David Salle Davidsallestudio.Net

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

David Salle Davidsallestudio.Net David Salle davidsallestudio.net Born in Norman, Oklahoma (1952) Lives and works in Brooklyn, New York Education and awards 1973 BFA, California Institute of the Arts, Valencia, California 1975 MFA, California Institute of the Arts, Valencia, California Solo exhibitions 2020 Self-Ironing Pants and Other Paintings, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac - Marais, Paris 2019 Portraits, Flowers, and Wire, Galería Javier López & Fer Francés, Madrid Musicality and Humour, Skarstedt Gallery, London 2018 Paintings 1985 - 1995, Skarstedt Gallery, New York 2017 Ham and Cheese and Other Paintings, Skarstedt Gallery, New York New Paintings, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris 2016 Lehmann Maupin Gallery, Hong Kong Inspired by True-Life Events, CAC Málaga, Málaga 2015 Debris, Dallas Contemporary, Dallas, Texas New Paintings, Skarstedt Gallery, New York 2014 Maureen Paley, London Collages, Mendes Wood, São Paulo 2013 David Salle / Francis Picabia, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris Leeahn Gallery, Seoul Leeahn Gallery, Daegu Ghost Paintings, Skarstedt Gallery, New York Ghost Paintings, The Art Club, Chicago, Illinois Tapestries / Battles / Allegories, Lever House Art Collection, New York 2012 Ariel And the Other Spirits, The Arnold and Marie Schwartz Gallery Met, Metropolitan Opera House, Lincoln Center, New York Gerhardsen Gener, Berlin 2011 David Salle Recent Paintings, Mary Boone Gallery, New York Maureen Paley, London 2010 Mary Boone Gallery, New York 2009 Héritage du Pop Art, Kestnergesellschaft, Hannover 2008 Galleri Faurschou, Copenhagen Studio d’Arte Rafaelli, Trento 2007 Galeria Cardi, Milan New Works, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Salzburg Bearding The Lion in His Den, Deitch Projects, New York 1, 2, 3, 4, Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, Colorado 2005 Mary Boone Gallery, New York 2004 Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris Split Worlds. The Montage Principle, Stella Art Foundation, Moscow Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, Colorado 2003 Mary Boone Gallery, New York Waddington Galleries, London Emilio Mazzoli Galleria d´Arte Contemporanea, Modena 2002 Galleria Cardi, Milan Lehmann Maupin, New York 2001 Gagosian Gallery, New York Jablonka Galerie, Cologne 2000 MARCO - Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Monterrey A. C., Monterrey, Nuevo Leon 1999 Lehmann Maupin Gallery, New York Gagosian Gallery, New York Retrospective, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig, Vienna; Museo d’Arte Contemporanea Castello di Rivoli, Torino; Museo Guggenheim, Bilbao 1998 Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, Colorado Itochu Gallery, Tokyo 1997 Gagosian Gallery, Bervely Hills, California Claudia Gian Ferrari Arte Contemporanea, Milan 1996 Galería Soledad Lorenzo, Madrid Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris 1995 Galerie Bischofberger, Zurich Gagosian Gallery, New York 1994 Marie Boone Gallery, New York Gagosian Gallery, New York 1993 Newport Harbor Art Museum, Newport Beach, California 1992 Galerie Daniel Templon, Paris Gagosian Gallery, New York Galeria Soledad Lorenzo, Madrid Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, Hague 1991 Gagosian Gallery, New York Robert Miller Gallery, New York (photographs) Galerie Bischofberger, Zurich 1990 Mario Diacono Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts Fred Hoffman Fine Art, Santa Monica, California Castelli Graphics, New York 1989 Waddington Galleries, London Galerie Michael Werner, Cologne Bayerische Staatsgemaldesammlungen Munchen, Munich The Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Tel Aviv 1988 Mary Boone / Michael Werner Gallery, New York The Menil Collection, Houston, Texas Fundación Caja de Pensiones, Madrid; Staatsgalerie Moderner