Showing posts with label Morgan Lehman Gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Morgan Lehman Gallery. Show all posts

Friday, January 12, 2024

Morgan Lehman Gallery Flat File Friday features art by Jimi Kabela

FLAT FILE FRIDAY
New artworks from Morgan Lehman's flat files in your inbox every Friday morning

Jimi Kabela

Untitled, 2023

Oil and fabric material on canvas over panel

9h x 9w in

22.86h x 22.86w cm

$ 1,500

Click here to inquire

Jimi Kabela obtained his MFA from Pratt Institute in 2023 after completing his BFA at the University of Texas, Arlington in 2021. Born in the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1990 and one of eleven siblings, Kabela and his family relocated to the United States in 2000 to pursue richer educational opportunities. Jimi's artistic journey has been profoundly influenced by his global voyages: having explored five continents, Kabela draws inspiration from these diverse cultural experiences, and is particularly interested in typography, language, and the power of communication.

www.morganlehmangallery.com | 212-268-6699 | Tues - Sat, 11-6

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Thursday, January 11, 2024

Morgan Lehman Gallery: Think of the Salad Days 1/11-2/17,2024

Curated by Priscilla Vail Caldwell & Joe Fyfe


January 11 - February 17, 2024

Opening Party: Thursday, January 25, 6-8pm

Hannah Beerman

Jimi Kabela

Liam Lee

Olivia Marwell

Nhật Minh

Bennett Smith

Will Thurman

Alix Van Der Donckt-Ferrand

Cullen Washington Jr.

"Think of salad days," 2024

Morgan Lehman Gallery

(installation view)

Think of salad days

They were folly and fun

They were good, they were young

 

Think we’ll destabilize, it’s urgent…challenge the structures that sustain racism, sexism, militarism, and bourgeois heteronormativity—we have the skill to take it on here…the above are the sole lyrics of the 2 minute song by the Young Marble Giants: indexing an influential band on their one & only album (ever heard of “albums”?) Colossal Youth.  

 

Think that one said they always made “music for evenings” that is, its quietness, its…Mark Fisher’s “slow cancellation of the future…” life on the planet in its “late” period… it’s always evening now… the first paintings made in the darkness of caves…Cullen Washington, Jr. ’s creation myth walks out into the savannah & the ancient dusk. Vito Acconci said “it’s always night in the city” now it’s always night on earth…

 

Think that we might be the last creatures like us to be here but there is no real night no enclosure in darkness & we look for it. Bennett Smith’s grasping binder claws if the heart be chrome within a black Newman zip…or if the near future descends in folds like Nhật Minh’s lost shadowy handkerchief blanketing the floor & the wall…

 

Think of intransigence, contradiction. Liam Lee saw the Covid time as when “our homes and bodies became focal points of safety and anxiety, protecting us from the outside world”…this is all waking sleep…roofers outside my window, floors below, the sound of the torch, years previous the smell of asphalt only encountered on the street.

 

Think a vexed threshold crossed Hannah Beerman invites Jack Spicer’s spirits in to help… acceptance of life and benevolence of spirit never comes knocking. Jimi Kabela & African money into oil dollars & Olivia Marwell a structure of feeling? are we seeing a pattern or merely an appearance of mothers and aunts certain humans are situations, it put me through school. one of them (her) became a chiropractor. My favorite line (she sang) is “lubricate the enema” 

 

Think of our glowing optimism daunting morning Alix van Der Donckt-Ferrand’s santeria of the quotidian object Will Thurman: “from a place that isn’t a place until it’s understood by the terms of its misplace-mentedness. only then can it be seen…” large lumps of blotches over crayoned cartoons… Duino Elegies: “For beauty is nothing but/the beginning of terror”

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Wednesday, November 15, 2023

Morgan Lehman Gallery: Kim McCarty New Work November 16, 2023 - January 6, 2024

Kim McCarty

New Work



November 16, 2023 - January 6, 2024

Reception for the Artist: Thursday, November 16, 6-8pm

Image: Kim McCarty, "Untitled (Tall Girl)," 2023, Watercolor, oil stick, oil pastel on paper, 78h x 45w in (detail)

Morgan Lehman is pleased to announce the opening of an exhibition of new works by Kim McCarty. This marks the artist’s fourth solo exhibition with the gallery.


