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Abounaddara. The Right to the Image. October 22–November 11 at The Vera List Center for Art and Politics at The New School.
http://www.abounaddara.com/ http://www.veralistcenter.org/
Abounaddara. The Right to the Image. Online Exhibition.
Presented in conjunction with the Abounaddara. The Right to the Image exhibition and conference. The Vera List Center for Art and Politics is pleased to announce "Abounaddara. The Right to the Image," an online art exhibition that seeks to illuminate the contemporary conditions of the Syrian revolution, show solidarity with civil society in Syria, and provoke new thinking about media representation. Organized by the Vera List Center for Art and Politics at The New School, Slought, and Project Projects/P! in collaboration with Abounaddara, this virtual, distributed online exhibition seeks to spread awareness of Abounaddara's widely acclaimed work as an anonymous collective of volunteer, self-taught artists in Syria. The exhibition will be activated through postings of new work at exactly 12pm noon EST on three Fridays: October 23, October 30, and November 6, 2015.
Abounaddara. The Right to the Image. October 22–November 11 at The Vera List Center for Art and Politics at The New School.
http://www.abounaddara.com/ http://www.veralistcenter.org/
It is more than likely that you have seen Elaine Lustig Cohen’s designs for buildings, interiors, books or exhibitions. Stopping on a street corner, you might have lingered over a stack of New Directions paperbacks whose California-hued Constructivist covers caught your eye. If you have studied Minimalism, you might recall the image of a vivid red line snaking through a large P on the cover of the Jewish Museum’s 1966 “Primary Structures” catalogue. Strolling through Mies van der Rohe and Philip Johnson’s Seagram Building, you might have noticed the blunt font used on the signage. These are just a few of the projects Cohen realized within the two decades of her design career.
An exhibition at Philip Johnson’s Glass House in New Canaan, Conn., includes paintings by Ms. Lustig Cohen as well as examples of her collaboration with Johnson.
THE DAILY PIC (#1395): i
i think
i think this is the letter “i" – just as i have now typed it eleven times (not counting the “i" in “times", or in “counting" for that matter, or in “in"). But of course in today’s Pic it’s been rendered in three dimensions, in granite, by Vivienne Griffin, for a witty exhibition called “Pangrammar" that opened Friday at P! gallery in New York. The show includes works of art that represent all the letters, and uses them to spell “the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog,“ the most famous of all alphabet-exhausting pangrams. (The show will be rearranged to form other pangrams before it closes.)
One of the clichés of typography is the desire to turn letterforms into 3D versions of themselves, by adding sides and shadows and other superfluous reality effects. So I love the way Griffin decides to go all the way, by actually turning a letter into a massy object and then letting its dot drop off, as seems to be the first instinct whenever someone decides to make a cutesy animation of the letter in question.
Here the cute gesture has real-world implications: It could break someone’s toe.
The Daily Pic also appears at ArtnetNews.com. For a full survey of past Daily Pics visit blakegopnik.com/archive.
Blake Gopnik on Vivienne Griffin’s sculptural “i” in PANGRAMMAR
P! reopens Sept 18 with PANGRAMMAR
PANGRAMMAR
September 18 – November 1, 2015 Opening reception: Friday, September 18, 6–9pm P!, 334 Broome St, New York City
Download press release
Like the quick brown fox that jumps over a lazy dog, PANGRAMMAR is a group exhibition of over 26 works that each depict a single letter. These objects include pieces of art and design ranging from contemporary to historical, mass-produced to unique, in two-, three-, and four-dimensions. Over the course of the show’s run, PANGRAMMAR will rearrange itself periodically to spell different sentences and create new meaning. Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.
