Archive for the ‘Corcoran Gallery of Art’ Category

NEXT GENERATION: Selections by Artists from the 30 Americans Collection

January 20, 2012


What do artists Nina Chanel Abney, Nick Cave, Rashid Johnson, Rodney McMillian, Gary Simmons, Xaviera Simmons, Shinique Smith, Henry Taylor, Hank Willis Thomas, Mickalene Thomas, and Carrie Mae Weems have in common?  They are all widely acknowledged as top contemporary American artists, all African American, and each artist’s work is included in the seminal Rubell Family collection, 30 Americans, currently on view locally at the Corcoran Gallery of Art.  But there is another connection.  This group of artists also recently assisted Contemporary Wing in selecting the exhibitors featured in its debut show in D.C. entitled, NEXT GENERATION: Selections by Artists from the 30 Americans Collection.  Contemporary Wing asked the artists to provide one or two names of emerging and mid-career, contemporary American artists who, in their opinion, best represent the “next generation” of artists who have the potential to define the American landscape in the next decade.

The result is a fabulous group of artists working in a broad range of media, including photography, painting, sculpture, installation, textiles, drawing, light and new media, as well as works that combine or hover between these media. The twelve participating artists in NEXT GENERATION are: Derrick Adams, Kajahl Benes, Caitlin Cherry, Sonya Clark, Alex Ernst, Wyatt Gallery, Kira Lynn Harris, David Huffman, Jason Keeling, Karyn Olivier, Gary Pennock, and Cheryl Pope. 

NEXT GENERATION runs from February 4 until March 10, 2012, Tuesday through Saturday from 11-6 p.m.  The preview is Friday, February 3, from 6-9 p.m., and the public opening is on Saturday, February 4, from 6-9 p.m.  The artists and Kalia Brooks, who critiqued the work for the exhibition catalog, will be present at both private and public openings.  Because of the scale of the works, the show is being held at an alternative site, at 1250 9th Street, N.W, in Washington, D.C.  NEXT GENERATION promises to present dynamic work of the highest quality that is changing the face of contemporary art, some of which deals directly with issues of race and diversity, and some with social and aesthetic questions more broadly.

A catalog will accompany the exhibition with critiques by Kalia Brooks, Exhibitions Director at MoCADA (Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts) in Brooklyn, NY.

Derrick Adams – Derrick Adams is a New York-based artist who is interested in how perceptions and ideals attach to objects, colors, shapes and materials especially in the built environment. A recurring theme in his work is the relationship between man and monument.

Kajahl Benes – Kajahl Benes is a painter from Santa Cruz, California, who lives and works in New York City.  Benes creates large-scale paintings of figures incorporating divergent cultural symbols as well as ancient and contemporary signifiers within each work.

Caitlin Cherry – Caitlin Cherry is a painter and installation artist from Chicago, Illinois who lives and works in New York City.  In her abstracted self-portraits, she replaces her own figure with an avatar to compelling effect.  Most of her paintings are connected to, or held by, found objects that further engage the themes of her work.

Sonya Clark – Sonya Clark is an installation, fiber, and textile artist based in Richmond, Virginia. She explores the social significance of hair with regard to race and assimilation and related notions of beauty. Using the thin-toothed black combs found in any barber shop, and in some cases, thread, and hair foil, she creates sculptures and tapestries of rapturous form and color.

Alex Ernst – Alex Ernst is a New York-based sculptor who uses wood, string, and rudimentary tools requiring only the power of her effort.  Her process is intentionally stripped down, leaving form, the inherent beauty of materials, and a record of her impact upon them.

Wyatt Gallery – Wyatt Gallery is a photographer who often documents humanitarian crises.  This body of work, Tent Life: Haiti, is a series of photographs taken after the devastating 7.0 magnitude earthquake in 2010.

Kira Lynn Harris – Kira Lynn Harris was born and raised in Los Angeles, and currently works in Harlem, New York.  She is a multi-media artist interested in light, space, and perception.  Her installations destabilize perception in order to reveal a new orientation.

David Huffman – David Huffman is an abstract painter based in Oakland, California. His works are an amalgam of the formal concerns of abstract painting and social identity.

Jayson Keeling
– Jayson Keeling is a New York-based artist whose works evoke an ominous glamour.  He uses glitter on canvas to portray skeletons or nuclear explosions, and the tension created by disjunction in form and content draws the viewer to his work.

Karyn Olivier– Karyn Olivier was born in Trinidad and Tobago and works currently in Brooklyn, New York.  Olivier often uses playground elements in her work, since the playground is where children learn about isolation and socialization. Olivier also favors the repetition of identical forms–twin dilapidated houses or multiple tether balls–to transform banal elements into works of art.

Gary Pennock – Gary Pennock is a Brooklyn-based artist who works primarily with light, sound, and video projection.  With titles like “A Line Through the Center of Space,” and “Across the Stillness of Time,” Pennock transports viewers virtually to another dimension.  Beauty is a chief concern in his work.

