"Two Cells with Conduit”
1987
Day-Glo, acrylic, and Roll-a-Tex on canvas, two panels
78 x 154.75 in (198.1 x 393.1 cm) overall
Guggenheim, NY
Peter Halley
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@bsart
"Two Cells with Conduit”
1987
Day-Glo, acrylic, and Roll-a-Tex on canvas, two panels
78 x 154.75 in (198.1 x 393.1 cm) overall
Guggenheim, NY
Peter Halley
"But a Storm Is Blowing from Paradise"
2014
Gesso, watercolor, and ink on inkjet prints, 24 parts
11.8125 x 15.75 in (30 x 40 cm) each
Guggenheim, NY
Rokni Haerizadeh
"Death pulling the soul out of a dead man”
2015
Multiple of gauze cotton cloth from a boxed set of eight editions and multiples in various mediums
irreg.: 7.875 × 59.0625 in (20 × 150 cm)
MoMA
Matt Mullican
“Some may like a soft Brazilian singer”
2015
Offset lithograph from a boxed set of eight editions and multiples in various mediums
composition and sheet: 33.0625 × 23.375 in (84 × 59.4 cm)
MoMA
Christian Jankowski
“Duns Scotus"
2015
Synthetic polymer paint, oil, wax, and lacquer on artificial leather
53.5 × 106.25 in (136 × 270 cm)
MoMA
Michaela Eichwald
“Herb Garden"
2015
Carborundum relief from a portfolio of three aquatints (one with carborundum relief), one carborundum relief, one chromogenic color print, three digital prints, four etchings (two with chine collé, one with embossing), one linoleum cut, one lithograph, three screenprints, two woodcuts, and two polymer gravures (one with woodcut)
composition and sheet: 11.25 × 15.0625 in (28.5 × 38.3 cm)
MoMA
Howard Hodgkin
“Untitled (for Alan C.)”
2015
Chromogenic color print from a portfolio of three aquatints (one with carborundum relief), one carborundum relief, one chromogenic color print, three digital prints, four etchings (two with chine collé, one with embossing), one linoleum cut, one lithograph, three screenprints, two woodcuts, and two polymer gravures (one with woodcut)
composition: 15.75 × 15.6875 in (40 × 39.9 cm); sheet: 19.6875 × 19.6875 in (50 × 50 cm)
MoMA
Jan Dibbets
“Ashtray”
2015
Screenprint from a portfolio of three aquatints (one with carborundum relief), one carborundum relief, one chromogenic color print, three digital prints, four etchings (two with chine collé, one with embossing), one linoleum cut, one lithograph, three screenprints, two woodcuts, and two polymer gravures (one with woodcut)
composition and sheet: 19.6875 × 19.6875 in (50 × 50 cm)
MoMA
Michael Craig-Martin
“Untitled”
2015
Multiple of cotton handkerchief and knitted sock with ink additions from a boxed set of eight editions and multiples in various mediums
overall (irreg.): 77 × 40 in (195.6 × 101.6 cm)
MoMA
John Bock
"Let's Walk to the Middle of the Ocean"
2015
Torn and pasted papers, shellac, and oil on paper on canvas
102 × 144 in (259.1 × 365.8 cm)
MoMA
Mark Bradford
"Duo"
1961
Oil on canvas
72.125 x 68 in (183.2 x 172.7 cm)
Guggenheim, NY
Philip Guston
--
“In 1959 Guston incorporated a loosely rendered image of a hooded figure with paintbrush in hand in The Painter. With this work, he initiated a series of paintings in which he tested the boundaries between figuration and abstraction. Duo (1961) belongs to this transitional body of work. Two dark forms situated in a multitude of subtly differentiated grays dominate the composition. Touches of blue, red, yellow, and pink are woven through the gray brushstrokes to create an atmosphere surrounding the two central figures. As in his nonrepresentational works, Guston left the periphery of the canvas bare and focused on the middle where he has built up layers of pigment. The moodiness and predominantly black-and-gray palette of this and similar works have led art historians to refer to them as Guston's "dark paintings."The return of the hooded figure in Duo and other pictures of the early-to-mid-1960s foreshadowed Guston's focus on this subject in his late work, which represented a radical departure from his abstract paintings and drew on the visual language of cartoons and a vivid palette of reds, pinks, and grays.“
"Library (Bibliothek)"
1999
Chromogenic print, face-mounted to acrylic
image: 62.5625 x 127 in (158.9 x 322.6 cm); sheet: 78.875 x 142.125 in (200.3 x 361 cm)
Guggenheim, NY
Andreas Gursky
"Singapore Stock Exchange"
1997
Chromogenic print, face-mounted to acrylic
image: 52 x 92.75 in (132.1 x 235.6 cm); sheet: 66.875 x 106.25 in (169.9 x 269.9 cm)
Guggenheim, NY
Andreas Gursky
--
“Despite the traditions he invokes both formally and conceptually, Gursky has no pretense to objectivity. He digitally manipulates his images—combining discrete views of the same subject, deleting extraneous details, enhancing colors—to create a kind of “assisted realism.” The traders on the floor of the Singapore stock exchange, in Gursky’s version, all wear the same shade of red, yellow, or blue jacket. And his epic view of the Stockholm public library, a perfect hemisphere of color-coded books, omits the actual floor, which, in reality, includes an escalator that would have marred the symmetrical beauty of the image. According to art historian Norman Bryson, the critical paradox of Gursky’s photography lies in its dual commitment to objectively observing the social strata at work in the world and to aestheticizing empirical reality, an impulse that almost sabotages the science of his project. In this dialectic, the artist provocatively undermines photography’s claims for “truth,” offering, instead, as Bryson suggests, an inquiry into the subjective dimensions of all representations of the social.“
