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The Guggenheim Museum: For the 2024 YCC Party, artist Rachel Rossin will transform the iconic rotunda into a hybrid virtual environment.

The Guggenheim Museum: For the 2024 YCC Party, artist Rachel Rossin will transform the iconic rotunda into a hybrid virtual environment.

For the 2024 YCC Party, artist Rachel Rossin will transform the iconic rotunda into a hybrid virtual environment.

Rossin is known for depicting environments that fuse the technological aspects of avatars, computer vision and military imaging with the more visceral traits of lived experience. For example, in some works she adapts conditions of our real world—gravity, heat, space, mapping, the senses—and grafts them into digital environments, while in others she simulates three-dimensionality by marking digital image coordinates and translating the outcome into a painting.

Frieze: Zak Ové, The Mothership Connection, 2021

Frieze: Zak Ové, The Mothership Connection, 2021

Frieze: Zak Ové, The Mothership Connection, 2021

Presented by Gallery 1957

Wendy White: Resistance Training: Arts, Sports, and Civil Rights

Wendy White: Resistance Training: Arts, Sports, and Civil Rights

Resistance Training: Arts, Sports, and Civil Rights

If you were a professional athlete, a world-renowned artist, or a public figure, how would you use your popular status to effect change? In what directions and to what ends?

August 19, 2023–February 18, 2024

W: Sarah Meyohas’s Tech-Art Explores the Mechanics of Perception

W: Sarah Meyohas’s Tech-Art Explores the Mechanics of Perception

Sarah Meyohas’s Tech-Art Explores the Mechanics of Perception

The artist, whose solo show opens at Marianne Boesky gallery on May 16, uses technical wizardry to create art—all informed by her background in business.

by Julia Halperin

Photographs by Meghan Marin

May 15, 2023

The Art Newspaper: Petra Cortright's digital landscapes blossom at Intersect Aspen

The Art Newspaper: Petra Cortright's digital landscapes blossom at Intersect Aspen

Petra Cortright's digital landscapes blossom at Intersect Aspen

One of the fair's only solo stands, from Florida-based gallery County, features recent compositions by the Net art pioneer

Benjamin Sutton

1 August 2023

“We chose to exhibit a solo presentation because we felt the strength of Petra’s landscape works garnered a more in-depth viewing,” says Dalton Freed, the director of County.

HYPERALLERGIC: Rachel Rossin SCRY (2023) at Magenta Plains

HYPERALLERGIC: Rachel Rossin SCRY (2023) at Magenta Plains

Installed centrally on the ceiling, Rossin’s lenticular LED screen work “The Maw Of” (2022) steeps the quasi-abstract paintings on view in an eerie warm light; the show is a haunting meditation on the future of technology

THE WHITNEY: Rachel Rossin: The Maw Of 2022

THE WHITNEY: Rachel Rossin: The Maw Of 2022

Rachel Rossin’s The Maw Of is a transmedia story — a narrative unfolding across multiple platforms and formats — that reflects on the ways in which our bodies and minds are increasingly merging with and altered by technology.

Meyohas: The Art Newspaper: Paris's Centre Pompidou breaks new ground by acquiring 18 NFTs

Meyohas: The Art Newspaper: Paris's Centre Pompidou breaks new ground by acquiring 18 NFTs

The Centre Pompidou has announced the acquisition of a series of 18 NFTs from 13 prominent French and international artists. The works are set to join France's national collection of modern and contemporary art, one that has been acquiring pioneering "new media" art since the late 1970s, including work by Nam June Paik, Valie Export, Bruce Nauman, Bill Viola and Vito Acconci.

Dorian Batycka

14 February 2023

Robb Report: An Artist and Sailor Teamed Up to Transform a Raceboat Into a Floating Work of Art: James Perkins' beautiful silk panels were in tatters by the time Conrad Colman's "Imagine" sailed into Guadeloupe from France. But that was the point.

Robb Report: An Artist and Sailor Teamed Up to Transform a Raceboat Into a Floating Work of Art: James Perkins' beautiful silk panels were in tatters by the time Conrad Colman's "Imagine" sailed into Guadeloupe from France. But that was the point.

An Artist and Sailor Teamed Up to Transform a Raceboat Into a Floating Work of Art

James Perkins' beautiful silk panels were in tatters by the time Conrad Colman's "Imagine" sailed into Guadeloupe from France. But that was the point.

By MICHAEL VERDON 

Perkins says that was part of the process, since he expected the forces of nature—wind, sun, salt and rain—to weather each piece differently.

For his part, Colman enjoyed having the artwork on his boat. “To be the custodian and choreographer of James’ art while watching the minute-by-minute transformation of the silk—both in color and texture was amazing,” he says. The two plan to collaborate on future ocean projects.

The post-ocean artwork will be exhibited at the James Perkins Studio in January 2023.

The Trops: Nature’s Course: An Interview with John Newsom

The Trops: Nature’s Course: An Interview with John Newsom

Nature’s Course: An Interview with John Newsom (Part 1)

March 12, 2022

Posted by  Nathalie Martin

Combining realistic representations of animals and vegetation, Abstract Expressionism, and hard-edge geometry, John Newsom’s paintings explore our intricate and complicated relationship with nature. I spoke with John about his origins, his practice, and his upcoming exhibitions – a mid-career retrospective at the Oklahoma Contemporary Museum and a two-person show with Raymond Pettibon in Palm Beach.

MAAKE: Spotlight Artist: Danielle Mysliwiec

MAAKE: Spotlight Artist: Danielle Mysliwiec

Danielle Mysliwiec holds a BA from Wesleyan University and an MFA from Hunter College. Her work will be featured in an upcoming solo exhibition at C O U N T Y, (Palm Beach) in 2023.

ART and Object: Wendy White

ART and Object: Wendy White

SCAD Unveils Promenade de Sculptures in Provence

OCTOBER 24, 2022  WEBB HOWELL

Wendy White’s fabulously titled Raincloud (Neon Signs on Overcast Days) seems to achieve the impossible in aluminum and steel. The rain cloud has been a recurring symbol in White’s work since 2016. 

WallPaper* Serge Attukwei Clottey on fashion, gender, and unexpected art

WallPaper* Serge Attukwei Clottey on fashion, gender, and unexpected art

Serge Attukwei Clottey on fashion, gender, and unexpected art

In captivating new portraits for ‘Beyond Skin’, Ghanaian artist Serge Attukwei Clottey explores fashion as identity and subverts antiquated ideas of gender and sexuality 

 

BY PEI-RU KEH

LAST UPDATED OCTOBER 12, 2022

Inspired by mid-century black and white photography originating from the coast of West Africa, Clottey’s works update the visual language of historical images and transports them into the present day.