Cheryl Pope – Cheryl Pope is a multi-disciplinary artist who incorporates collaboration and community into her process.  She is showing work from her “Hoop Dreams” series that is based on conversations with African American youth, many of whom expressed the belief–remarkably, to this day–that professional basketball is the only future open to them.

To preview the works please contact info@contemporarywing.com

Contemporary Wing would like to extend a special thanks to          CAS Riegler and City Interests for their generosity

HAPPY HOLIDAYS & WINTER/SPRING 2012 SAVE THE DATES

December 27, 2011

ALL OF US AT CONTEMPORARY WING WOULD LIKE TO WISH YOU A VERY HAPPY HOLIDAY SEASON

*     *     *

GALLERY NEWS

IVORY TOWER  (RECAP).  Thanks to all who took time from the hustle and bustle of the Miami art fairs to visit “Ivory Tower.”  It was a hugely successful debut for Contemporary Wing, and we would like to extend special thanks for their assistance with this exhibition to:  Deborah Shelton Tynes, Veronica Jackson at The Jackson Design Group, Bill Apter at Avitecture, and John Gargus at Christie Digital.  If you missed the exhibition, please check out an amazing photo-recap, courtesy of “Look into my Owl.”

NEXT GENERATION  (FEBRUARY/MARCH 2012).   Our inaugural exhibition in Washington, D.C., opens February 4, 2012, at 1250 9th Street, NW.  “NEXT GENERATION” complements the Corcoran Gallery of Art’s exhibition of Mera and Don Rubell’s collection, “30 Americans,” on display through February 12, 2012.  For “NEXT GENERATION,” Contemporary Wing invited each artist represented in the “30 Americans” exhibition to identify one or two American artists that he or she believes is a critical “up and comer” of the next generation.  Selected artists from Los Angeles, Chicago, New York, Baltimore, and Richmond, VA, among other places, will be announced in January.  A catalog will accompany the exhibition with critiques by Kalia Brooks, Exhibitions Director at MoCADA (Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts) in Brooklyn, NY.
Contemporary Wing would like to extend special thanks to CASRiegler Real Estate Development for its generous support.

I’M COMING HOME.  (MAY/JUNE 2012) Appropriately named for Contemporary Wing’s first exhibition in its home gallery space at 1412 14th Street, “I’m Coming Home” is a solo exhibition of new works by gallery artist, Hedieh Javanshir Ilchi relating to home life and domestic space in Iran.

For more information about the gallery and exhibitions, please visit contemporarywing.com or contact info@contemporarywing.com

header image: Paul D. Miller (DJ Spooky), Ice Sonification, Antarctica Project, DVD, 8:08 minutes, edition of 5 + 2 AP, 2011. Courtesy of Look into my Owl and the Artist

Where have you been? What’s going on?

February 28, 2009

In Smithsonian news, LA and DC have  made a respectable exchange in museum professionals. Today, it was announced that Anne Ellegood, Curator of Contemporary Art at the Hirshhorn will be leaving us for LA, but in return we got a new Director of the Hirshhorn, Richard Koshalek.

In Corcoran news, my favorite fundraiser is coming up in March – Artini.  Since most of us in DC are still riding on the Obama stimulus plan (aka December, January and February, the inauguration months), why not continue to celebrate and also enjoy Maya Lin: Systemic Landscapes which opens March 14.

In DC gallery news, we’re all still here and everyone is doing fine.  We have the fascinating Lesser Madonnnas exhibition opening tonight of new work by Corcoran School of Art + Design graduate Melissa Ichiuji.  As a dealer and collector of her work, I highly advise a visit.  And for my street art audience, expect a treat in June at Irvine…

In Manifest Hope news, where do I begin?  Some important points:  All the merchandise from the exhibition can be bought on this website.  We raised over $20,000 for the Duke Ellington School of Arts. Arnold Schwaznegger is stunning. This link just sums up the experience.

In NY Armory news… I’ll have some after my visit this week.  If you want to stay updated on the NY gallery RIP list, you can join the speculation here.

arnold-schwarzenegger

Richard Avedon at the Corcoran

August 21, 2008

Kicking off the fall season in DC’s art world is the highly anticipated “Richard Avedon: Portraits of Power” opening at the Corcoran Gallery of Art on September 13th . 250 photographs, from 1957 to his death in 2004, illustrate how Avedon used his fame to access the elite, and photograph them.

Portraits of Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, George W Bush, Donald Rumsfeld, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Barack Obama, John Stewart, Micheal Moore and Malcolm X to name a few. And one of my favorite, not person obviously, but anecdotes from “a sitter” by the name of Karl Rove. Rove called Avedon, “an elitist snob who deliberately set me up… The portrait is foolish, stupid and insulting. It makes me look like a complete idiot.”