Kunst, Munich; The Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Tel Aviv Galerie Bischofberger, Zurich 1987 Mary Boone Gallery, New York The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh Galerie Bischofberger, Zurich Spiral Garden, Wacoal Art Center, Tokyo 1986 Leo Castelli Gallery, New York Mario Diacono Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts Castelli Graphics, New York Museum am Ostwall, Dortmund, Germany; Aarhus Kunstmuseum, Aarhus, Denmark The Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, Massachusetts Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, California; Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Illinois Galerie Bischofberger, Zurich 1985 Texas Gallery, Houston, Texas Galerie Daniel Templon, Paris Mary Boone Gallery, New York Donald Young Gallery, Chicago, Illinois Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Illinois Galerie Michael Werner, Cologne 1984 Leo Castelli Gallery, New York Mario Diacono Gallery, Rome Galerie Bischofberger, Zurich 1983 Akira Ikeda Gallery, Tokyo Mary Boone Gallery, New York David Salle / Francis Picabia, Galerie Schellmann & Kluser, Munich Museum Boymans - van Beuningen, Rotterdam Gagosian Gallery, Los Angeles, California 1982 Mary Boone Gallery, New York Leo Castelli Gallery, New York Galerie Bischofberger, Zurich Anthony d´Offay Gallery, London 1981 Mary Boone Gallery, New York Larry Gagosian Gallery, Los Angeles, California Lucio Amelio Gallery, Naples 1980 Galerie Bischofberger, Zurich 1979 Gagosian / Nosei Weber, New York Group exhibitions 2019 Downtown Painting, Peter Freeman, Inc., New York; presented by Alex Katz Coleçao Berardo de 1960 à atualidade, Berardo Museum, Lisbon Fischl, Fischli & Weiss, Muñoz, Prince, Salle, Sherman, Skarsktedt Gallery, New York Wo Kunst geschehen kann. Die frühen Jahre des CalArts, Kestnergesellschaft, Hannover Inaugural Exhibition, Skarstedt Gallery, New York At First Glance: Fischl Sculptures and Salle Photographs, Skarstedt Gallery, New York 2018 Condo, Fischl, KAWS, Kippenberger, Salle, Sherman, Williams, Skarstedt Gallery, New York In My Room: Artists Paint the Interior 1950 - Now, The Fralin Museum of Art at The University of Virginia, Virginia Running Wild. Eric Fischl, David Salle, The Arts Club, London 2017 Third Space / Shifting Conversations About Contemporary Art, Birmingham Museum of Art, Birmingham, Alabama America! America! How Real is Real?, Museum Frieder Burda, Baden - Baden Social Surfaces, Artists Space, New York Baselitz, Condo, Fischl, Haring, Muñoz, Prince, Salle, Skarstedt Gallery, New York Provenance: Art Stories, Washington Pavillion, Sioux Falls, South Dakota Alex Katz / David Salle, Auroras, São Paulo Hope and Hazard: A Comedy of Eros, The Hall Art Foundation, Reading, Vermont; curated by Eric Fischl American Cool, Mirat and Co., Madrid Zeitgeist, Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Geneva Creatures Great and Small, Tobias Mueller Modern Art, Zurich Fast Forward: Painting from the 1980s, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York Fischl, Holzer, Prince, Salle, Sherman, Skarstedt Gallery, New York 2016 Baselitz, Condo, Kippenberger, Muñoz, Prince, Salle, Trockel, Skarstedt Gallery, New York Portraits, Skarstedt Gallery, New York Painters´ Painters, Saatchi Gallery, London Unifinished Business: Paintings from the 1970s and 1980s by Ross Bleckner, Eric Fischl and David Salle, Parrish Art Museum, New York Cindy Sherman and David Sallle: History Portraits and Tapestry Paintings, Skarstedt Gallery, London A Selection of Works from the 1980s, Vito Schnabel Gallery, St. Moritz Water Bodies, New York Academy of Art, Southhamton Arts Center, New York; curated by Eric Fischl and David Kratz Solana ¿simbolista?, Museo de Arte Moderno y Contemporáneo de Santander y Cantabria, Santander La Mia Ceramica, Galerie Max Hetzler, Paris Condo, Kippenberger, Oehlen, Salle, Skarstedt Gallery, London Exhibition of Work by Newly Elected