolfgang Hahn Prize

November 6, 2024

An­na Boghiguian (born 1946 in Cairo) will be award­ed the 30th Wolf­gang Hahn Prize of the Ge­sellschaft für Mod­erne Kunst at Mu­se­um Lud­wig, Cologne. The award cer­e­mony will take place on 8 Novem­ber 2024.

The Egyp­tian-Ca­na­dian artist of Ar­me­nian ori­gin has pre­sent­ed one of the most exc­it­ing po­si­tions in con­tem­po­rary art since her par­ti­ci­pa­tion in the Bien­nials of Is­tan­bul in 2009 and of Shar­jah in 2011 and in dOC­U­MEN­TA 13 in 2012. She is known for her fig­u­ra­tive mu­rals, (note)books, draw­ings, paint­ings, pho­to­graphs, and sculp­tures, as well as large-scale in­s­tal­la­tions. Boghiguian’s work is of­ten spon­ta­neous and fre­quent­ly cre­at­ed on lo­ca­tion. She is con­sid­ered a per­cep­tive ob­serv­er of the hu­man con­di­tion and con­veys an in­ter­pre­ta­tion of con­tem­po­rary life in which her con­tent os­cil­lates ex­treme­ly clev­er­ly be­tween past and pre­sent, po­et­ry and politics, his­to­ry and lit­er­a­ture. Her art­works cele­brate a glob­al­ly unit­ed hu­mani­ty and fo­cus on the af­ter­math of his­tor­i­cal events and their con­flicts in or­der to iden­ti­fy op­tions for the fu­ture through an artis­tic reap­praisal.

As a daugh­ter of an Ar­me­nian watch­mak­er, An­na Boghiguian studied po­lit­i­cal sci­ence and eco­nomics at the Amer­i­can Uni­ver­si­ty in Cairo in the 1960s. In the ear­ly 1970s, she moved to Ca­na­da and studied art and mu­sic in Mon­tre­al. Boghiguian has her stu­dio and resi­dence in Cairo, but al­so lives and works in Eu­rope, Asia, Afri­ca and Amer­i­ca. Win­n­er of the Gol­d­en Li­on for Best Pav­ilion (Ar­me­nia) at the 56th Venice Bien­nale in 2015, she al­so par­ti­ci­pat­ed in the tour­ing ex­hi­bi­tion "Con­tem­po­rary Arab Rep­re­sen­ta­tion" in 2003, the 11th and 14th Is­tan­bul Bien­nale in 2009 and 2015, the Sao Pao­lo Bien­nale in 2014 and 2023, and has re­ceived so­lo ex­hi­bi­tions at the Castel­lo di Rivoli in Turin, Kun­sthaus Bre­genz, Mu­se­um für Ge­gen­wart­skunst Sie­gen and SMAK in Ghent, among others.

The Wolf­gang Hahn Prize is award­ed an­nu­al­ly by the Ge­sellschaft für Mod­erne Kunst am Mu­se­um Lud­wig. The award is pri­mar­i­ly in­tend­ed to ho­n­our con­tem­po­rary artists who have al­ready made a name for them­selves in the art world through an in­ter­na­tio­n­al­ly recog­nised oeu­vre, but who are not yet as well known in Ger­many. The prize mon­ey of a max­i­mum of €100,000 is fund­ed by the mem­bers’ con­tri­bu­tions and goes to­wards the ac­qui­si­tion of a work or group of works by the artists for the col­lec­tion of Mu­se­um Lud­wig. The name of the prize ho­n­ours the me­m­o­ry of the pas­sio­nate Cologne-based col­lec­tor and paint­ing conser­va­tor Wolf­gang Hahn (1924-1987), who was com­mitt­ed to the art of the Eu­ro­pean and Amer­i­can avant-garde.

Anna Boghiguian’s exhibition, Living Amidst the Death, is on view at Sylvia Kouvali in London until Saturday 16 November.

Gagosian announces global representation of Tyler Mitchell

October 23, 2024

Gagosian is pleased to announce the global representation of artist, photographer, and filmmaker Tyler Mitchell. Mitchell’s work will be shown by Gagosian at Paris Photo in a curated presentation with photographs by Richard Avedon from November 6 to 10, 2024. New photographs by the artist will be featured in the catalogue accompanying Superfine: Tailoring Black Style, the Costume Institute’s spring 2025 exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. His first exhibition with the gallery following representation will take place in New York in the spring of 2025.

A leading artist of his generation, Mitchell is renowned for his vibrant, playfully theatrical compositions that foreground the style and beauty of Black subjects, often within pastoral landscapes and familiar domestic settings. His photographs and videos offer utopian visions of empowerment, self-determination, tenderness, and camaraderie.