ARTNET: ‘It Always Comes Back to My Own Embodiment’: Watch Artist Rachel Rossin Merge Plexiglas Molds of Her Body With Digital Painting

ARTNET: ‘It Always Comes Back to My Own Embodiment’: Watch Artist Rachel Rossin Merge Plexiglas Molds of Her Body With Digital Painting

‘It Always Comes Back to My Own Embodiment’: Watch Artist Rachel Rossin Merge Plexiglas Molds of Her Body With Digital Painting

As part of a collaboration with Art21, hear news-making artists describe their inspirations in their own words.

Artnet News, October 7, 2022

Rachel Rossin has made art her entire life, even if she didn’t always realize it.

WallPaper* Artist James Perkins: ‘land art was ripe for me to make a contribution’

WallPaper* Artist James Perkins: ‘land art was ripe for me to make a contribution’

Artist James Perkins: ‘land art was ripe for me to make a contribution’

Fire Island-based artist James Perkins transforms silk sculptures into forces of nature. Here, he discusses the future of land art, belonging, and living in a Horace Gifford-designed modern masterwork

BY MICHELLE SINCLAIR COLMAN

LAST UPDATED OCTOBER 06, 2022

Palm Springs Art Museum: Petra Cortright: sapphire cinnamon viper fairy

Palm Springs Art Museum: Petra Cortright: sapphire cinnamon viper fairy

Petra Cortright: sapphire cinnamon viper fairy

September 29, 2022 – March 26, 2023

Petra Cortright makes art in traditional genres, such as landscape and portraiture, using tools, sources, formats, and platforms native to the age of the internet and digital technology.

THE CITY OF LIFE ORG: A NEW COMMISSION BY RACHEL ROSSIN, THE MAW OF, LAUNCHES ON THE WHITNEY MUSEUM’S ARTPORT

THE CITY OF LIFE ORG: A NEW COMMISSION BY RACHEL ROSSIN, THE MAW OF, LAUNCHES ON THE WHITNEY MUSEUM’S ARTPORT

A NEW COMMISSION BY RACHEL ROSSIN, THE MAW OF, LAUNCHES ON THE WHITNEY MUSEUM’S ARTPORT

Sept 15 - 18, 2022

Through her work, Rachel Rossin investigates the relationship between bodies and machines, highlighting technology’s evolution from a tool to an extension of the mind and body that affects our existence at profound levels. Rossin highlights that technology, ranging from smartphones to virtual reality headsets, has already permeated our lives and increasingly obscures the divide between humans and machines.

Sarah Meyohas: With Bitchcoin, Sarah Meyohas Started the Cryptoart Craze. She’s Still Innovating.

Sarah Meyohas: With Bitchcoin, Sarah Meyohas Started the Cryptoart Craze. She’s Still Innovating.

The conceptual artist, venture capitalist and 1stDibs NFT guest curator merges art and commerce in ways that Warhol never dreamed of.

BY WILLIAM FOWLER

LUXE SOURCE: James Perkins: Behind This Artist’s Totemic Works Formed By The Elements

LUXE SOURCE: James Perkins: Behind This Artist’s Totemic Works Formed By The Elements

Behind This Artist’s Totemic Works Formed By The Elements

BY MONIQUE MCINTOSH

SEPTEMBER 6, 2022

“My goal is to infuse the material with this sensation of standing at the shoreline’s edge and feeling like the smallest thing on the planet,” he explains.

The New York Times: Caroyln Salas: At the U.S. Open, 5 Artists Get a Place in the Sun

The New York Times: Caroyln Salas: At the U.S. Open, 5 Artists Get a Place in the Sun

At the U.S. Open, 5 Artists Get a Place in the Sun

Five sculptures, created by artists from underrepresented communities, will find a place in the sun at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Queens until Sept. 11.

By Kalia Richardson

Updated Aug. 29, 2022

ARTNEWS: Carolyn Salas: In Pictures: See the Grand-Slamming Sculptures in the Armory Show’s First-Ever Exhibition at the U.S. Open

ARTNEWS: Carolyn Salas: In Pictures: See the Grand-Slamming Sculptures in the Armory Show’s First-Ever Exhibition at the U.S. Open

In Pictures: See the Grand-Slamming Sculptures in the Armory Show’s First-Ever Exhibition at the U.S. Open

Five artists are presenting works on the grounds of the tennis championship.

Vittoria Benzine, August 25, 2022

In June, the Armory and the United States Tennis Association (USTA) announced their first-ever partnership, presenting the Armory Off-Site at the U.S. Open. Now, images of the works installed on the grounds of the tennis championship have gone live. The Armory Off-Site program launched last year, with public sculptures installed around New York City during the fair’s run in September.

Rachel Rossin: The Guardian: Four creators share their Dall-E-generated images – and their hopes and fears about AI in art

Rachel Rossin: The Guardian: Four creators share their Dall-E-generated images – and their hopes and fears about AI in art

Four creators share their Dall-E-generated images – and their hopes and fears about AI in art

By Anna Furman

 

‘We are seeing a reflection of ourselves’ – Rachel Rossin

The New York Times: U.S.T.A. and the Armory Show to Bring 5 Artists to the U.S. Open

The New York Times: U.S.T.A. and the Armory Show to Bring 5 Artists to the U.S. Open

U.S.T.A. and the Armory Show to Bring 5 Artists to the U.S. Open

Sculptures by the artists, from underrepresented communities, will be on display as part of the U.S. Tennis Association’s Be Open social justice campaign.

By Kalia Richardson June 29, 2022

The Art Newspaper: 'It shouldn’t be a surprise that easily traded JPEGs are not "safe" assets': artist Sarah Meyohas on the NFT market

The Art Newspaper: 'It shouldn’t be a surprise that easily traded JPEGs are not "safe" assets': artist Sarah Meyohas on the NFT market

'It shouldn’t be a surprise that easily traded JPEGs are not "safe" assets': artist Sarah Meyohas on the NFT market

The French-US artist is showing a hologram sculpture with Marianne Boesky at Art Basel

 

Anny Shaw

17 June 2022

Only a year after the Bitcoin network first came to life in 2015, the French-US artist Sarah Meyohas created her BitchCoin project, for which she developed her own cryptocurrency with the idea that collectors should invest directly in artists instead of works of art. The inspiration came, Meyohas says, from the invention of Bitcoin, which she describes as a “creative act”.