Member and Recipients of Honors and Awards, American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York Condo, de Kooning, Kippenberger, Muñoz, Salle, Warhol, Skarstedt Gallery, London Body Superficial, Sgorbati Projects, New York Nice Weather, Skarstedt Gallery, New York; curated by David Salle Condo, Gonzalez - Torres, Kelley, Prince, Salle, Sherman, Trockel, Wool, Skarstedt Gallery, New York 2015 Winter Group Show, Skarstedt Gallery, London American Is Hard to See, Whitney Museum of American, New York Matters of Pattern, Skarstedt Gallery, New York Future Seasons Past, Lehmann Maupin, New York; curated by Manuel E. Gonzalez GHP Amer, Baga, Cameron, Greenbaum, Lins, Mackler, Salle, Jane Harstook Gallery at Greenwich House Pottery, New York Making Art Dance: Backdrops and Costumes from the Armitage Foundation, Mana Contemporary, Jersey City, New Jersey; curated by Jeffrey Deitch Summer Exhibition, Skarstedt Gallery, New York 2014 Urban Theather: New York Art in the 1980´s, Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Fort Worth, Texas Feats of Clay, Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, Colorado Absent Friends, Monya Rowe Gallery, New York; curated by Paul Schrader Disturbing Innocence, The Flag Art Foundation, New York; curated by Eric Fishl Everyday Epiphanies: Photography and Daily Life Since 1969, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; curated by Doug Eklund Inaugural Exhibition, Minsheng Art Museum, Shanghai Rauschenberg: Collecting and Connecting, Nasher Museum, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina Beg, Borrow, Steal, Medical Facilities of America Gallery / Temporary Exhibitions Gallery and The Media Lab, Taubman Museum of Art, Roanoke, North Carolina Modernism from the National Gallery of Art: The Robert & Jane Meyerhoff Collection, de Young Museum, San Francisco, California Summer Exhibition, Skarstedt Gallery, New York George Condo, Albert Oehlen, David Salle, Thomas Schütte and Cindy Sherman, Skarstedt Gallery, New York Variations in Abstraction, Skarstedt Gallery, New York To Have and to Hold, The Rubell Family Collection, Miami, Florida 2013 Girls Can Tell, GAK - Gesellschaft für Aktuelle Kunst,
Recommended publications
  • Skarstedt Presents David Salle: Ghost Paintings, a Series of Works from 1992, on View November 8 – December 21, 2013
    SKARSTEDT PRESENTS DAVID SALLE: GHOST PAINTINGS, A SERIES OF WORKS FROM 1992, ON VIEW NOVEMBER 8 – DECEMBER 21, 2013 Press Preview: Wednesday, November 6, 9:30 a.m. RSVP to [email protected] Opening Reception: Friday, November 8, 6:00 – 8:00 p.m. David Salle, Ghost 3 (1992), Ink on photosensitized linen, 85 X 75 inches New York, NY, November 4, 2013— Skarstedt presents David Salle: Ghost Paintings, featuring 13 works made in 1992, but never exhibited before this year. The exhibition travels from the Arts Club of Chicago, where it was seen in summer 2013. It will be on view at Skarstedt (20 East 79th Street) from November 8 through December 21, 2013. The Ghost Paintings are made from large photographic images printed on three contiguous linen panels. The “subject” of the photograph is that of a woman creating improvised movements under a large piece of fabric. The three horizontal panels are then painted over with fields of intense color. The series represents the canvas surface of painting at three levels: as a photographic subject (the fabric in the dancer’s hands), as a readymade ground (the linen imprinted with photographic emulsion), and as a traditional surface for the application of paint. The Ghost Paintings concretely merge painting, photography, and performance to produce mysteriously imagistic works in the best innovative spirit of postmodernism. Salle (b. 1952), who lives and works in Brooklyn, NY, is known for his crucial role in the formulation of postmodernism. He helped to reestablish painting as a central force in the 1980s, after a decade dominated by photography and new media.