Mitchell draws from the traditions of portraiture, fine-art photography, fashion, and filmmaking to create images of individuals whom he seeks to visualize as “free, expressive, effortless, and sensitive.” Works such as Untitled (Kite) (2019) and Riverside Scene (2021) envision scenes of leisure in idyllic summertime landscapes. Such personal expressions seamlessly blend with editorial projects in his wide-ranging practice; in commissioned works like Untitled (Twins I) (2018) and Untitled (Communion in a Landscape) (2023), Mitchell uses brilliant color and dramatic silhouettes to present images of alluring individuals. He often prints his photographs on unorthodox substrates, including mirrors and fabric hung from clotheslines or draped over frames, as in A Gradual Shining Light (2023). He also embeds them into mixed-media Altar sculptures that reference domesticity and vernacular photography, integrating his visions into physical reality.

Mitchell achieved global prominence when he photographed Beyoncé for the September 2018 issue of American Vogue, becoming the first Black photographer to shoot the magazine’s cover in its then 126-year history. The Smithsonian Institution’s National Portrait Gallery acquired an image from the series the following year. Untitled (Hijab Couture) (2019), from another Vogue feature, pictures Somali-born model Ugbad Abdi wearing a headdress of glossy pink flowers. His photographs of the newly inaugurated Vice President Kamala Harris were commissioned for the cover of Vogue’s February 2021 issue. Mitchell has also collaborated with brands including Loewe, Louis Vuitton, Ferragamo, JW Anderson, Wales Bonner, and Marc Jacobs.

Tyler Mitchell was born in 1995 in Atlanta and lives and works in New York.

photo: © Tyler Mitchell

Born Digital – a GalleriesNow event

October 10, 2024

an engaging evening of caviar, champagne, and conversation

Galerie Eva Presenhuber announces representation of Chemu Ng’ok

October 4, 2024

Galerie Eva Presenhuber is proud to announce the representation of Nairobi-based artist Chemu Ng’ok, alongside Central Fine, Miami, and Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg. On November 15, her debut solo exhibition with Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Echoes, will open at Waldmannstrasse, Zurich.

Ng’ok investigates personal, psychological, political, and spiritual relationships through her art. Her works unveil tensions and shifts in belief systems within African societies, blending reality and imagination to create intricate narratives. These include themes such as the act of negotiating power for the self within the institution, bearing witness to ceremonies, the search for justice, and navigating loss through the body within the theme of transition. The works are in constant flux as their meaning changes over time and the ambiguity of the work allows for different interpretations. Painting becomes a verb, an act of doing, searching, witnessing, or navigating. An elusive conclusion is never reached.

In painting the body, I show a psychological disjuncture. The flexibility of flesh offers me painterly ammunition. Lines hint at the unfinished aspects of thought. The lines morph and become a type of coding that hovers “in the air” of painting. These transmutations are endless. They refer to language, memory, ritual, absence, a future that is yet to be determined, things left unsaid and bodies on the verge of eruption.
– Chemu Ng’ok

Ivy Brandie Chemutai Ng’ok was born in 1989 in Nairobi, Kenya, where she lives and works. In 2017, she received her MFA in painting from Rhodes University, Grahamstown, ZA. In 2023, she was the subject of a solo exhibition at ICA Milano, Milan, IT. She has participated in group exhibitions at institutions including The Institutum, Singapore, SG (2024); Kunstmuseum Basel, Basel, CH (2024); Nairobi Contemporary Art Institute, Nairobi, KE (2024); Galerie Eva Presenhuber x Taxa, Seoul, KR (2023); Museum Dhondt-Dhaenens, Sint-Martens-Latem, BE (2022); Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, FL, US (2022); Zeitz MOCAA, Capetown, ZA (2022); de la Cruz Collection, Miami, FL, US (2021); New Museum Triennial, New York, NY, US (2018); Grahamstown National Arts Festival, Grahamstown, ZA (2018; 2014); and National Gallery of Zimbabwe, Harare, ZW (2017).

photo: James Muriuk

Mother Tongue by Bethan Laura Wood

October 2, 2024

luminaries of the art, design and fashion communities reflect on the talismans and objects that have nurtured and inspired their creative journey

David Zwirner now represents Victor Man

David Zwirner is pleased to announce the representation of Victor Man. The gallery will present the painting K (2014) by Man at Art Basel Paris, and a solo exhibition is planned for autumn 2025 at the London gallery.



Man’s psychologically layered, resolutely enigmatic paintings collapse reality and fiction, past and present. Marked by an elegant spareness and often painted in a palette of dark and atmospheric tones, the artist’s work encompasses portraits of individuals from his milieu, as well as symbolically laden scenes that are cloaked in a shadowed melancholia.