ARTnews: Pioneering Digital Artist Sarah Meyohas Is Now Represented By Marianne Boesky

ARTnews: Pioneering Digital Artist Sarah Meyohas Is Now Represented By Marianne Boesky

Pioneering Digital Artist Sarah Meyohas Gets Gallery Representation

BY SHANTI ESCALANTE-DE MATTEI

 

Meyohas first began incorporating blockchain technology into her artistic practice in 2015, when she debuted a project called BitchCoin. The cryptocurrency was a conceptual project that played on the idea of investing directly in artists instead of in particular works of art. The token is now considered a proto-NFT, and it took on new relevance in 2021 with the start of the NFT boom.

Meyohas will also be a speaker at Art Basel for the “The New Patrons: NFT Collectors and Supporters” conversation on June 16.

Petra Cortright: FRIEZE: June Exhibitions at No.9 Cork Street: Hymodernity (Digital Platform)

Petra Cortright: FRIEZE: June Exhibitions at No.9 Cork Street: Hymodernity (Digital Platform)

June Exhibitions at No.9 Cork Street

Opening on 2 June until 18 June 2022, Frieze's Mayfair gallery presents exhibitions by Vadehra Art Gallery (New Delhi), Hymodernity (Digital Platform) and Athr Gallery (Jeddah)

IN FRIEZE | 23 MAY 22

 

Canon! looks to disrupt the established biases of art, redefining our conceptions of what art might be in the burgeoning age of digital art and accelerated technological development. The group exhibition presents works which explore the possibilities of an ‘evolutionary now’. The artists selected for Canon! were chosen by Hymodernity to reflect the digital art platform’s diverse community, as a celebration of the breadth of artistic creativity and identities. Artists include Petra Cortright, 4FSB, Masha Batsii, Samuel Lubicz and WRLD.SPACE, amongst others. 

CNN: Serge Attukwei Clottey: He's building a real-life yellow brick road without any bricks

CNN: Serge Attukwei Clottey: He's building a real-life yellow brick road without any bricks

He's building a real-life yellow brick road without any bricks

Updated 22nd May 2022

Written by Jacopo Prisco

"Yellow Brick Road" is meant to symbolize the resilience of the community and also the issue of property rights. Credit: Nii Odzenma/Courtesy the artist and Gallery 1957

"My family migrated from Jamestown to Labadi and they were traveling on the coast. They were trading alcohol and beef, and based on the trade relationship my family had with the people of labor, they got a place to settle, and it was a verbal agreement. There was no documentation," he said on African Voices.

You’re Invited: Rhizome’s 2022 Benefit Honoring Rachel Rossin & Julie Martin

You’re Invited: Rhizome’s 2022 Benefit Honoring Rachel Rossin & Julie Martin

You’re Invited: Rhizome’s 2022 Benefit Honoring Rachel Rossin & Julie Martin

Tuesday, May 31 at Bowery Terrace, in partnership with Zora

By Rhizome

May 05, 2022

Purgatory | Hammer Museum | Los Angeles, CA | Petra Cortright

Purgatory | Hammer Museum | Los Angeles, CA | Petra Cortright

For #EarthDay, “Hellscape No 17” by artist @petra_cortright has been installed at the Cantor Arts Center (@cantorarts) and the @hammer_museum as part of #ACoolMillionCampaign, a public arts initiative for climate awareness led by artists and institutions to expand environmental justice programming and support the conservation of one million acres of land.

ARTFORUM: Petra Cortright on self-isolation, Zoom mania, and her early webcam works

ARTFORUM: Petra Cortright on self-isolation, Zoom mania, and her early webcam works

PETRA CORTRIGHT

Petra Cortright on self-isolation, Zoom mania, and her early webcam works

April 20, 2020

Giampaolo Bianconi

I FEEL LIKE I’VE STEPPED INTO A TIME MACHINE and been transported back to ten or twelve years ago. Being at the computer and online was a big part of my life and work back then. There was this certain consciousness that I wanted to record—the spirit of AOL Instant Messenger chatrooms.

ARTFORUM: John Newsom Nature’s Course Oklahoma Contemporary

ARTFORUM: John Newsom Nature’s Course Oklahoma Contemporary

John Newsom

Nature’s Course

Oklahoma Contemporary

“With each painting, John Newsom creates a universe of extended metaphors and multivalent narratives,” said Jeremiah Matthew Davis, Oklahoma Contemporary’s director. “With a unique combination of exquisite painterly technique, art historical allusions and rich storytelling, Newsom invites us not just to view his works, but to inhabit them.”

OKLAHOMA CONTEMPORARY: John Newsom: Nature's Course

OKLAHOMA CONTEMPORARY: John Newsom: Nature's Course

John Newsom: Nature's Course

March 24 - Aug. 15, 2022
Eleanor Kirkpatrick Main Gallery

“With each painting, John Newsom creates a universe of extended metaphors and multivalent narratives,” said Jeremiah Matthew Davis, Oklahoma Contemporary’s artistic director. “With a unique combination of exquisite painterly technique, art historical allusions and rich storytelling, Newsom invites us not just to view his works, but to inhabit them. We’re thrilled to welcome the artist back to Oklahoma for his first mid-career retrospective.”

ARTNET News: ‘I’m a Defender of Beauty and Simplicity’: Petra Cortright on Why She Has No Interest in Jumping on the Political Art Bandwagon The celebrated net artist talks about the changing internet landscape, and why she doesn't mix painting and politics.

ARTNET News: ‘I’m a Defender of Beauty and Simplicity’: Petra Cortright on Why She Has No Interest in Jumping on the Political Art Bandwagon The celebrated net artist talks about the changing internet landscape, and why she doesn't mix painting and politics.

‘I’m a Defender of Beauty and Simplicity’: Petra Cortright on Why She Has No Interest in Jumping on the Political Art Bandwagon

The celebrated net artist talks about the changing internet landscape, and why she doesn't mix painting and politics.

Kate Brown, February 2, 2022

In the early 2010s, Cortright became known among a cohort of millennial digital post-internet artists for her short statement video works that innovated and confounded the notion of selfies and other forms of self-presentation online. And her work continues to find relevance today

Rachel Rossin: Palm Beach Daily News: Artist sounds the alarm with hologram-embedded art at C O U N T Y Gallery

Rachel Rossin: Palm Beach Daily News: Artist sounds the alarm with hologram-embedded art at C O U N T Y Gallery

Artist sounds the alarm with hologram-embedded art at County Gallery

Jane Moore 

Dec. 20, 2021

“Given the year everyone has had,” Freed said, “Rachel wanted to create an environment where you could get away from everything and experience this wonderful, peaceful, soothing universe, so I thought that was perfect. Everyone needs that right now. The show just made a lot of sense to me for this time we are in.”