    [Show full text]
  • Barbara Kruger Born 1945 in Newark, New Jersey
    This document was updated February 26, 2021. For reference only and not for purposes of publication. For more information, please contact the gallery. Barbara Kruger Born 1945 in Newark, New Jersey. Lives and works in Los Angeles and New York. EDUCATION 1966 Art and Design, Parsons School of Design, New York 1965 Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2021-2023 Barbara Kruger: Thinking of You, I Mean Me, I Mean You, Art Institute of Chicago [itinerary: Los Angeles County Museum of Art; The Museum of Modern Art, New York] [forthcoming] [catalogue forthcoming] 2019 Barbara Kruger: Forever, Amorepacific Museum of Art (APMA), Seoul [catalogue] Barbara Kruger - Kaiserringträgerin der Stadt Goslar, Mönchehaus Museum Goslar, Goslar, Germany 2018 Barbara Kruger: 1978, Mary Boone Gallery, New York 2017 Barbara Kruger: FOREVER, Sprüth Magers, Berlin Barbara Kruger: Gluttony, Museet for Religiøs Kunst, Lemvig, Denmark Barbara Kruger: Public Service Announcements, Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, Ohio 2016 Barbara Kruger: Empatía, Metro Bellas Artes, Mexico City In the Tower: Barbara Kruger, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC 2015 Barbara Kruger: Early Works, Skarstedt Gallery, London 2014 Barbara Kruger, Modern Art Oxford, England [catalogue] 2013 Barbara Kruger: Believe and Doubt, Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria [catalogue] 2012-2014 Barbara Kruger: Belief + Doubt, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC 2012 Barbara Kruger: Questions, Arbeiterkammer Wien, Vienna 2011 Edition 46 - Barbara Kruger, Pinakothek
    [Show full text]
  • ^ for Immediate Release
    ^ For immediate release EXHIBITION: ends and exits: contemporary art from the collections of lacma and the broad art foundation ON VIEW: February 23-august 4, 2013 LOCATION: bcam, 3 rd floor (Image captions on page 3 ) (Los Angeles—February 13, 2013) The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) presents a new exhibition of contemporary art that investigates the visual dialogue of the 1980s. Ends and Exits: Contemporary Art from the Collections of LACMA and The Broad Art Foundation features more than fifty artworks—ranging from photography and painting to sculpture—and is drawn largely from two significant Los Angeles collections. Emerging from modernism, artists in the 1980s broke away from traditional painting methods and questioned the notion of originality. The exhibition highlights a diverse group of artists who made significant and timely artworks associated with this challenging social and political period, including Jonathan Borofsky, Robert Gober, Hans Haacke, Jenny Holzer, Jeff Koons, Barbara Kruger, Sherrie Levine, Allan McCollum, Richard Prince, Meyer Vaisman, David Wojnarowicz, and more. “Bringing together two comprehensive Los Angeles collections allows us to depict an era that began, in part, here in Los Angeles,” comments Franklin Sirmans, LACMA’s Terri and Michael Smooke Curator and Department Head of Contemporary Art. “In Ends and Exits we present a diverse scope of contemporary artists whose art captures the discourse of the 1980s.” Since 2008, works from The Broad Art Foundation have been incorporated into many LACMA exhibitions, including Color + Form, Art of Two Germanys/Cold War Culture and most recently, a survey of works by artist Robert Therrien.