Ummm, no comment

Did you know…

July 1, 2008

that Martin Puryear was a native Washingtonian?

Lois Mailou Jones founded the art department at Howard.

Benjamin Edwards lives in Washington, DC.

Paul D. Miller (DJ Spooky) grew up here and

Romare Bearden had his first solo exhibition, Projections, in 1964 at the Corcoran. This was when he introduced to the world his “collage style”.

ROMARE BEARDEN( American, 1914-1988 )

Return of the Prodigal Son, 1967.

Mixed media and collage on canvas, 50 1/4 x 60″

(Albright-Knox Collection)

That Voice Sounds Familiar

May 22, 2008

Have you visited the Corcoran’s exhibition The American Evolution: A History Through Art and noticed the familiar voice on the audio tour? This month’s ARTnews reveals that it’s the voice of Project Runway’s Tim Gunn. Gunn, who was a BFA graduate of the Corcoran College of Art & Design in 1976, has now re-affiliated himself with the institution, giving lectures and lending his voice. Gunn goes on to further support DC’s art community in ARTnews by discussing his donation of a work by Anne Truitt, his art school inspiration and senior thesis advisor, to the Hirshhorn after learning of her retrospective there in ’09.

I wonder if “make it work” or “this worries me” was coined by Truitt as she reviewed his student work…

Tim Gunn

Last Day

April 22, 2008

to buy your Artini tickets!

Don’t forget that Fall Fete tickets sold out last year creating a black market …

Did you know that in SE Asia (most notably Thailand & Burma) due to censorship and isolation paint, canvases and other art supplies must be bought on the black market … one would argue that this is probably a good indicator that these “emerging markets” aren’t quite ready to open up

Artini!

April 8, 2008

Only 7 more nights to find your favorite Artini before the Feature Event on April 30th!

Your drinking schedule:

Tuesday, April 8

6:30 p.m. – Le Bar/Ici Urban Bistro

7:30 p.m. – Bobby Van’s Steakhouse

Thursday, April 10

6:30 p.m. – Poste Moderne

7:30 p.m. – Inde Bleu

Tuesday, April 15

6:30 p.m. – Teatro Goldoni

Thursday, April 17

6:30 p.m. – Perry’s Restaurant

7:30 p.m. – Napoleon Bistro & Lounge

Tuesday, April 22

6:30 p.m. – West End Bistro

7:30 p.m. – M Bar Lounge

Thursday, April 24

6:30 p.m. – Topaz Bar

Tuesday, April 29

6:30 p.m. – Hudson

See you there!

Buying Blake

January 18, 2008

Immediately after the death/sucide of Jeremy Blake was announced there was a spike in readers brought to the blog by search terms such as “buy jeremy blake”, “buy blake prints”, “jeremy blake prices” etc.

At cocktail parties I’ve heard from amateur specullectors that an artists’ death is the easiest way for their art collections to appreciate. While basic Keynesian theory supports that, it’s not always the case. Thus, the following information may be disappointing to some, but I promise it is true and common practice:

Jeremy Blake, whose suicide last summer was all but incomprehensible to the career-obsessed art world, has had his beautifully mounted retrospective homage at Kinz, Tillou and Feigen Gallery [his dealers] … Fans may be slightly daunted however by the fact Blake did not often sign his digital prints, they have no edition number and, choicest of all, there are no actual, vulgar prices given for any works. Instead you have to leave your name and contacts and wait to see if you are deemed suitable. It’s an elegant system that keeps collectors on tenterhooks.

Don’t Call Us, We’ll Call You by Adrian Dannatt – The Art Newspaper, Jan 08, p. 36

Luckily there is still a way to enjoy Blake’s work where right of entry does not rely on pedigree or contacts. Check out Wild Choir: Cinematic Portraits by Jeremy Blake at the Corcoran Gallery of Art through March 2nd.

american-sex-machines.jpg
Jeremy Blake, Working still from Glitterbest, 2006, digital video and sound (Courtesy Kinz, Tillou + Feigen, New York)

I Guess We All Wondered

January 9, 2008

Our own, Dr. Paul Greenhalgh, director of The Corcoran Gallery of Art, got a great sound bite in this month’s The Art Newspaper when asked if he was related to the infamous Greenhalgh family of forgers. The Greenhalgh’s, who have deceived many prominent dealers and museums, have most recently made headlines with a Gauguin forgery in the collection of The Art Institute of Chicago.

(Our) Greenhalgh says he has no relation to the forger family, but that “…there is actually a Paul Greenhalgh who was a star of one of Britain’s soap operas, ‘Coronation Street’ (set in the North of course). Sadly I am not him either, though I am sure it helped my cause at home over the years that a lot of people thought a TV star was writing to them.” (The Art Newspaper, Jan ’08, pg.2)

paul_corcoran.jpgOur Greenhalgh

images.jpg “Coronation Street” Greenhalgh

187-n-faun.jpgFake Gauguin


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