#BarbaraKruger new #HighLineCommission "Untitled (Blind Idealism Is...)" is now complete! Stop by 22 street to check it out! (at The High Line)

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#BarbaraKruger new #HighLineCommission "Untitled (Blind Idealism Is...)" is now complete! Stop by 22 street to check it out! (at The High Line)
Ryan Gander’s Kissing Fountain
This past week we said goodbye to Ryan Gander’s (b. 1976, United Kingdom) incredibly popular To employ the mistress… It’s a French toff thing, a marble fountain fabricated in the likeness of his wife Rebecca playfully spitting water.
We are excited to announce our upcoming #HighLineCommission by celebrated artist #BarbaraKruger! Titled "Untitled (Blind Idealism Is...)" this new work will be realized as a hand-painted mural on the High Line at West 22nd Street. Opening next week! (Rendering of Barbara Kruger, Untitled (Blind Idealism Is...), 2016) (at The High Line)
Happy #InternationalWomensDay! We take a look back at #Pier54, a #HighLineCommission featuring the work of 27 female artists, documented by photographer @lizlig Pictured left to right is N. Dash, Marie Lorenz, Stephanie Harris, Aki Sasamoto, Francesca Benitez, Marianne Vitale, Carol Bove, Jill Magid, Virginia Overton, and Mika Tajima. (at The High Line)
TBT | Allyson Vieira’s Pyramid of Cups
In April 2012, High Line Art presented its first group exhibition titled Lilliput, which featured miniature sculptures installed in unusual and unexpected places on the High Line and created an art treasure hunt for visitors.
Mariana Castillo Deball’s Tales from Mexico
Mariana Castillo Deball (b. 1975, Mexico) examines how objects’ cultural and functional significance changes over time. For Panorama, the artist presents Who would measure the space, who would tell me the moment?, a series of three stacked ceramic columns, measuring 14 feet high, installed in the planting beds at West 14th Street.
Rashid Johnson’s Minimalist Blocks
Inspired by a childhood steeped in African American cultural influences, Rashid Johnson (b. 1977, United States) creates layered artworks that engage a conversation between personal biography and the implied gravitas of larger cultural and historical narratives. Johnson works predominantly in mixed media sculptures and paintings, combining bare materials such as mirror, wood, and shea butter with loaded iconic objects including record covers, CB radios, historical books, and common domestic objects. Throughout his career, Johnson has explored the ways in which we form our sense of belonging to races and communities, investigating the relationship between familiar objects and identity.
A very happy birthday to #KerryJamesMarshall! Check out his #HighLineCommission at W22 Street. #publicart (at The High Line)