    [Show full text]
  • John Baldessari: Paintings 1966-68 Is Comprised of Loans from the Glenstone Museum and Private Collections Across the Country
    CRAIG F. STARR GALLERY FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: CONTACT: Becky Elmquist + 1 (917) 971 9401 [email protected] JOHN BALDESSARI: PAINTINGS 1966 -68 TO BE EXHIBITED AT CRAIG F. STARR GALLERY APR 7-MAY 20 John Baldessari, Space Available, 1966-67. Ink on canvas, 12 1/4 x 12 1/4 inches. Private collection. NEW YORK – Craig F. Starr Gallery is pleased to present John Baldessari: Paintings 1966- 68, on view from April 7 through May 20, 2017. The exhibition brings together a selection of John Baldessari’s (b. 1931) paintings from 1966-68 and includes examples of the experimental, small canvases and the larger Text and Photo-Text Paintings. It is the first focused presentation of these groundbreaking works since they were originally shown together at Molly Barnes Gallery in 1968. Among the earliest examples of Conceptual Art, it was with these seminal paintings that Baldessari reconsidered the practice of artmaking, questioned the concepts of authorship, originality, and aesthetic judgement, and first explored the narrative potential of imagery and the associative power of language that continues to inform his work today. By the early 1960’s, Baldessari had abandoned the concept of traditional painting. Working in his hometown, National City, CA, he was isolated from but not ignorant of the critical discourse happening in New York and Los Angeles. With this isolation came the freedom to experiment and ideas took precedent in his work. 5 East 73rd Street New York, NY 10021 Tel 212 570 1739 starr-art.com [email protected] CRAIG F. STARR GALLERY In an interview with David Salle, Baldessari recalled, “I was always interested in language.
    [Show full text]
  • DAVID SALLE Born 1952, Norman, Oklahoma, USA. Currently Lives And
    DAVID SALLE Born 1952, Norman, Oklahoma, USA. Currently lives and works in New York. Education 1975 California Institute of the Arts, MFA. 1973 California Institute of the Arts, BFA. Awards 2016 American Academy of Arts and Letters 2015 National Academy of Art 1986 Guggenheim Fellowship for Theater Design Selected Solo Exhibitions 2018 David Salle: Paintings 1985 -1995, Skarstedt, New York, USA. 2017 David Salle: Ham and Cheese and Other Paintings, Skarstedt, New York, USA. David Salle: New Paintings, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris, FR 2016 David Salle, Lehmann Maupin Gallery, Hong Kong, HK. David Salle: Inspired by True-Life Events, CAC Málaga, Málaga, ES. 2015 David Salle, Skarstedt, New York, USA. Debris, Dallas Contemporary, Dallas, USA. 2014 Maureen Paley, London, UK. Collage, Mendes Wood D, São Paulo, BR. 2013 Ghost Paintings, Skarstedt Gallery, New York, USA. David Salle/ Francis Picabia, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris, FR. David Salle: Ghost Paintings, The Arts Club, Chicago, USA. Tapestries/ Battles/ Allegories, Lever House Art Collection, New York, USA. Leeahn Gallery, Daegu, KR. Leeahn Gallery, Seoul, KR. 2012 Gerhardsen Gerner, Berlin, DE. Ariel and Other Spirits, The Arnold and Marie Schwartz Gallery Met, Metropolitan Opera House, Lincoln Center, New York, USA. 2011 David Salle Recent Paintings, Mary Boone Gallery, New York, USA. Maureen Paley, London, UK. 2010 Mary Boone Gallery, New York, USA. 2009 Héritage du Pop Art, Kestnergesellschaft, Hannover, DE. 2008 Galleri Faurschou, Copenhagen, DK. Studio d’Arte Raffaelli, Trento, IT. 2007 Galleria Cardi, Milan, IT. David Salle, New Works, Galerie Thaddeaus Ropac, Salzburg, AT. Bearding The Lion In His Den, Deitch Projects, New York, USA.
