Richard Artschwager
Study of Line
1969/70
charcoal on paper
25 x 19 inches
63.5 x 48.3 cm
dated on lower right recto
RA1811
Richard Artschwager
Green Weave
2008
oil pastel on paper
25 x 38 inches
63.5 x 96.5 cm
signed and dated on lower right recto
RA3078
Richard Artschwager
Single Line
1969
charcoal on paper
19 x 25 inches
48.3 x 63.5 cm
signed and dated on lower right recto
RA1851
Richard Artschwager
Weave
1989
charcoal on paper
37 1/2 x 25 inches
95.3 x 63.5 cm
RA0669
Steve DiBenedetto
Leviathan
2009
colored pencil and acrylic on paper
26 x 42 inches
66 x 106.7 cm
SD2541
Steve DiBenedetto
Seven
2009
colored pencil and acrylic on paper
35 1/2 x 26 inches
90.2 x 66 cm
signed, dated and titled on lower right verso
SD2540
John Duff
Inside the Kepler Conjecture II
2010
urethane resin, steel
54 x 15 x 15 inches
137.2 x 38.1 x 38.1 cm
JD3075
John Duff
Inside the Kepler Conjecture III
2010
urethane resin, steel
47 x 22 x 22 inches
119.4 x 55.9 x 55.9 cm
JD3076
Mel Kendrick
Double Core
2005
plywood, plaster
52 x 31 x 36 inches
132.1 x 78.7 x 91.4 cm
KEN3077
Mel Kendrick
Untitled
2008
cast paper with pigment
23 5/8 x 41 3/4 inches
60 x 106 cm
KEN3005
Barry Le Va
Centerpoints and Lengths (Blocks Through Points of Tangency) Five Circular Areas Tangent to and Inscribed Within Each Other. 8 Unequal Lengths Cut on a Circular Plan (walked end-over-end in their own paths, ends touch; ends cut)
1974
ink and colored pencil on paper
36 x 60 inches
91.4 x 152.4 cm
BL0955
Barry Le Va
7 Pages from Unfinished Book of Fiction
1968 - ongoing
xeroxes, ink and typewritten ink on graph paper
11 x 8 1/2 in. and 11 x 8 in.
27.9 x 21.6 cm and 27.9 x 20.3 cm
BL3084
Barry Le Va
Untitled
1981
ink and acrylic on paper
22 1/8 x 30 1/4 inches
56.3 x 76.7 cm
signed and dated on lower right recto
BL2832
Barry Le Va
Untitled
1981
ink and acrylic on paper
22 1/8 x 30 1/4 inches
56.3 x 76.7 cm
signed and dated on lower right recto
BL2831
Alexander Ross
Untitled
2010
graphite on paper
18 1/2 x 18 1/2 inches
47 x 47 cm
signed and dated on verso
AR3063
Alexander Ross
Untitled
2010
graphite and crayon on paper
30 x 22 1/8 inches
76.2 x 56.2 cm
signed and dated on verso
AR3064
Alexander Ross
Untitled
2010
graphite and crayon on paper
22 3/4 x 30 inches
57.8 x 76.2 cm
signed and dated on verso
AR3065
Alexander Ross
Untitled
2010
graphite and crayon on paper
30 1/8 x 30 1/8 inches
76.5 x 76.5 cm
signed and dated on verso
AR3066
Alexander Ross
Untitled
2010
graphite on paper
40 x 30 inches
101.6 x 76.2 cm
signed and dated on verso
AR3067
Jorinde Voigt
Blickwinkel - Study 4
2008
ink and graphite on paper
22 7/8 x 30 3/4 inches
58 x 78 cm
JV3069
Jorinde Voigt
Blickwinkel - Study 14
2008
ink and graphite on paper
22 7/8 x 30 3/4 inches
58 x 78 cm
JV3070
Jorinde Voigt
Blickwinkel - Study 21
2008
ink and graphite on paper
22 7/8 x 30 3/4 inches
58 x 78 cm
JV3071
Jorinde Voigt
Symphonic Area Var. 10
2009
ink and pencil on paper
31 1/2 x 70 7/8 inches
80 x 180 cm
JV3072
Jorinde Voigt
Symphonic Area Var. 12
2009
ink and pencil on paper
31 1/2 x 70 7/8 inches
80 x 180 cm
JV3073
Jorinde Voigt
Symphonic Area Var. 14
2009
ink and pencil on paper
31 1/2 x 70 7/8 inches
80 x 180 cm
JV3074
Summer Group Show
Richard Artschwager, Steve DiBenedetto, John Duff, Mel Kendrick, Barry Le Va, Alexander Ross and Jorinde Voigt
July 9 – September 25, 2010
David Nolan Gallery is pleased to announce the opening of its summer group exhibition, running through September 25, 2010. The show features drawings and sculpture made by artists from several generations, each with their own unique approaches to abstraction.