Featuring: Carlos Amorales Colleen Asper & Marika Kandelaki Anna Barham Erica Baum Jen Bervin Barbara Bloom Mel Bochner Jean-Francois Bory Robin Cameron Commercial Type Dexter Sinister Shannon Ebner with David Reinfurt Paul Elliman Timo Gaessner / Milieu Grotesque Joe Goode and Ed Ruscha Vivienne Griffin Mathew Hale Christine Hill Esen Karol Viktor Kopp Elaine Lustig Cohen Karel Martens Herbert Matter Tom McGlynn Adam Michaels & Glen Cummings Moniker Georges Perec Dushan Petrovich Man Ray Ksenya Samarskaya Willem Sandberg Joost Schmidt Anna Schuleit Haber Jack Stauffacher Sulki & Min Ladislav Sutnar TypoKaki & Martin Frostner JP Williams Piet Zwart
and others
Elaine Lustig Cohen at The Glass House, New Canaan, CT
Elaine Lustig Cohen at The Glass House, New Canaan, CT
July 13 – October 19, 2015 Organized by Cole Akers Link to exhibition on The Glass House website
PRESS The New York Times Artforum.com Dwell
The Glass House presents the first survey to explore the relationship between the early paintings and pioneering design projects of Elaine Lustig Cohen. Based in New York, Lustig Cohen has been highly regarded as a graphic designer, artist, and rare book dealer throughout her career, which spans over fifty years. On view in the Painting Gallery, the exhibition includes a selection of her paintings from the 1960s and 1970s as well as examples of her multi-year collaboration with architect Philip Johnson, among other projects.
In 1955, Lustig Cohen began a graphic design practice that integrated the aesthetics of European modernism within a distinctly American visual idiom for her diverse clientele of publishers, corporations, cultural institutions, and architects. Her first client was Johnson, who commissioned her to work on the lettering and signage for the Seagram Building. The two forged an important bond that resulted in a variety of projects for the Glass House, Yale University, Lincoln Center, the Munson-Williams-Proctor Art Institute, and the Sheldon Museum of Art, among others, as well as commissions from Johnson’s clients, including John de Menil and the Schlumberger oil company.
As a painter, Lustig Cohen developed a hard-edged style in the 1960s and 1970s that engaged the physicality of the canvas’ flat surface. Employing a simplified formal language that includes solid colors and abstract geometric shapes, her paintings allude to her design work as well as the contemporaneous practices of other artists who strove to dissolve the barriers between painting and objecthood.
Elaine Lustig Cohen (b. 1927, Jersey City, New Jersey) studied art at the University of Southern California. Her first solo exhibitions in New York were held at John Bernard Meyers Gallery (1970, 1972, 1973), Galerie Denise René (1975), and Mary Boone Gallery (1979), where she was the first woman to have a solo exhibition. Since then, her work has been presented at Exit Art (1985), Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum (1995), Julie Saul Gallery (2005), the Rochester Institute of Technology (2014), and P! (2014), among other venues. As a graphic designer, her clients have included the Jewish Museum, New Directions, the Whitney Museum, and architects Eero Saarinen, Richard Meier, and Philip Johnson. In 1973, she co-founded the influential bookstore Ex Libris, which specialized in 20th century avant-garde books, periodicals, ephemera, and posters. Work by Lustig Cohen is held in numerous public and private collections, and she is the recipient of the 2011 AIGA Medal for her life’s work in design.
Special thanks to Prem Krishnamurthy and P!, New York.
March – July 2015: P! becomes K.
P! is pleased to announce K., a new gallery taking over the former P! storefront at 334 Broome Street. From March through July 2015, K. inhabits the renovated Lower East Side space. The first exhibition, Real Flow, opens Sunday, March 1, 6–8pm.
Collapsing the timeframe of the four-week gallery show with that of the four-day art fair, K. presents an accelerated schedule of two- and three-week long exhibitions. Featuring artists Real Flow, Aaron Gemmill, Mathew Hale, Michal Helfman, Matthew Schrader, Wong Kit Yi, and others, the exhibition cycle examines critical questions of economic systems and the production of value in a new context. Gallery architecture by Leong Leong functions as an open white cube for the condensed five month schedule of shows. A hybrid physical/virtual publication edited by Sarah Demeuse and Sarah Hromack launches at the conclusion of K..
For more information, contact Prem Krishnamurthy at [email protected] or visit k-period.com.
Download press release
EXHIBITION PROGRAM
March 1–15 Real Flow
March 22–April 5 Aaron Gemmill and Matthew Schrader: Tactile Pose
April 12–May 3 Wong Kit Yi: North Pole Futures
May 10–31 Mathew Hale: 5TH HELENA …
June 14–July 3 Michal Helfman: I’m so broke I can’t pay attention
July 13–31 Egress, organized by Sarah Hromack
Support for Michal Helfman provided by Artis. In-kind support provided by Knoll and Amorim, the world’s largest natural cork company.