    [Show full text]
  • Art in Free Fall | by David Salle | the New York Review of Books
    Art in Free Fall | by David Salle | The New York Review of Books http://www.nybooks.com/articles/2018/02/08/laura-owens-art-free-fa... Font Size: A A A Art in Free Fall David Salle FEBRUARY 8, 2018 ISSUE Laura Owens an exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City, November 10, 2017–February 4, 2018; the Dallas Museum of Art, March 25–July 29, 2018; and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, November 4, 2018–March 25, 2019 Catalog of the exhibition edited by Scott Rothkopf. Whitney Museum of American Art, 663 pp., $45.00 (paper) (distributed by Yale University Press) The Los Angeles artist Laura Owens brings a light touch and a tough mind to a new kind of synthetic painting. Her exuberant, bracing midcareer survey at the Whitney beams a positive, can-do energy. As a stylist and culture critic, Owens is neither a stone-cold killer nor a gleeful nihilist, traits embraced by some of her peers. She’s an art lover, an enthusiast who approaches the problem of what to paint, and how to paint it, with an open, pragmatic mind. Her style can appear to be all over the place, but we always recognize the work as hers. Her principal theme may be her own aesthetic malleability. Owens bends the conceits of art theory so that her own personality can flourish. She is not afraid of wit. Enchantment has its place too. Walking through her show, Laura Owens/Whitney Museum of American Art I was reminded of something Fairfield Porter once wrote Laura Owens: Untitled (detail), 138 1/8 x 106 about Pierre Bonnard: “He was an individualist without ½ x 2 5/8 inches overall, 2014 revolt, and his form…comes from his tenderness.” For decades, and especially in the mid-twentieth century, a persuasive reading of modern painting revolved around the idea of the gestalt—the way every element in a painting coalesced into one totality, one essence that blotted out ambiguity.
    [Show full text]
  • Cv Selected Solo Exhibitions 2015 David Salle, Skarstedt, New York, USA
    Cv Selected Solo Exhibitions 2015 David Salle, Skarstedt, New York, USA. Debris. Dallas Contemporary, Dallas, USA. 2014 Maureen Paley, London, UK. Collage, Mendes Wood D, São Paulo, Brazil. 2013 Ghost Paintings, Skarstedt Gallery, New York, USA. David Salle/ Francis Picabia, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris, France. David Salle: Ghost Paintings, The Arts Club, Chicago, USA. Tapestries/ Battles/ Allegories, Lever House Art Collection, New York. Leeahn Gallery, Daegu, South Korea. Leeahn Gallery, Seoul, South Korea. 2012 Gerhardsen Gerner, Berlin, Germany. Ariel and Other Spirits, The Arnold and Marie Schwartz Gallery Met, Metropolitan Opera House, Lincoln Center, New York, USA. 2011 David Salle Recent Paintings, Mary Boone Gallery, New York, USA. Maureen Paley, London, UK. 2010 Mary Boone Gallery, New York, USA. 2009 Héritage du Pop Art, Kestnergesellschaft, Hannover, Germany. 2008 Galleri Faurschou, Copenhagen, Denmark. Studio d’Arte Raffaelli, Trento, Italy. 2007 Galleria Cardi, Milan, Italy. David Salle, New Works, Galerie Thaddeaus Ropac, Salzburg, Austria. Bearding The Lion In His Den, Deitch Projects, New York, USA. David Salle : 1,2,3,4, Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, USA. 2005 Mary Boone Gallery, New York, USA. 2004 Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris, France. David Salle: Split Worlds. The Montage Principle, Stella Art Gallery, Moscow, Russia. Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, USA. 2003 Mary Boone Gallery, New York, USA. Waddington Galleries, London, UK. Emilio Mazzoli Galleria D’Arte Contemporanea, Modena, Italy. 2002 Galleria Cardi, Milan, Italy. Lehmann Maupin, New York, USA. 2001 Gagosian Gallery, New York, USA. Jablonka Galerie, Cologne, Germany. 2000 Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Monterrey, A.C., Monterrey, Mexico. 1999 Lehmann Maupin Gallery, New York, USA. Gagosian Gallery, New York, USA.
