TOP OF / 10 – FIAC 2017

Donna Huanca Peres Project

Peres Project | Donna Huanca

Donna Huanca, Meat Curtain 2016, Courtesy of Peres Project, Berlin

Donna Huanca’s installations fuse tactile materials, such as clothing and ephemera to create architectural collages that are performative in nature. Working primarily with deconstructed clothing, dipped in paint and solidified, her sculptural gestures pause a once-fluid life of the garment. During Huanca’s durational performances the works interact with the vulnerability of live models, camouflaged and infused into the sculpture, giving life to otherwise static artworks. Born in Chicago, Huanca received a BFA in Painting from the University of Houston and studied at Stadelschule, Frankfurt, Germany. In 2012 Huanca was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to live and work in Mexico City. Publications of her work have been featured in Art Forum, DUST, Wire, British Vogue, ArtInfo, Art in America, and the Younger than Jesus Artist Directory published by the New Museum, New York amongst others. Recent exhibitions include: MUSCLE MEMORY at Peres Projects, Berlin, WATER SCARS at Valentin, Paris, PSYCHOTRIA ELATA at Art Berlin Contemporary, Berlin, Germany, SADE ROOM (famously reclusive) at MoMA PS1 Printshop New York, SEEING AURAS at ltd Los Angeles, RAW MATERIAL at Malmö Konsthall, Sweden, PANIC FEAR CRYING FITS at Preteen Gallery, Mexico City.

Karla Black Raffaella Cortese

raffaellaKarla Black, In Place of Requirements 2016, Galleria Raffaella Cortese

Karla Black currently lives and works in Glasgow. She creates abstract sculptures using a combination of everyday materials including powder, soap, gels, and pastes, along with more traditional media such as plaster, chalk, paint, and paper. Carefully arranged on the floor or suspended from the ceiling, they are typically made on site and include direct evidence of the process of their creation through fingerprints and dust. Delicate, messy, sensuous, and visceral, they testify to a physical experience of the world that lies beyond metaphorical and symbolic references.
Poised between form and anti-form, they emerge like transitional states or naturally occurring sediments. Black was born in 1972 in Alexandria, Scotland. She received her B.F.A. in sculpture in 1999 from the Glasgow School of Art, followed by her M.F.A. in 2004. In 2014, Black joined David Zwirner and had her first gallery solo exhibition in New York the same year. In 2016, a solo show, featuring new and recent work by the artist, was presented at David Zwirner, New York. Since the early 2000s, Black’s work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at prominent institutions, including a presentation of new sculptures shown in 2013 at the kestnergesellschaft in Hanover, Germany. Also on view in 2013 was her first museum show in the United States hosted by the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia. 

Talia Chetrit Kaufmann Repetto

22662788_10213053021413663_2138577357_o (1)Talia Chetrit, Ever (Swing), 2014 / 2016, Kaufmann Repetto

Talia Chetrit was born in 1982 in Washington DC. She lives and works in New York, NY. Her career has been an ongoing exploration of what remains hidden in the practice and mechanisms of photography. Her works make frequent use of isolation, obscuration, and distortion, such that her subjects become abstracted and not immediately recognizable. She also inverts conventions of positive and negative space, horizontal and vertical orientation—these extreme effects are not the outcome of post-production processes, but are actually the product of a skillful technical grasp of the medium. There is often an underlying psychological or intimate narrative underpinning the works. In a recent series, she revisited some of the first rolls of film she shot in the 1990s of her own family; other works allude more explicitly to sexuality and the body.

Miriam Cahn Jocelyn Wolff

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Miriam Cahn, Desaster 2016, Jocelyn Wolff

Miriam Cahn is a Swiss painter, she makes intimate, haunting paintings and drawings of semi-ambiguous figures, animals, and landscapes imbued with quiet emotion. Influenced by the black-and-white images she was exposed to through early television and reproductions in art history textbooks, Cahn used only black, white, and shades of gray in her early work. She began using color in 1994, turned on to the formal and psychological power of mass media imagery and its gradual saturation. She cites Michelangelo Antonioni’s 1964 film Il deserto rosso (Red Desert) as a work that exposed her to the hyper-reality of color. With exquisite sensitivity, Cahn uses color to highlight choice parts of her figures—principally the genitals, breasts, lips, or eyes—suggesting fragility and fecundity and endowing her figures with a sense of inner life.

