Posted by Fabio 27 November 2013
Rising to prominence on the New York art scene more than forty years ago, Richard Serra is now celebrated internationally, notably for his groundbreaking sculptures and for his radical approach to drawing. Serra’s Drawings for The Courtauld are extraordinarily powerful works. read more
Posted by Fabio 27 November 2013
Painter David Ostrowski will be opening his next exhibition, Yes Or Let’s Say No, at the Simon Lee gallery in London on 28th November. Film director Harmony Korine interviewed Ostrowski for the exhibition Press Release. read more
Posted by Fabio 21 November 2013
Tallahassee is centered around Leo Gabin’s first feature film A Crackup At The Race Riots, based on the Harmony Korine novel of the same title. Composed entirely from appropriated, user generated found footage, there is no place for plot, linear narrative, character development, or scene setting in Leo Gabin’s video work. read more
Posted by Fabio 21 November 2013
Working in a variety of modes and media, including painting, music, social critique and photo-collage, the Houston-based artist Mike Lood is a critic of what he calls the “non-profit art organization gulag, yet his work is represented in the permanent collections of the Dallas Museum of Art, Menil Collection in Houston and the Birmingham Museum of Art. read more
Posted by Fabio 21 November 2013
Working within the vein of assemblage, Wadden makes paintings by piecing together his hand woven weavings to create large scale, hard-edge geometric abstractions. The weavings are constructed from various natural and synthetic materials, mostly refuse from projects gone sour and/or long forgotten read more
Posted by Fabio 21 November 2013
Presenting a world that pulses with excesses and appetites, Cecily Brown explores the breadth of human experience in tactile oil paintings. Broadly inspired by the history of painting from Rubens and Veronese to the muscular expressionism of Willem de Kooning. read more
Posted by Fabio 18 November 2013
Brian Donnelly’s work acts to settle his own selfish whims, while exploring art and art culture through representational painting. Inspired by books like “The island of Dr. Moreau” and “Frankenstein”, his aim is not to recreate works based on fiction, but to create his own vision of cruelty. read more
Posted by Fabio 15 November 2013
Hungry Castle makes public art for planet earth. Based in Barcelona, the collaborative of Dave Glass and Kill Cooper create large-scale works inspired by internet pop culture. They sell concepts and cool to corporate sponsors, creative agencies, music festivals and to you. read more