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Pace Gallery is currently presenting JoAnn Verburg’s “For Now” through August 20 at the New York space in Chelsea.
July 9, 2021 - August 20, 2021
Pace Gallery is currently presenting JoAnn Verburg’s “For Now” through August 20 at the New York space in Chelsea.
In the exhibition, Verburg debuts recent multiple-frame photographs and video works depicting olive trees captured on three continents. Along with the artist’s multidisciplinary practice over four decades, these new experiential artworks offer a contemplative urban environment in response to a period of social and political unrest and the ongoing COVID-19 virus. “For Now” invites viewers to pause and enter a world of self-reflection, a place where the artist has called it an “imagined reality,” as her images become performative vehicles to drive existential encounters between the viewer and the world.
Since 2010, Verburg has continually experimented with the process of photo and video installations within an urban environment that both acknowledge the environment and provide an escape from it. Her desire to exhibit her images of olive trees in New York has grown to reflect her interest in the disconnect between the meditative space of the gallery and the busy world outside. By repeatedly using the same subject matter, her images in three-dimensional spaces showcase a variety of vantage points, framing, and light, while employing techniques of classical craftsmanship.
David Zwirner and Fraenkel Gallery have come together for the presentation of “Cataclysm: The 1972 Diane Arbus Retrospective Revisited.”
An exhibition of new multimedia paintings by Andro Wekua is on view at Gladstone 64 from September 14—October 22.
In Christina Quarles's “In 24 Days tha Sun’ll Set at 7pm” the artist is sharing new works that are the product of her recent residency at Hauser & Wirth in Somerset.
The first U.S. survey of Anna-Eva Bergman, “Revelation” is one of the few looks at the experimental practice of the dynamic Norwegian-born artist.
Lucy Bull's first solo exhibition in New York, "Piper" is on view at David Kordansky from September 10—October 15, where the artist will introduce new works on canvas.
Jenny Holzer’s most recent language-based artworks can be seen at Hauser & Wirth’s New York gallery in an exhibition titled “DEMENTED WORDS.”
Originating at World Cultural Heritage sites, “nendo Sees Kyoto” is the result of the design house’s collaborations with six Japanese master artisans.
vanessa german’s “Sad Rapper” constructs a narrative of characters from the same neighborhood as a platform to challenge urgent and current issues.
Go inside the worlds of art, fashion, design, and lifestyle.