Richard Artschwager (American, b. 1923) has made a long career of playing with the edges of the so-called abstraction/figuration dichotomy. Well known for his sculptures that look like functional objects such as tables and chairs but are in fact considered art, Artschwager's lesser known drawings are atmospheric explorations of ambiguous, abstract spaces and objects that are at once familiar and uncanny. In this exhibition we show four drawings by Artschwager from the late 1960's until 2008.
The two colored pencil drawings of Steve DiBenedetto (American, b. 1958) are inspired by the shiny glass architecture of skyscrapers. His renderings of these buildings are fractured and bewildering, reflecting the vertiginous experience of seeing these structures on the street as they reflect sunlight, streetlights and their urban surroundings.
The precise geometric and organic forms of the two sculptures on view by John Duff (American, b. 1943) are from the series titled "Inside the Kepler Conjecture," referring to the complex mathematical theories proposed by Johannes Kepler, a 16th century astronomer who was the first to explain planetary movement. Duff's cast resin sculptures are composed of the negative space left by clusters of spheres that were stacked on top of one another and connected by steel rings.
Mel Kendrick (American, b. 1949) is most well known for his sculptures carved out of blocks of wood. Kendrick paints the wood on the outside, cuts through the block, dismantles the pieces from its original state and then recomposes them. The simple procedure behind making the sculptures belies the complex compositions and sense of movement Kendrick achieves by experimenting with interior and exterior spaces, presence and voids. We present a sculpture made of plaster and plywood by Kendrick entitled "Double Core" from 2005.
Barry Le Va (American, b. 1941) has revolutionized the field of sculpture, pushing the medium's limits to the point of dematerialization. Le Va likens his works to crime scenes, where commonplace objects such as wood, felt, ball bearings, shards of glass, even chalk dust, are staged as evidence of an act happening in the past, whether it be an act of violence or simply one of carefully premeditated thought. Utilizing the dialectic of order and flux as well as notions of invisibility and transience, Le Va attempts to classify and catalogue ways of thinking by distributing objects in space as complex markers or traces of process. Drawings by Le Va from the 1960's through the 1980's are on view.
The geometries of nature are the inspiration behind the five black and white drawings on paper by Alexander Ross (American, b. 1960). The biomorphic forms in Ross's drawings appear to be cells viewed through a powerful microscope. He filters objective fact into art through obsessively detailed marks rendered in stark black and white, highlighting the exquisite formal perfection of nature.
The arcs and undulating lines of Jorinde Voigt's (German, b. 1977) drawings are constellations of ideas given visual form. They represent situations, events, and actions from everyday life, from music to ambient temperatures to acts as intimate as kissing, with the incidences noted in relation to each other according to complex algorithms. Voigt's works show the underlying subjectivity behind what is conventionally thought of as objective truth. In this exhibition, we present drawings from two series: "Blickwinkel (Perspective)" (2008) and "Symphonic Area" (2009).
Summer Gallery Hours:
Monday, by appointment
Tuesday – Friday, 10 AM – 6 PM
# # #
For further information, images or to arrange for an interview, please contact:
Katherine Chan
T: 212-925-6190
F: 212-334-9139
katherine[at]davidnolangallery.com