Kader Attia Lehmann Maupin

22664076_10213053097495565_351733357_oKader Attia, Modern Architecture Genealogy 2014, Lehmann Maupin

French-Algerian artist Kader Attia began his practice with photography before moving to collage, sculpture, and large-scale installation. His work does not conform to one visual aesthetic but is informed by his concept of repair, which he sees as a way to explore Western and non-Western approaches to history and politics in terms of a constant restitching of cultural identity. His philosophical, research-based installations draw on themes of architecture, the body, and religion, often employing postcolonial references within museological modes of display.

Katja Novitskova Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler

katja Novitskova

Katja Novitskova, Approximation (C. Elegans, long tail) 2017, Kraupa-Tuskany, Zeidler

Katja Novitskova, born 1984 in Tallinn, Estonia, lives and works in Berlin and Amsterdam. She was artist in residence at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten in Amsterdam from 2013 to 2015. Novitskova’s works includes cutouts from digital imagery, sculptures, installations and artist publications. In her work she examines ecological and information systems, through an engagement with digital data, exploring the co-evolution of planetary ecosystems and species and the competing forces of human expansion and biodiversity. In 2010, she published the influential artist book the ‘Post Internet Survival Guide’ and in 2016 her second artist book ‘Dawn Mission’ was published with the Kunstverein in Hamburg. She had her first solo exhibition at Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler, Berlin in 2012. Since then her work has been exhibited internationally in solo and group exhibitions including the CCS Bard, New York (2012); Fridericianum, Kassel (2013); Astrup Fearnley Museum, Oslo (2014); Kunsthalle Lissabon (2015, solo); 13e Biennale de Lyonn (2015/2016); The Museum of Modern Art, New York (2015); the 9th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art (2016); Kunstverein in Hamburg (2016, solo); Okayama Art Summit, (2016); Yuz Museum, Shanghai (2016); Museum Folkwang, Essen (Nam June Paik Award 2016); Greene Naftali, New York (2016, solo). Besides the Estonian Pavilion at the 57th Venice Biennale upcoming solo and group exhibitions include The Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma, Helsinki; K11 Art Foundation, Shanghai; Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt; Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen; The Public Art Fund, New York (solo). Her work is in the collections of Astrup Fearnley Museum, Oslo; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Museum Ludwig, Cologne; Kumu Art Museum, Estonia; Yuz Museum, Shanghai; Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin; K11 Art Foundation, Shanghai; CC Foundation, Shanghai; Ishikawa Foundation, Okayama; Boros Collection, Berlin; Ringier Collection, Zurich; Rubell Family Collection, Miami; Aishti Art Foundation, Beirut and Sishang Art Museum, Beijing. Her work has been featured in Art Forum, Art Review, Frieze, Mousse, Metropo lis M and Leap, amongst others. Katja Novitskova is represented by Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler, Berlin and Greene Naftali, New York.

Kraupa-Tuskany, Zeidler

Michael Williams Eva Presenhuber

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Michael Williams, Windsurfing 2017, Eva Presenhuber

Michael Williams has been animating the art world with his colorful and quirky paintings for over a decade ever since his solo debut at New York’s Canada gallery in 2007. Aside from early experiments with oil painting, the artist has gradually phased out the use of the brush and since 2013 has developed a unique technical approach using a number of mediums including airbrush, digital inkjet printing, and oil paint to develop his energetic and eclectic works. Throughout his constantly evolving body of work he has maintained a very distinct visual language characterized by a bold palette, layered imagery dotted with quirky, oddball references to pop culture and art history. 