    [Show full text]
  • After 30 Years of Scrutiny, David Salle's Paintings Still Confound
    After 30 Years of Scrutiny, David Salle’s Paintings Still Confound By Alina Cohen | April 26, 2018 David Salle, Mingus in Mexico, 1990. Courtesy of the artist and Skarstedt Gallery. It’s only natural to desire a simple, straightforward narrative. Artworks (and people) that seem to proffer easy interpretation, then deny any satisfying conclusion, are eminently frustrating. For over 40 years, the artist David Salle has been making work—and giving interviews—that deny tidy conclusions. Though Salle began exhibiting in New York in the 1970s, it was his association with Mary Boone that launched his career. The gallerist first displayed his work in a 1980 exhibition alongside that of painters Julian Schnabel and Ross Bleckner. New York’s critical and financial attention fixated on the trio throughout the rest of the decade. A widely accepted story developed: the so-called “return to painting” in the 1980s. The Whitney Museum played on this trope when it organized last year’s “Fast Forward: Painting from the 1980s.” Tate Modern operated on similarly reductive assumptions in its 2008–09 exhibition “UBS Openings: Paintings from the 1980s.” Both shows romantically posited a decade-long surge in exciting, innovative painting in New York that coincided with an eager, receptive market. The shows alternately grouped together such disparate artists as Mary Heilmann, Jean-Michel Basquiat, and Salle himself. Salle, however, disagrees. “I don’t put a lot of store into art world narratives,” he tells Artsy. “People aren’t very observant. They like to repeat stuff that sounds provocative.” He admits there was a “tremendous shift in emphasis” during the decade, that socio-economic changes during the 1970s led to something in the 1980s, though he doesn’t quite articulate what that is.
    [Show full text]
  • Why the Jack Goldstein and Gretchen Bender Shows Leave Us Contemplating the Retro in Their Retrospectives by G
    September 20, 2013 Stalled in the Mirror Stage: Why the Jack Goldstein and Gretchen Bender Shows Leave Us Contemplating the Retro In Their Retrospectives By G. Roger Denson Jack Goldstein × 10,000, the first American retrospective of the seminal Pictures artist, appeared this summer at The Jewish Museum in New York, May 10 - September 29, 2013.Gretchen Bender: Tracking the Thrill, presented key multichannel video installations and single-channel videos at The Kitchen, August 27 - October 5, 2013. See more at The Jewish Museum and The Kitchen websites. The confluence in New York this summer of two exhibitions by Pictures Artists, Jack Goldstein (1945 - 2003) at The Jewish Museum and Gretchen Bender (1951-2004) at The Kitchen, supplied the more theoretically-minded art cognoscenti an art historical quandary to ponder. Does the neglect of Goldstein and Bender as artists over the last two to three decades tell us something more comprehensive about the Pictures Generation as a whole? Did the Pictures Artists, perhaps, by virtue of serving as a reflexive bridge between the art world and the media mainstream, only serve to open the doors of late 20th-century art to a more protean generation of artists to come after them? With their eyes and lenses focused emphatically on appropriation, did they render themselves obsolete by counting themselves ideologically out of the renaissance of non-reflexive picture making about the world at large that ensues today? The questions are more than academic. With the Goldstein and Bender shows, along with last year's MoMA Cindy Sherman retrospective, following on the heels of the Metropolitan Museum's 2009 exhibition, The Pictures Generation, 1974-1984, the 2013 installations attempt to posthumously reassess the careers of two of the Pictures Artists who had largely gone neglected over the past two decades.