"1:14.9 (1188.5 miles of fenced border - West, North-West)"
2011–12
Polyester thread, wood, glass, and brass
64.1875 x 22 x 20 in (163 x 55.9 x 50.8 cm)
Guggenheim, NY
Shilpa Gupta
--
“Mumbai-based artist Shilpa Gupta addresses the weighty issues of religion, nationality, and history with wry humor. Using video, sculpture, photography, and sound, she distills critical observations into pithy reflections on conditions in South Asia. In 1:14.9 (2011–12), a hand-wound ball of thread is accompanied by a small plaque reading “1188.5 MILES OF FENCED BORDER – WEST, NORTH-WEST / DATA UPDATE: DEC 31, 2007.” Using sterile data about the fencing of the border between India and Pakistan extracted from a publicly available report by the Ministry of Home Affairs in India, she poetically represents the geopolitical division as a gleaming orb—a form that seems, at first, as abstract as the raw statistics from which it is derived. Yet the thread’s fragility reflects the tenuous nature of national boundaries, which demand constant restatement and surveillance. The object’s ovoid shape also suggests origins or genesis, and calls to mind the South Asian partition, which occurred either side of midnight on August 14, 1947, birthing two distinct nations in immediate succession.
This fraught moment in history, which has repercussions to this day, is referenced more obliquely in Gupta’s Threat (2008–09), a wall of bricks, each one stamped with the single word of the title. The tension of this division is, however, illusory, as the bricks are made from water-soluble soap. This testing of the border’s instability recurs in 100 Hand Drawn Maps of India (2007–08) and 100 Hand Drawn Maps (2010), components of a larger ongoing project. For these works, the artist travelled from India to Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, inviting participants to draw maps from memory. Layering these drawings atop one another, she illustrates the mercurial nature of nation as idea and, as the work’s lines intersect and diverge, its ambivalent and logocentric status (a characteristic previously remarked on by theorist Homi K. Bhabha). By using commonplace objects and materials to navigate the ideological and the physical, 1:14.9 reflects an interesting aspect of Indian aesthetics. The familiar textile material is used with measured allegorical purpose, drawing attention to ordinary realities distinct from the triumphalism found in the art championed by independent India, epitomized in Abanindranath Tagore’s famous painting Bharat Mata (Mother India) (1904–05).”
"Signs and Portents"
1956
Oil on canvas
69.25 x 98.5 in (175.9 x 250.2 cm)
Guggenheim, NY
José Guerrero
"Untitled (Ten Dollar Foxes, White on Red Mask M14.d)"
2012
Oil paint on bronze
23.75 x 10 x 17.125 in (60.3 x 25.4 x 43.5 cm)
Guggenheim, NY
Mark Grotjahn
--
“For over a decade, Mark Grotjahn has been making cardboard sculptures that he calls “masks.” The works began as a private form of release for the artist, away from his more formal butterfly paintings, such as Untitled (Blue Painting Light to Dark X) (2006). Constructed from mundane materials such as art supply boxes and toilet-paper rolls, some masks, such as those formed from beer boxes that the artist saved from his wedding, carry more personal significance. Loosely figurative, the masks invoke childhood craft projects while also referencing in resolutely primitive forms various art-historical predecessors. Grotjahn has recently begun casting his studio experiments in bronze and expressively painting the surfaces, as in Untitled (Ten Dollar Foxes, White on Red Mask M14.d) (2012).“
"Untitled (Blue Painting Light to Dark X)"
2006
Oil on canvas
75.1875 x 50.125 x 1.75 in (191 x 127.3 x 4.4 cm)
Guggenheim, NY
Mark Grotjahn
--
“In 1997, Mark Grotjahn began his well-known butterfly paintings, precisely rendered abstractions defined by thickly applied paint emanating in a fan-like pattern to the edges of human-scaled canvases. The works explore shifts in perspective and spatial illusion: vertical bands radiate out from two points at the center of the canvas while the density of the paint belies the illusory flatness of the surface. As the title details, Untitled (Blue Painting Light to Dark X) (2006) is from a cycle of ten canvases painted in shades of blue. The dark blue of this tenth monochrome shimmers in the grooves of hundreds of fine brush marks. However, a subtle yet vibrant orange underpainting at the center and edge of the canvas disrupts the plane of color and creates the shifting ground and foreground illusion as well as a dynamic play between symmetry and asymmetry originating from the points of convergence.“