The unique style and process earned Williams critical plaudits and international gallery shows in Denmark, Italy, Germany, and Switzerland, as well as a solo museum show at Canada’s Musée des Beaux-Arts de Montreal in 2015. That same year Gladstone Gallery announced the co-representation of the artist, together with New York’s Canada gallery. The artist is also represented internationally by Presenhuber in Zurich. 

Eva Presenhuber

Adam Gordon ZERO…

22712054_10213053209498365_1599492121_o

Adam Gordon, Untitled 2017, Zero…

Adam Gordon lives and works in New York, NY. He received his MFA from Yale University in 2011 His work has recently been exhibited at Andrew Kreps, NY; National Exemplar, NY; Night Gallery, LA; Know More Games, NY and Derek Eller Gallery, NY. Gordon’s multi-disciplinary practice focuses on the construction of experience. Through methodically manipulating the senses and relying on lived experience, he sets an enigmatic tone, one that peels back the layers of the banal while setting the stage for the re-examination of the physical and emotional self. All the while challenging an inherent need for a defined narrative by pushing the boundaries between reality and fiction. Through the disruption of the mechanisms that customarily govern the art viewing process, he creates works that envelop and are all consuming.

Zero…

Hernan Bas Galerie Peter Kilchmann

Hernan BasHernan Bas, Bloomsbry revisited (parroting) 2017, Galerie Peter Kilchmann 

Born in 1978 in Miami, Florida, Hernan Bas creates works born of literary intrigue and tinged with nihilistic romanticism and old world imagery. Influenced by the Aesthetic and Decadent writers of the 19th century, in particular Oscar Wilde and Joris-Karl Huysman, Bas’s works weave together stories of adolescent adventures and the paranormal with classical poetry, religious stories, mythology and literature. Bas’s work has been exhibited in numerous solo exhibitions around the world, including a major presentation at the Rubell Family Collection, Miami, in 2007, which subsequently traveled to the Brooklyn Museum of Art in 2008, and a retrospective exhibition at the Kunstverein Hannover, Germany, in 2012. In 2013, Bas presented the multi-media installation, TIME, Hernan Bas: a queer and curious cabinet at the Bass Museum of Art, Miami, FL and in 2014, Rizzoli published a monograph on the artist, the most comprehensive book of his work to date. Bas has participated in a number of important group exhibitions, including “The Collectors,” curated by Elmgreen & Dragset for the Nordic and Danish Pavilions at the 53rd Venice Biennale (2009); Triumph of Painting: Part III, Saatchi Gallery, London, and Ideal Worlds – New Romanticism in Contemporary Art, Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt (both 2005); and the 2004 Whitney Biennale. His work is part of the permanent collections of New York’s Brooklyn Museum of Art, The Museum of Modern Art, and Whitney Museum of American Art; as well as the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami, and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, among others. The artist lives and works in Detroit, Michigan.

Henry Taylor Blum & Poe

22712683_10213053295140506_933852526_oHenry Taylor, Don’t keep Love a secret. Portrait of Victoria Moreno’s niece (2017), Blum & Poe

Henry Taylor is an American artist and painter who lives and works in Los Angeles, California. Taylor is most well known for his acrylic paintings, mixed media sculptures, and installations. Taylor’s largest output of work is in portraiture: he is known to paint obsessively, on various materials, including empty cigarette packs, detergent boxes, cereal boxes, suitcases, crates, bottles, furniture, and stretched canvas. His subjects include family, friends, patients (when employed at the hospital), acquaintances, strangers, waitresses, celebrities, homeless people, himself, and also historical figures, cultural figures, sports heroes, politicians, and individuals from photographs or other art works.Taylor’s painterly style has been variously described as sensuous, vibrant, bold, fast and loose, full of  empathy, generosity, and love, and the visual equivalent to blues music, while retaining a profound critical social sensibility. His work has been lauded for maintaining an impossible balance between careful and sophisticated art-world references with a seemingly spontaneous and natural expressiveness. Taylor’s oeuvre has been aligned within various American lineages, including the portraiture tradition of Alice Neel, and the work of Harlem Renaissance painters such as Jacob Lawrence and Romare Bearden, and compared with his peer Kerry James Marshall.

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