ARTSY: The 10 Best Booths at Untitled Art Miami Beach 2021

ARTSY: The 10 Best Booths at Untitled Art Miami Beach 2021

COUNTY

Booth B43

With works by Sarah Meyohas

While most booths at this year’s Untitled Art Miami Beach feature a selection of works by multiple artists, COUNTY has opted for a solo presentation of renowned conceptual artist Sarah Meyohas. Back in 2015, the French American artist made headlines with her cryptocurrency performance “Bitchcoin,” which was minted months before Etherium came into existence. In 2017, she was included in Forbes magazine’s “30 Under 30” list. At COUNTY’s booth, Meyohas’s works continue the artist’s reflections on the nature and the possibilities of emerging technologies in contemporary society.

In addition to mesmerizing new hologram pieces by the artist, most of the works featured in the presentation are part of Mehoya’s enthralling “Speculation” series, including Liquid Speculation 5 and Blue and White Speculation (both 2021). “Even though she’s at the forefront in new mediums, her ‘Speculation’ works are created using a very traditional method: a hidden camera and two-way mirrors,” explained gallerist Dalton Freed. Close to half of the available works, priced between $20,000 and $30,000, had sold by the end of the day.

DNA as NFT: Artist Rachel Rossin Logs Her Genome on the Blockchain

DNA as NFT: Artist Rachel Rossin Logs Her Genome on the Blockchain

ArtNews: An artist who has consistently mulled the line between the virtual and the real, Rossin just debuted a new work that involves logging her DNA on the blockchain. Minted on the NFT platform OpenSea, the smart contract contains a precious string of code: Rossin’s sequenced genome.

Martine Poppe’s Pixelated Skyscapes Are Reminders of Our World’s Fragile Climate

Martine Poppe’s Pixelated Skyscapes Are Reminders of Our World’s Fragile Climate

Poppe’s delicate, pixelated clouds contemplate our embeddedness within interconnected systems—the climate and the internet.

Now, at a time of ecological crisis and hyperconnectivity, these skyscapes also become markers of environmental anxiety.

Art to Augment 12 Botanical Gardens Around the World (Sarah Meyohas)

Art to Augment 12 Botanical Gardens Around the World (Sarah Meyohas)

“Coming out of the pandemic when outdoor experiences and nature have taken on a new meaning and gravity in our lives, this exhibition represents a fresh way for people to engage with art and nature simultaneously,” the curator Tal Michael Haring, who worked on the show with Hadas Maor, said in a statement.

El Anatsui, Pamela Rosenkranz, Timur Si-Qin, Sigalit Landau and Sarah Meyohas are among the other artists who will contribute to the coming show at locations in the United States, Britain, South Africa, Australia, Israel and Canada.

Sarah Meyohas: Phillips: Bitchcoin

Sarah Meyohas: Phillips: Bitchcoin

When she originally released Bitchcoin, Meyohas was a recent graduate of the prestigious Wharton School completing her MFA at Yale University. Thinking deeply about art, markets, and her own agency in the art world, Meyohas considered the speculative value of cryptocurrency in relation to the subjective value of art; by minting artworks as cryptocurrency to create cryptocurrency as art, Meyohas reclaimed agency over her own market, a feminist appropriation of a male-dominated technology.

Sarah Meyohas: THE TOKENIZER: Phillips to Offer “Bitchcoin” by Groundbreaking Artist Sarah Meyohas

Sarah Meyohas: THE TOKENIZER: Phillips to Offer “Bitchcoin” by Groundbreaking Artist Sarah Meyohas

‘Bitchcoin’ is backed, much like the gold standard, by physical proof-of-work; each token from this release is tied to a rose petal relic from my Cloud of Petals exhibition in 2017. Each chosen for its intimate beauty, the petals commit to the physical world and the beauty of human subjectivity, and as tied to ‘Bitchcoin’, they unlock the potential of decentralized exchange. - Sarah Meyohas

Sarah Meyohas: Phillips: Bitchcoin by Sarah Meyohas: One of the first tokenizations of art on the blockchain

Sarah Meyohas: Phillips: Bitchcoin by Sarah Meyohas: One of the first tokenizations of art on the blockchain

In February 2015 conceptual artist Sarah Meyohas released Bitchcoin, one of the first ever tokenizations of art. Now, six years later, the artist is migrating Bitchcoin from its native chain to Ethereum, releasing 480 reserved Bitchcoins backed by art from her seminal Cloud of Petals exhibition. As part of our newest online auction, we will be selling five bundles of Bitchcoins, the first comprising 160 tokens and four subsequent bundles each containing 80 tokens. Bidding will be open for Meyohas' Bitchcoin 25-28 May exclusively on phillips.com.

Sarah Meyohas: The Wall Street Journal: Meet Wall Street’s Crypto Artist

Sarah Meyohas: The Wall Street Journal: Meet Wall Street’s Crypto Artist

Sarah Meyohas says she doesn’t view buying a nonfungible token as purchasing art in the traditional sense. The transparency of pricing makes her queasy. PHOTO: GABBY JONES FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

By Bourree Lam

May 22, 2021 5:30 am ET

 

Sarah Meyohas’s work at the intersection of art, technology and finance earned the contemporary artist fame with financiers and tech geeks. Her latest piece aims squarely at the crypto crowd.

Long before Beeple’s digital collage fetched tens of millions of dollars at auction, Ms. Meyohas was experimenting with using the blockchain technology behind bitcoin to make art. The result looked a lot like the so-called nonfungible tokens that have powered millions in art sales in recent months, along with NBA Top Shot and other digital collectibles. NFTs are similar to bitcoin: Each one is unique, allowing them to act like deeds proving ownership of digital assets.

Enoc Perez: Paradise: Guild Hall

Enoc Perez: Paradise: Guild Hall

Gallery Talk with Enoc Perez and Christina Mossaides Strassfield: Saturday, May 22 at 3pm

May 22, 2021

Gallery Talk with Enoc Perez and Christina Mossaides Strassfield: Saturday, May 22 at 3pm

Moran & Spiga Gallery 
Curator: Christina Strassfield 

Enoc Perez is a  contemporary  Puerto Rican born multimedia  artist best known for his paintings and oil stick drawings. Perez’s Guild Hall exhibition, Paradise, will explore the theme of natural disasters. 

Serge Attukwei Clottey: The New York Times: Desert X Artists Dig Beneath the Sandy Surface

Serge Attukwei Clottey: The New York Times: Desert X Artists Dig Beneath the Sandy Surface

Artworks in this year’s biennial, scattered around the Palm Springs area, explore issues of land rights, water supply and more.