Over the course of her career, McCarty has fused a deep-seated interest in figuration with a propensity for material experimentation. Her paintings rely on the gauzy, aqueous blur of alla prima watercolor technique to imbue her subjects with a sense of transience, longing, and memory. Often working at a massive scale, McCarty drenches unstretched heavyweight watercolor paper with water before marking the surface with gestural brushwork that clouds and blooms as pigments disperse into substrate. Translucent paint veils overlap and interact to form luminous color networks that verge on the abstract when viewed up close. McCarty’s painterly approach and ambitious sense of scale produce a powerful rawness in her work; this rawness serves as a counterpoint to the tenderness and vulnerability of her of figures.


In this latest body of work, McCarty refers to Antonio Canova’s “Pauline Bonaparte as Venus Victrix,” a neo-Classical marble sculpture completed in Rome between 1805-1808. Commissioned for Camillo Borghese, the historical artwork’s reclining figure exudes an early Nineteenth Century notion of idealized beauty, youth, and perfection. It is a piece that was painstakingly crafted to be an object of the viewer’s gaze. McCarty’s reimagining of the sculpture through the fragile medium of a work on paper proved both challenging and inspiring. Homage, curiosity, and McCarty’s critical feminine eye all come through. The shining solidity of Canova’s marble bust melts away to reveal a series of moving female portraits that are unapologetically psychological.


McCarty’s wet-into-wet watercolor process underscores the tension of attempting to hold onto a solid form that mutates or nearly vanishes when liquid is applied. The artist often attempts to capture a particular visual idea or shape countless times before achieving something that feels fully realized. This inherent material unpredictability keeps McCarty on her toes in the studio and asks her to be fully present during the act of painting. It also points to larger ideas about human impermanence, the chaos of our world, and the changes in perceptions of beauty that continue to unfold in our cultures. McCarty is also thinking about material evolution as it manifests in the aging process, to which no person is exempt. No one, except Pauline Bonaparte’s marble likeness as Venus Victrix, perhaps. For the rest of us, time moves forward.


Kim McCarty graduated with an MFA from the University of California at Los Angeles and a BFA from the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California. Recent solo and group exhibitions include the Santa Monica Museum of Art (Santa Monica, CA) and the Pasadena Museum of Art (Pasadena, CA). McCarty’s work is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art (New York, NY); the UCLA Hammer Museum (Los Angeles, CA); and the Honolulu Academy of Art (Honolulu, HI); among others. Her paintings have been featured in major publications including The New York Times, The LA Times, Architectural Digest, and ArtForum.

www.morganlehmangallery.com | 212-268-6699 | Tues - Sat 11-6
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Morgan Lehman Gallery | 526 West 26th Street4th FloorNew York, NY 10001
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Friday, November 10, 2023

FLAT FILE FRIDAY
New artworks from Morgan Lehman's flat files in your inbox every Friday morning

Paolo Arao

Rivers, 2023

Handwoven cotton

24 1/2h x 8 1/4w in

62.23h x 20.95w cm

$ 3,500

Click here to inquire

Paolo Arao is a Brooklyn-based, Filipino-American artist working with textiles. He received his BFA from Virginia Commonwealth University and attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. Arao has shown his work widely and has presented solo exhibitions at David B. Smith Gallery (Denver), Western Exhibitions (Chicago), and Jeff Bailey Gallery (NYC) amongst others. Residencies include: Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, The Museum of Arts and Design (NYC), the Millay Colony, the Studios at MASS MoCA, Vermont Studio Center, Lower East Side Printshop Keyholder Residency, NARS Foundation, Wassaic Project, BRIC Workspace, Atlantic Center for the Arts and the Fire Island Artist Residency. He is a recipient of an Artist Fellowship from The New York Foundation for the Arts. His work has been published in New American Paintings, Maake Magazine, ArtMaze, Esopus, and Dovetail.

www.morganlehmangallery.com | 212-268-6699 | Tues - Sat, 11-6

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