Published to coincide with the artist’s solo exhibition by the same name, Michael Mandiberg: Timeframe reviews two new bodies of work – Zoom Paintings and Live Study. The catalog includes essays by Christiane Paul, Curator of New Media Art at the Whitney Museum of American Art; danilo machado, poet and curator; and Michael Mandiberg. 10 x 7 inches/25 x 18 cm 102 pages Softcover Language: English Read the catalog online Visit exhibition website, Timeframe.
Artist Pamela Council Is Building a Joyous, Camp ‘Fountain for Survivors’ in Times Square The sculpture will feature close to 400,000 acrylic nails. Sarah Cascone, August 18, 2021 Pamela Council with the model for A Fountain for Survivors in Times Square, New York. Photo by Alex Webster courtesy of Times Square Arts. Artist Pamela Council is building their largest ever “Fountains for Black Joy” sculpture in New York City’s Times Square. The monumental structure will measure 18 feet tall and be…Read More
Denny Dimin Gallery Announces Representation Solo exhibition Bury Me Loose opens at Denny Dimin Gallery on September 10, 2021 Time Square Arts Announces Major Public Installation A Fountain for Survivors Denny Dimin Gallery is honored to announce the representation of artist Pamela Council. A solo exhibition by the artist, Bury Me Loose, will be on view at the New York location from September 10 to October 23, 2021. Times Square Arts will present Council’s immersive public art installation, A Fountain…Read More
On High by Paula Wilson Locust Projects, Miami, FL November 21, 2020 – January 23, 2021 “Looking at this work now, in the current moment, it feels aspirational, linking past and the present, ushering in the potentials of the future.” – Paula Wilson On High at Locust Projects features Paula Wilson’s 2017 video Living Monument, a one-minute, two-channel video. On one screen is footage compiled from online sources of the confederate General Beauregard Equestrian Statue’s removal in New Orleans in…Read More
Please enjoy the digital catalog created for Scott Anderson’s exhibition “Biotech,” with essay by Sarah Diver. Return to Scott Anderson: Biotech.
2 Art Gallery Shows to Explore From Home Galleries and museums are getting creative about presenting work online during the coronavirus crisis. Here are some shows worth viewing virtually. By Jillian Steinhauer and Jason Farago April 9, 2020 ‘How Can We Think of Art at a Time Like This?’ Ongoing; artatatimelikethis.com. The title of this online exhibition is a question I’ve been asking myself the last few weeks. A pandemic rages; people are dying — who cares about virtual viewing rooms? And yet, culture is sustaining…Read More
Artist Kennedy Yanko Wants to Teach Your Children How to Make Art During Quarantine By Alex Greenberger Next week was supposed to be a big one for artist Kennedy Yanko, as she was supposed to present new work at the Dallas Art Fair by way of New York’s Denny Dimin Gallery. Then the fair, like so many other art events happening around the world, got postponed indefinitely. (It is now scheduled for the beginning of October.) But she had been at least…Read More
Iranian-Born Artist Amir H. Fallah Creates Work That Thrives In A Cultural Limbo By Rand Al Hadethi 07 April 2020 Fallah creates work with stupefying subtext The 40-year-old artist paints idiosyncratic portraits that unfurl infinite narratives to his audience. Ask him, and he explains that his detail-rich, colour-drenched paintings are a new kind of portrait, one that shows a person without physicality at all. More often than not, these portraits – usually created in close collaboration with his subjects – forego face…Read More
Clarity Haynes DENNY DIMIN GALLERY A pair of hairy, pendulous tits and a huge belly marred by stretch marks, drooping skin, fresh bruises, and old wounds: This is a general yet reasonably accurate description of an obese, middle-aged physique—one that belongs to me, a gay man.I see myself reflected in the luminous portraits of nonbinary, trans, and female torsos—fat, scarred, imperfect—by Clarity Haynes. But in her pictures, I don’t find shame or self-loathing—feelings I imagine those with nonnormative bodies, like…Read More
KENNEDY YANKO AT DENNY DIMIN GALLERY “Nothing feels as good as scouring a yard, spotting a piece that calls to you, digging for its entirety, and revealing its full glory,” says Brooklyn-based sculptor Kennedy Yanko. She is speaking of her trips to salvage yards in search of discarded metals she will later repurpose for her sculpture practice. “It’s a full day or multiday activity, scavenging. But again, it’s an integral thrill and informs everything that follows.” The fruit from some…Read More
Hong Kong Video Art Lands in New York City In New York, amidst the current pandemic demobilizing our cities, Denny Dimin Gallery in New York mounts “Hong Kong — Tales of the City,” a panoramic showcase of Hong Kong video art, co-presented with Videotage. TEXT: Barbara Pollack IMAGES: Courtesy of Denny Dimin Gallery Coronavirus COVID-19 has hit New York, leading to a general shutdown of galleries and museums, at-home quarantine and panic shopping, shocking locals who seemed entirely unaware that…Read More
10 More Recipes From Artists Who Are Getting Creative in the Kitchen to Spice Up Dining in the Era of Social Distancing Dana Sherwood, Olafur Eliasson, and other artists share some of their favorite recipes. Sarah Cascone, March 25, 2020 As much of the world hunkers down, practicing social distancing and sheltering in place, everyday life is shifting dramatically. And for artists, like the rest of us, that means preparing for an extended stay at home by stocking up their larders….Read More