By Jori Finkel

Published March 12, 2021

 

Clottey’s humble choice of material speaks to the droughts and water supply issues that threaten Southern California as well as his native Ghana. He cuts plastic pieces from so-called Kufuor gallons, colorful containers used in Ghana for storing water, and stitches them together with wire.

Petra Cortright: Art In America: Immersive Art: New Realities and Virtual Worlds

Petra Cortright: Art In America: Immersive Art: New Realities and Virtual Worlds

Working with the VR developer Float Land, she created a fully immersive environment that explodes one of her Photoshop files, with each digital layer becoming a discrete are to explore.

By William S. Smith

Published in issue: Jan/Feb 2021

The concept of layers is essential to understanding Petra Cortright's work. The intricate digital paintings she has created over the past decade take advantage of the powerful "layer" function at the heart of Photoshop. Every digital mark and brushstroke she makes using the image-editing software can be isolated and manipulated in its own slice of virtual space before being flattened and printed on canvas. But what if, instead of flattening these layers, they could be expanded in three dimensions? 

ARTNET: SERGE ATTUKWEI CLOTTEY: Coachella Officials Have Rejected a Proposal for an Ambitious Desert X Artwork, Claiming It Would ‘Exploit’ Local Plight for Tourism

ARTNET: SERGE ATTUKWEI CLOTTEY: Coachella Officials Have Rejected a Proposal for an Ambitious Desert X Artwork, Claiming It Would ‘Exploit’ Local Plight for Tourism

Coachella Officials Have Rejected a Proposal for an Ambitious Desert X Artwork, Claiming It Would ‘Exploit’ Local Plight for Tourism

This isn't the first time locals have voiced objections to a Desert X proposal.

Sarah Cascone, January 6, 2021

Desert X, Southern California’s Coachella Valley art biennial, has always confronted environmental themes head on, using the harsh desert landscape to speak to global concerns about climate change.

But during preparations for the event’s third edition, Coachella natives took umbrage with a planned installation about water insecurity by Ghanaian artist Serge Attukwei Clottey.

The Guardian: 'Water is sacred': 10 visual artists reflect on the human right to water

The Guardian: 'Water is sacred': 10 visual artists reflect on the human right to water

The UN declared access to water and sanitation a human right a decade ago, but 785 million people worldwide still have no water close to home

Ten photographs marking the 10th anniversary of access to water and sanitation being declared a human right by the UN have been commissioned from 10 visual artists by the charity WaterAid to show the impact of clean water on people’s lives.

Globally, 785 million people – one in 10 – still lack access to water close to home and 2 billion people – one in four – don’t have a toilet of their own.

 

Tomorrow’s World by Serge Attukwei Clottey (Ghana)

“I wanted to create art that would represent the anguish and violence that go along with our planet’s problems. People do not realise how their own suffering is tied to the environment: to their long trip to fetch water, or their discomfort under the heat when the streets have no trees. Ghana is facing some of the most detrimental consequences from climate change and water shortages. Yet the government does nothing, so I have taken it upon myself to educate through art.”

Petra Cortright in The Museum of Modern Art Collection

Petra Cortright in The Museum of Modern Art Collection

Petra Cortright’s critically renowned work VVEBCAM, 2007, has been acquired by The MoMA’s Department of Media and Performance.

VVEBCAM received lots of search hits, and some people expressed their anger at its misleading descriptors in the comments section below it. Cortright, in turn, robustly answered her critics in the spirit of the Internet burn. Her spammy keywords led to the video’s eventual pulling from YouTube in 2010.

Cortright’s video and the swirling interactivity around it made VVEBCAM one of the first social media artworks, and it remains one of the most influential. It engaged with a highly volatile, anonymous digital populace, one that has become a dominant force in today’s socio-political landscape.

REFLECTIONS: Matt Black  X  Gana Art

REFLECTIONS: Matt Black X Gana Art

Ry David Bradley

November 1, 2019 - January 5, 2020

Opening Reception at GANA ART CENTER Friday November 1st at 5PM

Gana Art is pleased to present ≪Reflections≫, representing the contemporary art scene with 34 artists, in collaboration with filmmaker and curator, Matt Black, this exhibition is centered around his film titled “Reflections.” Following the film’s theme, Gana Art has curated this exhibition to feature works by worldly renowned artists not only from the international realm, but also from Korea, highlighting the whole art scene.

threeASFOUR LIGHTBEINGS

threeASFOUR LIGHTBEINGS

threeASFOUR LIGHTBEINGS by JENNIFER SODINI on FEBRUARY 12, 2019 in ART, CULTURE, FASHION, STYLE

After a three-year hiatus from the runway, threeASFOUR, recently made a triumphant return during New York Fashion Week with a show at The Guggenheim Museum. Debuting their collaborative collection with artist, Stanley Casselman, LIGHTBEINGS, is an exploration of the fusion of art and fashion.

The Glass House: ENOC PEREZ: LIPSTICK

The Glass House: ENOC PEREZ: LIPSTICK

2019

 This exhibition will present a new body of work comprising six paintings that refer to the Lipstick Building (1986), an elliptical office tower in Manhattan designed by architects Philip Johnson and John Burgee. In each work, Perez uses his characteristic style to explore the formal qualities of the Lipstick Building in a variety of palettes.

Mousse Magazine: Ry David Bradley “Overworld” at COMA Gallery, Rushcutters Bay

Mousse Magazine: Ry David Bradley “Overworld” at COMA Gallery, Rushcutters Bay

2019

Ry David Bradley “Overworld” at COMA Gallery, Rushcutters Bay

An Overworld is an area within a video game that interconnects all its levels or locations. Typically it presents an aerial perspective, a global map of the stages that have been completed or are yet to be, allowing one to see what may lay ahead without revealing what that is. Access is granted by completing tasks, or entering secret passwords. In presenting an exhibition installation that mirrors the aerial stage, where some positions have been unlocked, and others are yet to be known—Ry David Bradley continues an exploration of access and restriction within specific worlds, each an enquiry for where painting was, may now be and is yet to be.

Interview Magazine: ARTIST ENOC PEREZ WALKS US THROUGH THE HOTEL ROOMS OF ROCKSTARS

Interview Magazine: ARTIST ENOC PEREZ WALKS US THROUGH THE HOTEL ROOMS OF ROCKSTARS

2019

Where his previous works focused on exteriors, The Cinematic Self furthers his tradition of imagining beautiful spaces usually filled with people rendered completely empty. “I made these beautiful paintings of these modernist buildings,” Perez told Interview. “A lot of those buildings today are in ruins. They’re abandoned. That was the utopia I was painting 25 years ago.”

