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  • Jean Dubuffet

    Fragmentation and Distortion
    Jean Dubuffet
  • Damien Hirst's Poems of Love
  • Presenting Joan Miró's Femme, oiseaux
  • Sam Gilliam's Bodily Configuration of Painting
  • In Conversation with Larissa Goldston

    Universal Limited Art Editions (ULAE)
    Robert Rauschenberg working with master printer Robert Blackburn at ULAE (Universal Limited Art Editions), West Islip, NY, United States, 1962. Photo: Hans Namuth © Hans Namuth Estate / Courtesy of The Robert Rauschenberg Foundation Archives, New York.
    Robert Rauschenberg working with master printer Robert Blackburn at ULAE (Universal Limited Art Editions), West Islip, NY, United States, 1962. Photo: Hans Namuth © Hans Namuth Estate / Courtesy of The Robert Rauschenberg Foundation Archives, New York.

    Universal Limited Art Editions (ULAE) played a pioneering role of the greatest significance in the development of printmaking in the United States. Originally founded by Tatyana Grosman in 1955 as a way to generate extra income, reproductions of paintings created there came to the attention of William Lieberman, who at the time was a curator at the Museum of Modern Art. Impressed by their quality, he encouraged Grosman to create original prints through collaboration with artists. She decided to follow his advice and sought out young artists she knew of, who in turn brought more artists intrigued by the output. ULAE ultimately became a crucial site for the creation of prints by leading artists of the day and was responsible for incredible advances in the medium, a tradition it continues to this day.

     

    Larissa Goldston, the current co-owner and director of ULAE, grew up observing changes in the landscape of printmaking firsthand. In light of our viewing room From Paris to New York: Transformations in Printmaking, we were honored to speak with her about her experiences. In this conversation with art historian Jennifer Earthman, Larissa provides her perspective on the history of printmaking in general in both Paris and the United States, ULAE’s crucial role in the development of printmaking in America specifically, the unique experiences of women artists in comparison to their male counterparts, and stories of collaborations between artists and printmakers, ultimately providing a lens into a unique time in the history of printmaking.

  • Mapplethorpe's Orchid

    On Beauty and the Fragility of Life
    Mapplethorpe's Orchid
  • Raíz: Martín Chirino and the Telluric Forces of Nature
  • Julia Rooney. Portrait courtesy of Julia Rooney Studio; Alteronce Gumby, portrait by Ella Bessette, courtesy of the artist.
    Julia Rooney. Portrait courtesy of Julia Rooney Studio; Alteronce Gumby, portrait by Ella Bessette, courtesy of the artist.

    Zeit Contemporary Art is pleased to present a new episode of PERSPECTIVES. Art historian Samuel Shapiro sits down with abstract painters Alteronce Gumby and Julia Rooney to discuss the past and present of pictorial abstraction in connection with Zeit Contemporary Art's online viewing room Painting Abstraction: 197X - Today.

  • Adebunmi Gbadebo in her studio, New York, 2021. Courtesy of the artist
    Adebunmi Gbadebo in her studio, New York, 2021. Courtesy of the artist

    Stemming from a rejection of traditional materials as a result of their association with whiteness, Adebunmi Gbadebo uses hair from members of the African diaspora in her work, which encompasses sculptures, prints, paper, and paintings. Gbadebo views hair as intrinsically connected to history and culture in that it contains DNA, and is thus redolent of her own ancestry and lineage as well as other genealogies of the diaspora. Gbadebo is thus able to center Black people and histories as central aspects of the narrative through the medium in and of itself. The artist also used indigo dye and rice paper in addition to human hair in the series A Dilemma of Inheritance, a series inspired by her ancestors’ enslavement on two plantations in South Carolina. As some of this land now comprises a luxury golf course, Gbadebo has brought to light a narrative erased by history. All of her works can be viewed as conceptual archives steeped in history and memory. Gbadebo received her BFA from the School of Visual Arts in New York. Her work is currently included in the permanent collections of the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, the Minneapolis Institute of Art, and the Minnesota Museum of American Art. She has also been included in solo and group exhibitions worldwide.

  • Alteronce Gumby in his studio in the Bronx, New York, 2021. Courtesy of the artist
    Alteronce Gumby in his studio in the Bronx, New York, 2021. Courtesy of the artist

    While part of a lineage of artists whose work is deeply invested in exploring color, Alteronce Gumby is interested in examining and redefining its stereotypical associations, which historically have resulted in division and oppression. Through the use of both iridescent pigments and his unique method of sliding glass over a wood panel, Gumby works against this precedent. The two combined result in transparency as well as reflection, causing the viewer to see themselves in the painting while also lose themselves through looking at the painting. As a result, his paintings give place to a bodily encounter. Through this interaction, Gumby seeks to engage the viewer in a visceral fashion in order to bring to light the myriad of ways in which color is related to both race and identity as well as the universality of color. Though abstract, Gumby titles his paintings in order to bring certain relationships to mind. Gumby studied at Hunter College before obtaining his MFA at Yale University. Gumby has held residencies at the Fondation des Etats-Unis, London Summer Intensive, Dumfries House Residency, and Summer Academy in Salzburg Austria, and has been included in numerous solo and group exhibitions worldwide.