Amir H. Fallah Remember, my child, nowhere is safe Science is the antidote, superstition is the disease Better a cruel truth than a comfortable delusion Empathy even for those who do not speak You will always live between borders Everything happens for no reason What you seek is seeking you Ideas are bulletproof Dying for invisible lines, killing for invisible gods The animals of the world exist for their own reasons Let your teacher be love itself No gods, no…Read More
March 17, 2020 at 10:07am ARTADIA NAMES 2020 LOS ANGELES AWARDEES Artadia has announced the recipients of the sixth annual Los Angeles Artadia Awards: Beatriz Cortez, Amir H. Fallah, and Suné Woods. Cortez, a Los Angeles–based multidisciplinary artist, whose work explores topics such as versions of modernity, memory and loss in the aftermath of war, and migration, and Woods, who is best known for her multichannel video installations, photographs, and collages, will be given $10,000 in unrestricted funds. The artist…Read More
Art Industry News: The Metropolitan Museum of Art May Be Closed, But the Met Gala Is Still On + Other Stories Plus, Studio 54 regulars look back ahead of the Brooklyn Museum’s show and mega-galleries in New York temporarily shutter. Artnet News, March 13, 2020 Art Industry News is a daily digest of the most consequential developments coming out of the art world and art market. Here’s what you need to know on this Friday, March 13. For an up-to-the-minute list…Read More
For Immediate Release March 12, 2020 ARTADIA ANNOUNCES 2020 LOS ANGELES AWARDEES NEW YORK, NY – Artadia is pleased to announce the recipients of the sixth annual Los Angeles Artadia Awards are Beatriz Cortez, Amir H. Fallah and Suné Woods. Beatriz Cortez will receive $10,000 in unrestricted funds supported by Capital Group, Suné Woods was selected as the recipient of the inaugural Angeles Art Fund Artadia Award and will receive $10,000 in unrestricted funds, and Amir H. Fallah was selected…Read More
As Tensions Rise With Iran, So Does Interest in Art It Inspired This year, several museums in the United States will feature works by Iranian artists in exile. By Farah Nayeri LONDON — The Iranian artist Shirazeh Houshiary works out of a luminous studio in a leafy corner of southwest London. Her misty abstract paintings evoke the galaxy, the cosmos, the afterlife. To make them, she floods the canvas with water, pours pigment over it and draws tiny marks over the…Read More
Visiting the 2020 Armory Show Amid Ominous Headlines From art about environmental recklessness to Caribbean post-coloniality, Armory kicked off the spring art fair season in spite of growing coronavirus concerns. Dessane Lopez Cassell Amir H. Fallah’s work on view in the Denny Dimin booth as part of Focus at Pier 90, curated by Jamillah James (all photos by Dessane Lopez Cassell for Hyperallergic, unless otherwise stated) ’Tis the season: with Thursday’s public opening of the Armory Show, spring art fair…Read More
MAR 06 2020 ROUNDUP FROM THE ARMORY SHOW 2020 BY PAUL LASTER The blackened entrance to The Armory Show 2020 at Pier 94, New York, during the VIP Preview Day. All photos by Paul Laster for ArtAsiaPacific. The Armory Show, which returned to Piers 90 and 94 on New York’s Hudson River for its 26th edition boasted 183 exhibitors from 32 countries, although most were American and European galleries while only 14 were from Asia or have a presence there. “The fair looks…Read More
MARCH 6, 2020 Scenes from the 2020 Armory Show The 2020 edition of the Armory Show opened to invited guests on Wednesday, March 4, and runs at Piers 90 and 94 through Sunday, March 8. Despite ongoing concerns around the world over the new coronavirus and the ways in which it could spread in large crowds, the fair went on, and many dealers said the affair was business as usual during its early hours. The fair brings together over 180 galleries from…Read More
The Armory Show: Playing It Safe During an Unsettled Time Another year, another crisis: The Armory Show proves resilient again as it opens amid the coronavirus outbreak. Our critic surveys the fair’s many welcoming entry points. By Martha Schwendener March 5, 2020 Last year the Armory Show weathered a crisis when Pier 92 over the Hudson River was condemned shortly before the art fair opened, precipitating a last-minute reshuffling of booths and the shutting down of a satellite display. This year, the fair has…Read More
Editors’ Picks: 19 Things Not to Miss in New York’s Art World This Week From the Armory Party at MoMA to the New York International Antiquarian Book Fair, there’s something for everyone this week. Sarah Cascone, March 2, 2020 Each week, we search New York City for the most exciting and thought-provoking shows, screenings, and events. See them below. . . . A participant at the Wikipedia Asian Month: Edit-a-thon on Exhibition Histories, A Space, AAA, November 2019. Photo by Winnie…Read More
See Highlights from the 2020 Armory Show The 2020 edition of the Armory Show opens to the public later this week, running from March 5 to March 8, with a preview day on March 4. This year, more than 180 local, national, and global exhibitors will gather at New York’s Piers 90 and 94. Mega-enterprise Gagosian will be joined by returning galleries such as 303 Gallery (New York), Victoria Miro (London and Venice), Jeffrey Deitch (Los Angeles and New York),…Read More
February 27, 2020 White, Woll, and the artist’s sense of control Taylor Anton White, Above The Fruited Plainnnz!, 2020, acrylic, airbrush, wax crayon, pencil, paper, rubber coated wire, cardboard, screws, and plywood, 36 x 36 x 2 inches. Contributed by Riad Miah Taylor Anton White and Andy Woll’s solo exhibitions opened at two galleries next door to each other in Tribeca, White’s at Monica King Contemporary and Woll’s at Denny Dimin Gallery. Their bodies of work are outwardly different, but…Read More