Christie's Curate LA - Kour Pour: Cut & Paste

Christie's Curate LA - Kour Pour: Cut & Paste

2019

Christies - Los Angeles

An exhibition of works by Kour Pour in dialogue with 19th century Japanese woodblock prints, curated by Shiva Balaghi, and presented by Stefan Simchowitz

 

Times Square Arts: Petra Cortright

Times Square Arts: Petra Cortright

2019

Petra Cortright (Born 1986, Santa Barbara, CA) lives and works in Los Angeles, CA. She studied Fine Arts at Parsons School of Design, The New School, New York, NY (2008) and the California College of the Arts, San Francisco, CA (2004). 

Financial Times: Jewels from the Windrush: Get Up, Stand Up Now at Somerset House

Financial Times: Jewels from the Windrush: Get Up, Stand Up Now at Somerset House

In a 1968 photograph of Michael X, the self-styled British Black Power leader, being interviewed by the press in his London garden, a baby crawls in the right-hand corner, peeking through the journalists’ legs. The shot was taken by the child’s father, photographer and film-maker Horace Ové, who lived in the flat below Michael X. His son Zak Ové, now an artist aged 52, is the curator of a momentous show on black artistic achievement from the 1940s to the present. As the archive photograph intimates, his angle on history is a privileged, if unusual, one.

Matt Dillon Teamed Up With Private Dealer Tara Amelchenko to Launch a Pop-Up Group Show Devoted to Collage In The Lower East Side

Matt Dillon Teamed Up With Private Dealer Tara Amelchenko to Launch a Pop-Up Group Show Devoted to Collage In The Lower East Side

2019

The late Hamburg-based painter Norbert Fleischer’s Think in Pictures—a moody image of a man’s face overlaid with swirling text—is the curatorial inspiration behind a new exhibition in New York’s Lower East Side of the same name organized by dealer Tara Amelchenko, painter John Newsom, artist André Butzer, and Matt Dillon, best-known as as actor, but who is also a practicing artist.

The New York Times: Ross Bleckner on His Comeback and Mary Boone

The New York Times: Ross Bleckner on His Comeback and Mary Boone

2019

Putting personal dramas behind him, the artist opens his first New York show in five years (at a new gallery).

By Ted Loos

April 25, 2019

 

Mr. Bleckner, 69, made his name in the 80s and 90s by channeling the anger and sorrow of the AIDS crisis into somber, abstract paintings. Since then, he has been painting steadily, lately from his base in the Hamptons.

He hasn’t had a show in New York in five years, but on April 24 he debuts a suite of more than a dozen canvases at Petzel Gallery in the show “Pharmaceutria” (“sorceress” in Latin). It furthers Mr. Bleckner’s exploration of modes of perception.

MODERN MAGAZINE: Enoc Perez takes Philip Johnson to the canvas in Dallas

MODERN MAGAZINE: Enoc Perez takes Philip Johnson to the canvas in Dallas

FEBRUARY 27, 2019

Some artists paint portraits. New York–based artist Enoc Perez has made modernist architecture his subject. Painting in a slashing overlay style that seems to channel both Andy Warhol and Franz Kline, in Liberty & Restraint, an exhibition that opened last month at the Dallas Contemporary and eight locations throughout the city, he investigates the gallery of local buildings designed by architect Philip Johnson. MODERN’s associate editor Sammy Dalati caught up with Perez at his cavernous studio in Astoria Queens, and asked him about his process and his inspiration for the show.

Liz Markus - For Naomi Watts, Art Is Like a Tattoo. She Explains How.

Liz Markus - For Naomi Watts, Art Is Like a Tattoo. She Explains How.

OCTOBER 5, 2018

By Robin Pogrebin for The New York Times

 

Ms. Watts has covered the wall space of the TriBeCa home — much of it with work from fund-raising auctions for the New York Academy of Art, where she is a board member. Ms. Watts said she looks forward to those galas as opportunities to discover new artists and raise money for scholarships.

At those auctions — where she has been known to get into bidding wars — Ms. Watts has acquired work by Will Cotton, Donald Sultan, Hugo Guinness and Liz Markus, among others.

LETMEIN: Ry David Bradley

LETMEIN: Ry David Bradley

SEPTEMBER 29, 2018

HERNING MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART
SEP 29 2018 - MAR 3 2019
CHIEF CURATOR MICHAEL BANK-CHRISTOFFERSEN

PAPER: Meet the Young British Artist Harry Styles Collects: Tomo Campbell

PAPER: Meet the Young British Artist Harry Styles Collects: Tomo Campbell

Meet the Young British Artist Harry Styles Collects

Story by Mhairi Graham / Photography by Britt Lloyd

14 September 2018

 

"The thing with painting is that it's really slow. The more you look, the more you get, and I like making people really have to look."

PLAIN: IN SPECULATIONS, SARAH MEYOHAS EXPLORES THE THRILL OF STARING INTO THE VOID

PLAIN: IN SPECULATIONS, SARAH MEYOHAS EXPLORES THE THRILL OF STARING INTO THE VOID

SEPTEMBER 10, 2018

New York-based artist Sarah Meyohas invites us into an intriguing world of infinite tunnels in her installation series titled Speculations. Her thrilling body of work involves two mirrors facing each other, the empty space between them filled with a smattering of objects — rose petals, tree branches, a row of daisies, and even something as ephemeral as smoke — which produces intricate visuals that seemingly duplicate, recede and disappear into a void.

Why Should a Webcam Plus a Woman Equal Sex? For Petra Cortright, It's Art

Why Should a Webcam Plus a Woman Equal Sex? For Petra Cortright, It's Art

The artist uses the web to create striking, ethereal art that sometimes seems too simple to be true.

JULY 10, 2018

At 31, Cortright is young for a survey (“Too young,” she told Vice in February), but she’s long been recognized as a pioneer in the field of what’s often called post-internet art, meaning work that deals, tangentially or directly, with the web. Her paintings—meticulously layered Photoshop files that incorporate images she finds online (roses, kitchens, beach scenes) with digital drawings (flowers, squiggles) printed on aluminum, silk, or flags—prompted the website Artsy to declare Cortright “the Monet of the 21st Century.” 