     

    In this conversation between Jennifer Earthman and Alteronce Gumby, Gumby describes abstraction’s ability to open up multiple possibilities as well as to result in a pause and a safe space, ever more important in our media-saturated world. He also discusses the broad significance of his materials in addition to race’s impact on his engagement with color: “Color and race are intertwined, and I want to use abstract painting to emancipate all perceptions of color and liberate all aspects of race.”

  • Nelo Vinuesa at work in his studio. Benifayó, Valencia, Spain, 2021. Courtesy of the artist
    Nelo Vinuesa at work in his studio. Benifayó, Valencia, Spain, 2021. Courtesy of the artist

    Nelo Vinuesa’s vibrant abstractions stem from the artist’s deep connection to both color and the natural landscape. Vinuesa believes color is culturally and anthropologically resonant; as a result, the artist mixes his own colors in order to create hues that represent a certain psychological state or emotion stemming from his own life experience. Vinuesa is also deeply inspired by the landscape, viewing it as revelatory of our own existence, describing it as both inspiration and expression with regard to his painting. His work carries on Abstract Expressionism’s action painting legacy as he works quickly and intuitively in such a way that one can imagine the artist’s movements. Though he focuses on painting, the artist has also worked in audiovisual and video mediums, and cites them as important influences in his work. His paintings are personal yet strive to resonate to all through the expression of essential, universal emotions. Vinuesa studied fine art at the Polytechnic University of Valencia in Spain, and has been included in solo and group exhibitions worldwide. He has also been awarded grants and residencies in both London and Madrid.

     

    In this conversation with art historian Jennifer Earthman, the artist discusses what draws him to abstraction, his creative process, and his artistic goals. His inspiration from nature alongside his interest in technological advances results in unique paintings emblematic of both primal and contemporary imagery. Related to his interest in universally communicative work is his belief in the need of spiritual transcendence in our contemporary world: “After overcoming the conflicts that marked the 20th century, we are still plunged into a kind of chaos … a reconnection with the spiritual can certainly serve us in the present, and this is precisely what draws me to abstraction.”

     

  • Julia Rooney in her studio at the Brooklyn Army Terminal, New York, 2021. Courtesy of the artist
    Julia Rooney in her studio at the Brooklyn Army Terminal, New York, 2021. Courtesy of the artist

    While based in painting, Julia Rooney’s work is interdisciplinary. The artist is interested in the use of nontraditional materials, such as dish-ware, newspaper, maps, and letters. She embeds these materials into her art in order to create complex, culturally significant multi-layered works. Rooney is also interested in exploring the ways in which painting can extend into three-dimensional space, prompting interactions with viewers. As Rooney states “The resulting paintings and sculptural forms I produce become palimpsests: fundamentally layered constructions of incompatible materials with diverse histories.” Her most recent work is invested in the pandemic’s impact: the artist has exclusively been creating six by six feet and two by two inch paintings in light of social-distancing measures and increased reliance on cell phones for communication and connection. Both of these scales result in the viewers’ heightened awareness of their own bodies. Rooney purposely used weak stretchers in order to fracture the larger paintings and mass-produced frames for the smaller paintings, resulting in cracks and imperfections that allude to the recently revealed weaknesses of our own socio-political and economic system. A visual artist and arts educator, Rooney obtained her Master’s in Fine Arts from Yale University. Rooney has held residencies as both an artist and arts educator, and has been included in numerous group and solo exhibitions.

     

    In this conversation with Jennifer Earthman, the artist describes the path that led her to abstraction, abstraction’s pervasive history, and its particular relevance today: “In today’s world where the fact/fiction dichotomy is especially fraught, abstraction offers a third option—a way of thinking that does not foreclose thought, at the same time that it does not evade the messiness of debate.” She also discusses her belief in the psychological resonance of color, particularly through certain juxtapositions.

  • Ashanté Kindle in her studio, 2021. Courtesy of the artist
    Ashanté Kindle in her studio, 2021. Courtesy of the artist

    Ashanté Kindle views her practice as a form of personal healing as she focuses on celebrating the history and beauty of Blackness using abstraction. Kindle utilizes abstracted s-curl or wave forms that resemble both the natural texture of Black hair as well as cartography in her monumental canvases. Kindle is interested in these marks as a result of an interest in the grid and the notion of mapping hair when styling it in addition to the idea of mapping out alternative safe universes for Black people, as in music videos from the nineties. Repetition is an integral part of her process through its meaning in relation to her body, emotions, and occupancy of space as well as resulting in a record of the labor of Blackness. Kindle views these repeated marks as representing the echo of a soft whisper or hysterical scream of emotion. The artist obtained her BFA from Austin Peay State University and is currently an MFA candidate at the University of Connecticut.

     

    "Each single mark I make holds a single action and thought but together they represent time and hold the toll that the labor to create has taken on my body. I want the viewer to see the visual representation of my personal history as well as a single interpretation of the beauty that comes from the labor of Blackness," the artists declares in this conversation with Jennifer Earthman. Ashanté Kindle describes her personal relationship with abstraction as a way in which to reflect on her identity as a Black woman. She also discusses the notion of abstraction as an inclusive place as well as a communicative tool.

