Cool Hunting

Inaugurating Pace Prints' new Chelsea gallery tomorrow, Ryan McGinness' "Varied Editions," features a myriad of his latest work, as the title implies. (Click flyer below for detail.) The show includes editions of silkscreens on paper, a series of monoprints, three-dimensional multiples created using skateboards, porcelain-baked enamel on steel panels, and metal sculptures (pictured above: an unpainted version), which are already causing a buzz.
The range of work amounts to a take-over of the space; McGinness is transforming the interior of the gallery with wallpaper and wall treatments of his creation. Buttons made of archival paper and metallic ink adorn canvases in numbers generated by software. One button says, "Fuck Off Coolhunters" and another says, "Fuck Off Trend Forecasters." Funny. I wonder what the rest say.
After this show, McGinness will be immediately redirecting his focus on designing the environment for a functioning skate ramp, in conjunction with P.S.1, for Art Basel Miami this year. Not only will McGinness be responsible for the graphics on the ramp, he's working on the overarching design of the entire installation, which will include his enamel works, as well as the signage and collateral design for a cafe—napkins included!
Varied Editions
Opening Reception: 4 October 2007, 7-10pm
4 October-6 November 2007
Pace Prints Chelsea
521 West 26th Street
New York, NY 10001 map
tel. +1 212 629 6100
|
previous entry Suissa: Enlighten |
next entry Rack Magazine |
by Ariston AndersonThe beauty of a Ryan McGinness show is not only that passing through the gallery doors is entering into the world of McGinness, but that each painting fully consumes your attention once you start looking. Like their name implies, each multi-layered screenprinted work from the Black Hole series has the remarkable ability to suck viewers in. Similar to a Jackson Pollack or a...
This weekend Ami and I got to check out You, Urs Fischer's installation at Gavin Brown's Enterprise. (Click images for detail.) The piece is an eight-foot deep crater measuring about 38x30 feet dug within the pristine white walls of the gallery. According to New York Magazine the pit took a ten days to build and cost about $250,000 using a jackhammer to remove the...
At a time when modern high-rise condos are transforming much of NYC's landscape, it's more and more important to preserve what makes the city unique. U.K. artist Mike Nelson embraces this sentiment with his first major installation in the U.S., “A Psychic Vacuum,” presented in conjunction with Creative Time. Imagine a derelict building located in Manhattan's Lower East Side—former home to the bustling Essex...
The culmination of a year-long curatorial project by FIT's (Fashion Institute of Technology) Art Market Master of Arts program, "Impossibly Familiar" is a group exhibition featuring works by Antenna Design, assume vivid astro focus, Ragna Berlin, Cui Fei, Ivan Navarro, Brandon Neubauer, Aurora Robson and Zbig Rybczynski. Strategically curated to encourage viewers to reconsider the impossible and challenge our perceptions of the future, the...
His disorienting light installation was the final scene of CH's Whitney Biennial 2006 video and now the New York-based artist Paul Chan's first German exhibition is opening this Friday, 27 October 2006. Part of an ongoing series called The 7 Lights, Paul will show 3rd Light (pictured right and here), which continues his use of shadow-like digital projections of falling common objects, like sunglasses,...
Celebrating the launch of their newest flagship luxury LS 460 sedan, the Lexus 460 Degrees Gallery opened 20 October 2006 in LA and runs through 3 November 2006. Curators Shamin Momin (of the Whitney) and Sebastian Agneessens helped Lexus commission artists Arne Quinze, Miranda Lichtenstein, and Pascual Sisto to create the "Light and Speed" exhibition. Featuring Quinze's massive arcing installation made from readymade 2x4s,...