POINTS OF LIGHT IN A NOCTURNAL WORLD

POINTS OF LIGHT IN A NOCTURNAL WORLD

Curated By John Newsom In Cooperation With Metro Pictures

APRIL 29, 2018

Art in the Park XVI featuring Donald Baechler

Art in the Park XVI featuring Donald Baechler

JULY 11, 2018

ART IN THE PARK ZÜRICH | Baur au Lac Park, Talstrasse 1, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland

This year’s Art in the Park artist, Donald Baechler, was born in Hartford, Connecticut in 1956. He attended the Maryland Institute, College of Art, Baltimore (1974-77) and Cooper Union, New York (1977-78).

Petra Cortright - Young Artists 2018

Petra Cortright - Young Artists 2018

30 under 35 2018

2018

A painter reminiscent of Helen Frankenthaler, Cortright dilutes her original digital medium to create images that almost seem to glow, that create a space of their own. Printed on linen, aluminum and paper, the labor of Cortright’s research process is hidden by the lightness and deftness of her mark-making.

Architectural Digest - Enoc Perez Explores Philip Johnson's Architecture—and How it Relates to the Trump Era

Architectural Digest - Enoc Perez Explores Philip Johnson's Architecture—and How it Relates to the Trump Era

JANURAY 22, 2018

In vivid washes of color; in overlaid stencil-like images; and in bronze sculptures of massed, crumpled-up forms, artist Enoc Perez uses a multimedia approach reminiscent of Warhol and Rauschenberg to both celebrate and satirize some of the 20th century’s best-known buildings. In Dallas this month, he’s turned his sights on controversial modern designer Philip Johnson: In a show sponsored by local art museum Dallas Contemporary, Perez has created works featuring Johnson’s buildings, and then installed some of them inside the buildings themselves (of which Dallas has no fewer than six). The artist took a break from the museum opening to talk about the intrigues and the afterlife of America’s most infamous architectural gadfly.

ARTFORUM: RACHEL ROSSIN

ARTFORUM: RACHEL ROSSIN

RACHEL ROSSIN

In Sky Is a Gap, 2017, the scene is a slowly intensifying disaster—a Zabriskie Point–like explosion of a building. Yet the event progresses only in accordance with the viewer’s physical location: Her movements through space, tracked by motion sensors, “scrub” the sequence, causing it to unfold at normal speed, sped up, or in reverse. The viewer drives the disaster with her body. Time, here, happens in 3-D.

Whitehot Magazine - Donald Baechler in Conversation with Noah Becker

Whitehot Magazine - Donald Baechler in Conversation with Noah Becker

OCTOBER 31, 2017

Noah Becker spoke with the great Donald Baechler on the eve of his new solo show opening Thursday November 2, 2018 from 6–8 pm in New York City at Cheim and Read.

VOGUE: This Artist Is Wearing His Mother’s Clothing to Promote Social Change in Ghana: Serge Attukwei Clottey

VOGUE: This Artist Is Wearing His Mother’s Clothing to Promote Social Change in Ghana: Serge Attukwei Clottey

This Artist Is Wearing His Mother’s Clothing to Promote Social Change in Ghana

BY CHIOMA NNADI

 

Ghanaian Independence Day falls on March 6 and last year artist Serge Attukwei Clottey marked the occasion with a boundary-pushing act of self-liberation. He walked through the streets of Accra, the nation’s capital, in his deceased mother’s clothes with members of his art collective—also in their mothers’ clothing—marching by his side in solidarity. Wearing vibrantly printed traditional dress, the mostly male crew drew hundreds of onlookers out of their homes and onto the street, sending shockwaves through Ghanaian society where the conversation around gender fluidity is only just beginning to open up and homosexuality is illegal.

 

AI ARTISTS: Sarah Meyohas is a French-American artist working across disciplines including film, photography, virtual reality, performance art and sculpture.

AI ARTISTS: Sarah Meyohas is a French-American artist working across disciplines including film, photography, virtual reality, performance art and sculpture.

2017

Sarah Meyohas is a visual artist working across media. For her project Cloud of Petals, she staged a performance at the site of the former Bell Labs. Sixteen workers photographed 100,000 individual rose petals, compiling a massive dataset. This information was used to map out an artificial intelligence algorithm that learned to generate new, unique petals forever.

The performance resulted in a film, six gaze-based virtual reality experiences, and a series of sculptures, presented during a large-scale solo exhibition at Red Bull Arts New York. The Cloud of Petals exhibition becomes a site for contemplation about a post-human reality and the future of labor in the face of automation. The film has been screened at various festivals, including the Minneapolis St Paul International Film Festival, Slamdance, NY Times Talks, CogX, and the Locarno Film Festival.

ARTNET: How Artist Sarah Meyohas Transformed 100,000 Rose Petals Into a Steely Critique of Big Data

ARTNET: How Artist Sarah Meyohas Transformed 100,000 Rose Petals Into a Steely Critique of Big Data

OCTOBER 17, 2017

Don’t be fooled by the title of Sarah Meyohas’s current exhibition, “Cloud of Petals,” which seems to suggest a stereotypically girly flower display. On the contrary, the artist approaches roses from a no-nonsense, analytical perspective, informed by her clear-eyed take on the commercial aspect of the floral business—a far cry from the romance and femininity typically associated with such fragrant blooms.

“Yes, roses are a super symbol of love and beauty, but they are also a big business product,” Meyohas told artnet News during a visit to Red Bull Arts New York, where she was hard at work installing the show, which opened to the public October 12.

The exhibition is the outgrowth of a project that began last year at Bell Labs in Holmdel, New Jersey, once a site of major scientific and technological innovation as the headquarters of the telephone and information giant. When Meyohas first set foot inside the historic, Eero Saarinen-designed space—then empty ahead of its conversion into Bell Works, a new multi-purpose development—the 26-year-old artist had no idea what she was getting herself into.

INTERVIEW: THIS DREAMY NEW SHOW EXPLORES NATURE AND TECHNOLOGY THROUGH 10,000 DISASSEMBLED ROSES

INTERVIEW: THIS DREAMY NEW SHOW EXPLORES NATURE AND TECHNOLOGY THROUGH 10,000 DISASSEMBLED ROSES

OCTOBER 12, 2017

Cloud of Petals, the 26-year-old artist’s latest project, is as ethereal and delightfully obscure as it sounds. Meyohas marries nature and technology to discover the meaning in collecting (and collected) data; it’s fitting that the undertaking was conducted at Bell Labs, a now-abandoned research complex that birthed the information theory, which used math to define and represent information, allowing for its transmission, storage—and resulting, eventually, in the creation of the Internet. Opening at Red Bull Arts New York on October 12, Meyohas’s show is fourfold: it features a film, vitrines made by wall panels from Bell Labs fitted with two-way mirrors, six virtual reality simulations depicting digitized and pixelated rose petals, and two wall displays of 3,200 individually pressed and preserved petals.