  • On Sol LeWitt

    Perspectives
    Sol LeWitt. Wall Drawing #1131, Whirls and Twirls (Wadsworth), 2004. Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, CT
    Sol LeWitt. Wall Drawing #1131, Whirls and Twirls (Wadsworth), 2004. Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, CT

    Sol LeWitt (1928-2007) was a pivotal figure in the development of minimal and conceptual art and catalytic in the relay between the two. Perhaps because of that complexity, he doesn’t figure into the public consciousness as much as many of his postwar peers, although not for lack of exposure: there is an entire building dedicated to LeWitt’s wall drawings at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, and his modular sculptures grace grounds from the National Gallery of Art to Stormking. So who was Sol LeWitt? How can we reconcile his serial structures with his delicate hand painted gouaches, his folded paper drawings with large-scale instruction-based wall drawings? What did LeWitt mean when he said that “The idea becomes a machine that makes the art” and that “Conceptual Artists are mystics rather than rationalists”? How is it that his art has been claimed to represent both a kind of impersonal logic and a mad obsessiveness?

  • In Conversation with Res and Bryson Rand

    Photography has always been a uniquely mobile medium, unconfined to an artist’s studio. What happens to the medium when its peripatetic practitioners are locked in place? When they lose access to the world’s photographic face? What happens to photography under lockdown? In this new episode of PERSPECTIVES, art historian Samuel Shapiro sits down with American photographers Res and Bryson Rand to talk about photography and interiority, about the necessarily inward turn their photography has taken during our collective confinement. They discuss their practices, the impact of lock down in their photographic work and the general state of the medium today. This episode is presented in conjunction with the online viewing room The World Within: Photography and Interiority.

  • Andy Warhol. Weather Map (Positive), 1986. Acrylic on canvas 16 x 20 in. (40.6 x 50.8 cm) © 2020 Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Courtesy of Zeit Contemporary Art, New York
    Andy Warhol. Weather Map (Positive), 1986. Acrylic on canvas 16 x 20 in. (40.6 x 50.8 cm) © 2020 Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Courtesy of Zeit Contemporary Art, New York

    Zeit Contemporary Art is pleased to announce a new episode of PERSPECTIVES. This second installment of the podcast series is presented in conjunction with the online viewing room Andy Warhol: The Last Decade. Art historian Samuel Shapiro sits with Jessica Beck and Mark Loiacono, two of the field’s leading experts, to talk about Warhol’s late work, about his final decade, the 1980s. Long underappreciated―scorned by some and simply ignored by most―this crucial period of Warhol’s career has just recently begun to be reevaluated, leading to exhibitions and a wealth of new scholarship about an artist many thought they knew all too well. In this conversation, they debate whether the late Warhol was no longer successful or resurgently experimental, discussing a wide range of his artistic production and how it has come to be seen in a new light.

  • In Conversation with Eva Specker

    In this first episode of PERSPECTICES, released in conjunction with the online viewing room Joie de vivre, Samuel Shapiro sits with Eva Specker, a prominent psychologist at the University of Vienna. As a researcher in the department of cognition, emotion, and methods in psychology, a member of the Empirical Visual Aesthetics Lab, and a member of the board of the journal, Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts, Eva dedicates her scientific career to questions that might at first seem to belong more to the realm of art history. She investigates how emotion is communicated through works of art, how we experience awe, how environmental context changes the way we look at art, and even how curatorial narratives shape perception. Accordingly, her research takes place in scientific laboratories and art museums, alike. She’s conducted fieldwork in the Albertina and Belvedere Museums in Vienna, the Queens Museum in New York, and at the Venice Biennale.

  • Bryson Rand. Zack in Dappled Light (Fire Island), 2019. Archival inkjet print 40 × 28 in. 101.6 × 71.1 cm. Courtesy of the artist and Zeit Contemporary Art, New York
    Bryson Rand. Zack in Dappled Light (Fire Island), 2019. Archival inkjet print 40 × 28 in. 101.6 × 71.1 cm. Courtesy of the artist and Zeit Contemporary Art, New York

    Ron Gregg, Senior Lecturer in Film at Columbia University, sat down with Bryson Rand to talk about the most recent developments in Rand’s photographic practice. They dig into crucial aspects related to the construction of the image, such as the documentary nature of photography, the use of black and white, the relationship between the model and the photographer, and the pursuit of beauty. The conversation also led to an exploration of the connection between bodies and nature in Rand’s work, revealing a common barbarism endured by LGTBQ communities and the planet.

  • Bryson Rand to go to Skowhegan

    Zeit Contemporary Art is pleased to announce that Bryson Rand has been granted admission into Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture. Skowhegan is an intensive summer residency program for visual artists established in 1946. The resindency seeks each year to bring together a diverse group of individuals that have demonstrated high achivements in the field of visual arts. Founded by artists, and still governed by artists, the program provides an atmosphere in which participants are encouraged to work free of the expectations of the marketplace and academia.