Man’s paintings are frequently characterized by existential themes drawn directly from his own intimate spiritual experiences. Stylistically complex, these compositions elude categorization, often revealing varied, nonlinear references to art history, literature, and poetry, while also maintaining their singular position in contemporary art. The paintings speak to a deep exploration of existence where human and animal, masculine and feminine, often intermingle. As curator Alessandro Rabottini writes, Man’s work resides “in a regime of mutual simultaneity,” which “reveal[s] an osmosis of different identities that open up and complicate the very notion of portraiture. However, what coexists in Victor Man’s practice is not only the different dimensions of time and forms of feeling but also, and above all, the dimensions of human existence … eroticism alongside spirituality, affection alongside its renunciation, and resemblance alongside mystery and estrangement.” Through their overlapping and synchronous interventions of time, place, and feeling, Man’s paintings evoke the elegiac depths of human experience and reverberate with emotional immediacy.

David Zwirner states, “I love Victor Man’s powerful and enigmatic paintings. To me, they are quintessentially European, firmly rooted in the history of Western painting and his deep appreciation for the Renaissance. His paintings remind me of my favorite poetry: fragments coalesce into open-ended narratives, the interiority of his subjects remain mysterious, and through his surprising iconography, he manages to collapse the continuum of time. I’m excited and honored to welcome Victor Man, one of the truly unique voices in contemporary painting, to the gallery.”

Victor Man was born in 1974 in Cluj, Romania. His work has been the subject of various solo exhibitions at museums and institutions such as the Städel Museum, Frankfurt (2023); Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin (2022); Sant’Andrea de Scaphis, Rome (2021); Museo Tamayo, Mexico City (2018); Haus der Kunst, Munich (2014); Villa Medici, Rome (2013); and Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam (2009)

artwork: Victor Man, K, 2014 (detail). © Victor Man

Perrotin to open London gallery in early 2025

October 1, 2024

Perrotin gallery is delighted to announce the opening of Perrotin London in early 2025.

Situated in the heart of Mayfair, the gallery features 350 m2 of completely refurbished space in Claridge’s, a true British landmark. Perrotin is thrilled to be setting up its first London space in this vibrant and historic neighborhood. Located on Brook’s Mews, the gallery will be next to Claridge’s ArtSpace Café.

Perrotin London will offer a program created together with its artists to coincide with the city’s major cultural events, such as Frieze London, where the gallery has participated since 2004. For the 2024 edition, the gallery will present works by British sculptor Lynn Chadwick, whose Estate recently joined the gallery.

“It’s important to have a gallery in the British capital. We have a long-standing relationship with the UK art scene and collectors. I’ve been waiting for the opportunity to set up the gallery in the right conditions. I’m delighted to offer our artists a new exhibition platform and new projects in such a prestigious environment. This space was inaugurated in 2021 with a Damien Hirst exhibition organized by Claridge’s. As it happens, I organized Damien Hirst’s first two commercial exhibitions in 1990 (with a group show) and in 1991 (with a solo show) in my first Parisian space. At the exhibition opening in 1991, Frieze magazine launched its first issue, and Damien’s work was featured on the cover. It was an exceptional moment in my career. I look forward to coming full circle!” - Emmanuel Perrotin

Alison Jacques announces representation of Sagarika Sundaram

September 27, 2024

Sagarika Sundaram (b.1986, Kolkata, India; lives and works in New York, US) describes her process as one of transformation: ‘There’s an alchemy to it,’ she says of her work. ‘It changes in its final form.’ This sense of transformation and ‘alchemy’ has been a central theme throughout Sundaram’s career, where she uses wool, silk, and dyes to create textile sculptures, reliefs, and installations. These works bridge the bodily and the botanical, using the materiality of wool to explore internal, external, and imagined landscapes.

After working in graphic design for a decade, Sundaram pursued an MFA at Parsons School of Design, New York, following her degree in Visual Communication from the National Institute of Design, Ahmedabad. Each element in her work—wool, silk, dye—is chosen for its distinct textural qualities, which contribute to the polyphonic nature of her compositions. Her use of felt, an ancient textile form originating in Central Asia, is especially important. Treated entirely by hand, the material holds deep geographic histories while its pliability enables Sundaram to explore the potential of material as a form of thought.

In her studio, Sundaram approaches wool as if sketching, layering fibres like cross-hatching to create a mesh. Her process is intuitive; the work’s anatomy reveals itself only as layers of unruly colour interact and evolve. Stretched and coiled, her unfolding forms explore the intersections between human and natural worlds, challenging the notion that the two can be separated. As Sundaram puts it, ‘By the time things are humming along, the ending makes itself obvious—the work is complete when I can feel it talking to me.’

Sundaram made her solo debut at Palo Gallery, New York (2023), and has participated in group exhibitions at the Bronx Museum (2024) and the Al Held Foundation & River Valley Arts Collective (2023). Her upcoming solo show will be at Nature Morte Gallery, New Delhi (2025), and her work will be featured in the UBS VIP Lounge at Art Basel Miami Beach (2024).

Sundaram’s first solo exhibition with Alison Jacques will take place in Autumn 2025.

photo © Anita Goes

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