    [Show full text]
  • David Salle Press Release
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE DAVID SALLE: NEW PAINTINGS APRIL 30 – JUNE 27, 2015 DISCUSSSION WITH DAVID SALLE AND ART CRITIC/CURATOR CHRISTIAN VIVEROS-FAUNÉ: THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 5:45PM AT 550 WEST 21st STREET (New York, NY)—Skarstedt is pleased to present an exhibition of new work by American artist David Salle at their Chelsea gallery this April. The exhibition will feature all new work from two recent series: the Late Product Paintings and the Silver Paintings. David Salle: New Paintings will be on view at Skarstedt Chelsea (550 West 21st Street) from April 30 through June 27, 2015. Skarstedt will also publish a fully illustrated catalogue to accompany the show, featuring a conversation between David Salle and writer William Powers. David Salle’s new paintings are characterized by both immediacy and complexity; their vibrant color and highly energized, dynamic compositions display a marked evolution from his most recent exhibition, Ghost Paintings, shown at Skarstedt's Upper East Side gallery in 2013. Salle’s Late Product Paintings can be seen as both revisiting and providing an extension to his 1993 series, Early Product Paintings, in which flatly painted backgrounds of collaged product advertisements were the stage upon which present-tense painting operations were carried out. Salle’s Late Product Paintings bring this premise to a much fuller, performative, and masterful resolution. Exploring the intangible relationships between subjects, Salle’s images float in a fragmented world of poetic simultaneity. Drawing images from a variety of sources, Salle combines them into paintings as one would create a collage. Though often surprising, his connections are never forced; they have a non-programmatic, improvised quality, and they arrive at a place of buoyant equilibrium.
    [Show full text]
  • Robertlongo Manoftheworld
    American Gothic ARTIST ROBERT LONGO GETS HIS REVENGE UNTITLED (ST. LOUIS RAMS/HANDS UP) words by ANDREW GOLDSTEIN photography by BJÖRN WALLANDER 2015, charcoal on mounted paper, 65 x 120 inches opposite page: Artist Robert Longo, photographed in his studio in front of UNTITLED (PENTECOST), his 20-foot-long triptych of the robot from Pacific Rim, New York City, July 2016 The sign on the charcoal-blackened door sell for upward of a million dollars and He began taking night classes at Nassau of Robert Longo’s Little Italy studio reads are championed by people with names Community College, this time studying art SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES, but on a like Leo, Eli, and Dasha. Guardian critic history. “I distinctly remember going from recent Sunday afternoon, the artist presented Jonathan Jones has called his drawing of the kid who sat in the back of the class to being another side of what it means to be a refined, Ferguson police officers holding back black the kid who sat in the front. I really wanted if world-weary, badass. Dressed in black and protesters “the most important artwork to do this,” he says. After a summer visiting drinking a mug of tea—he foreswore alcohol of 2014.” This fall, Longo has a new show the museums of Europe and then acing a and drugs twenty years ago—Longo riffed on opening at Moscow’s Rem Koolhaas-designed battery of art-history tests, Longo transferred his work while giving a tour of his expansive Garage Museum of Contemporary Art, to SUNY Buffalo to pursue a bachelor’s in atelier, his confident gait somewhere between placing his work alongside that of two other fine arts.
    [Show full text]
  • NICE WEATHER Curated by David Salle FEBRUARY 25 – APRIL 16, 2016
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE NICE WEATHER Curated by David Salle FEBRUARY 25 – APRIL 16, 2016 OPENING RECEPTION: THURSDAY, February 25, 6-8 PM 20 East 79th Street 550 West 21st Street Nice Weather This is what it’s like at the end of the day. But soon the day will go away. Sunlight preoccupies the cross street. It and night soon will meet. Meanwhile, there is Central Park. Now the park is getting dark. - Frederick Seidel Skarstedt is pleased to present Nice Weather, an exhibition of paintings curated by David Salle, at both its Upper East Side and Chelsea locations. Inspired by the title of Frederick Seidel’s poem, this exhibition brings together some of the strongest painters of the present day. Spanning two galleries, Nice Weather hosts a platform for conversation within a multigenerational group of artists, ranging in age from their twenties to their eighties, many of whom will be seen together for the first time. Each work is concerned, to one degree or another, with the basic properties of painting: size, scale, surface, shape, color and gesture. Some of the paintings are also concerned with imagery, with how it can be presented and integrated with pure painting, but none of these artists are realists per se. Overall, there is an emphasis on structure and materiality. Many of the works are declarative; they make an immediate impact. Some are visually blunt; others are more lyrical. All have a strong sense of painting’s internal energy. A few of the artists are not “painters” in the strict sense, but their inclusion here makes visual and material sense.
    [Show full text]