P! at Material Art Fair, Mexico City
JOSÉ LEÓN CERRILLO ELAINE LUSTIG COHEN KAREL MARTENS
Material Art Fair Mexico City February 5–8, 2015
Download press release
For Material Art Fair 2015, P! is pleased to present a unique booth featuring José León Cerrillo (b. 1976, Mexico), Elaine Lustig Cohen (b. 1927, USA), and Karel Martens (b. 1939, Netherlands). Spanning generations and geographies, these three practitioners are linked by the legacy of Modernism, as well as a common exploration of geometric form in relation to perception, process, and play. Cerrillo’s work as an artist references and reinvents architectural and graphic tropes; Lustig Cohen and Martens are pioneering designers whose artwork has received widespread attention in recent years. Connecting different lineages of abstraction—in Latin America, North America, and Europe—the tripartite presentation suggests novel possibilities for multidisciplinary dialogue and inquiry.
At Material 2015, the three artists are presented in an idiosyncratic manner that underscores the indelible link between object and armature, raising questions of autonomous and contingent display. Curated by Cerrillo, the booth showcases a rare selection of Lustig Cohen’s hard-edge geometric paintings from the 1960s and 1970s, alongside new letterpress monoprints on Belgian identity cards by Martens. Although both Lustig Cohen and Martens are informed by graphic design, their divergent formal approaches contrast exacting structure with improvisatory composition.
To order these disparate works, Cerrillo has developed a display piece / sculptural object that can house Lustig Cohen and Martens equally. Cerrillo’s strategy follows the logic of context-specificity to an uncomfortable conclusion: the notion of an artwork-specific display, which itself is also a work of art. At the fair, each discrete unit combines a Cerrillo sculpture with a grouping of works by either Lustig Cohen or Martens to operate as a new symbiotic piece. Through this strange exchange, the booth offers a hybrid model, undermining the easy commodification of the art fair object in favor of a complex investigation of authorship, hierarchy, aura, and influence.
March 1: P! becomes K.
P! reopens from March–August 2015 as a new gallery, K. Follow K. on Twitter for more information.
FRIDAY, 9 JAN, 7PM — Leslie Hewitt and Zia Haider Rahman in conversation
Leslie Hewitt and Zia Haider Rahman in conversation Time: Friday, 9 Jan, 7pm Location: Project Projects, 161 Bowery, 2nd Floor Inquiries: [email protected]
As part of the exhibition “Power Structures”, P! presents a timely conversation between artist Leslie Hewitt and author Zia Haider Rahman on topics ranging from mathematics, unseen structures, abstraction, political action, and more. Moderated by Prem Krishnamurthy
“Power Structures: Leslie Hewitt, Karel Martens, Zia Haider Rahman“ on view from 17 December 2014 – 18 January 2014
“Power Structures”, 17 Dec 2014 – 25 Jan 2015
EXTENDED: 17 December 2014 – 25 January 2015 Curated by Prem Krishnamurthy
Special event: Leslie Hewitt and Zia Haider Rahman in conversation Friday, 9 Jan 2015, 7pm Project Projects, 161 Bowery, 2nd Floor Download press release View installation images
P! is pleased to present Power Structures, a three-person exhibition featuring Leslie Hewitt, Karel Martens, and Zia Haider Rahman. Additive and exponential, the show offers an oblique look at acute questions troubling our political moment.
Leslie Hewitt exhibits three works: a black horizontal line bisecting the viewer’s gaze and the space it circumscribes; a color photograph that collapses archival documentation and personal memory; and a white sheet metal sculpture from her current project at the Studio Museum Harlem, which evokes paper through its planar folds.
Printed on discarded Belgian identity records, a new body of letterpress monoprints by Karel Martens extends his signature technique of overprinting metal forms on found materials. Through this combination of figure and ground, past and present, Martens’ layering reactivates the remainders of a vast bureaucratic archive.
Zia Haider Rahman’s remarkable novel, In the Light of What We Know, resonates throughout the exhibition. A meditation on colonialism, epistemology, friendship, mathematics, and more, the book will be on sale here at cost. Through this economic gesture, the space reframes itself as a distribution point without profit, a single position from which timely ideas may multiply their dividends into the world.
“Ultramarine Fungus” (2014) by Moniker at NADA Miami Beach 2014