Ry David Bradley: Meet the artists using tech to preserve our history

Ry David Bradley: Meet the artists using tech to preserve our history

Im/material: Painting in the Digital Age brings together artists who combine the digital with the physical to create truly immersive work

SEPTEMBER 29, 2017

Two of his pieces, which were taken from footage on climate change, will be shown in Im/material: Painting in the Digital Age, an exhibition at the Sophia Contemporary Gallery in London’s Mayfair. Ry Bradley’s work attempts to capture augmented reality in a physical form using a Japanese-made polyester mesh that is so tightly woven it’s almost invisible. “This is the closest I’ve got to finding a true analogue for augmented reality,” he says. “I wanted it to feel ethereal, super lightweight – like it’s there but not truly. I’m trying to pre-empt this AR layer that I know is coming."

Ross Bleckner at The Pulitzer Arts Foundation

Ross Bleckner at The Pulitzer Arts Foundation

JUNE 9, 2017

Renowned artist Glenn Ligon (b. 1960) guest-curates a lyrical meditation on blue and black. Inspired by the Pulitzer’s monumental Ellsworth Kelly wall sculpture, Blue Black, Ligon will expand Kelly’s exploration of the two colors with a diverse selection of more than forty works spanning almost a century and touching upon notions of language, identity, and memory. 

Ross Bleckner at The Whitney Museum

Ross Bleckner at The Whitney Museum

JANUARY 27, 2017

Fast Forward: Painting from the 1980s presents a focused look at painting from this decade with works drawn entirely from the Museum’s collection. The exhibition includes work by artists often identified with this explosive period—Jean-Michel Basquiat, Sherrie Levine, David Salle, and Julian Schnabel—as well as by several lesser-known painters. 

The Guardian: Serge Attukwei Clottey: the artist urging African men to dress as women

The Guardian: Serge Attukwei Clottey: the artist urging African men to dress as women

Serge Attukwei Clottey walked through Ghana’s capital city in his dead mother’s clothes to honour her memory – and to highlight injustice against women. It is the latest step in his art collective’s mission to create social change

ARTCENTRON: Wendy White: Major artworks selected for Chicago Billboard Art Project will give Chicagoans a new way of appreciating art.

ARTCENTRON: Wendy White: Major artworks selected for Chicago Billboard Art Project will give Chicagoans a new way of appreciating art.

ARTCENTRON: Major artworks selected for Chicago Billboard Art Project will give Chicagoans a new way of appreciating art.

BY KAZAD

The Chicago billboard art project actualizes one of the main objectives of Expo Chicago, which is to expand the appreciation of art beyond the exposition floor at Navy Pier. Consequently, works by 15 artists drawn from major local, national, and international galleries will be displayed on Chicago's City Digital Network consisting of 28 digital billboards.

HUFF POST: Charles Schwab Closes Sarah Meyohas’ NYSE Account

HUFF POST: Charles Schwab Closes Sarah Meyohas’ NYSE Account

APRIL 4, 2016

Sarah Meyohas, an artist we interviewed back in January, has had her New York Stock Exchange account closed by Charles Schwab. She has exhibited her paintings which reflect her stock market trades and their effects on the market at Gallery 303. In an article by Fortune, it is said that her ambitions with this project is to “alter prices of 12 different NYSE-traded stocks,” proving her exhibition a relative success. With a market cap of $40 million or less, the effects of Meyohas’ stock buys are strong enough to be evident enough to catch the attention of Charles Schwab.

The Guardian: The Ghanaian turning thousands of discarded plastic bottles into art: Serge Attukwei Clottey

The Guardian: The Ghanaian turning thousands of discarded plastic bottles into art: Serge Attukwei Clottey

A new exhibition showcases a local artist using jerry cans to draw attention to the country’s pollution crisis

THE OBSERVER: Sarah Meyohas - Was An Artist’s Brokerage Account Shut Down for Manipulating the Stock Market?

THE OBSERVER: Sarah Meyohas - Was An Artist’s Brokerage Account Shut Down for Manipulating the Stock Market?

MARCH 28, 2016

Sarah Meyohas had her account closed by Charles Schwab, perhaps making the exact point she wanted to

The New York Times: Technology Expands the World for African Artists

The New York Times: Technology Expands the World for African Artists

Serge Attukwei Clottey: “I think technology helps African artists to reach many people in the global art space,” he said by email. “For example, I’ve been getting many residency opportunities from all over the world because people always see my work online.”

Technology Expands the World for African Artists

By Ginanne Brownell Mitic

March 24, 2016

 

The Ghanaian artist Serge Attukwei Clottey said that thanks to the Internet, where he posts his artistic productions on his Instagram account, he not only was offered — and took — the chance to study in Brazil but he also was contacted by one of his future collectors, who is based in California.

“I think technology helps African artists to reach many people in the global art space,” he said by email. “For example, I’ve been getting many residency opportunities from all over the world because people always see my work online.”

MONEY: Sarah Meyohas - When Trading Stocks Is a Work of Art

MONEY: Sarah Meyohas - When Trading Stocks Is a Work of Art

JANUARY 22, 2016

We think we know what stock performance means. Then Sarah Meyohas comes along.

Meyohas, a Wharton graduate who also holds an MFA from Yale, took that term as the title of her first solo art show, at the 303 gallery in New York City. For two weeks in January, Meyohas traded stocks on the New York Stock Exchange. Then, in real time, she drew the changes in each stock’s valuation with oil stick on blank canvases mounted throughout the space.

FORTUNE: Meet The Artist Who Paints the Stock Market - Sarah Meyohas

FORTUNE: Meet The Artist Who Paints the Stock Market - Sarah Meyohas

JANUARY 12, 2016

Artist Sarah Meyohas is a market mover—literally.

In her first solo show, “Stock Performance,” which opened Jan. 8 at New York City’s 303 Gallery, Meyohas will attempt to turn the ups and downs of the stock market into art. Starting Tuesday and continuing until Jan. 20, she will try to alter the prices of 12 different NYSE-traded stocks, painting those price movements on canvas as she trades—live—at the gallery.

ARTSPACE: The New Paint-by-Numbers? Sarah Meyohas on How She Is Manipulating the Financial Markets to Make Art

ARTSPACE: The New Paint-by-Numbers? Sarah Meyohas on How She Is Manipulating the Financial Markets to Make Art

JANUARY 8, 2016

Around this time last year, the art press picked up a quirky new story: a Yale photography M.F.A. named Sarah Meyohas had created her own cryptocurrency called Bitchcoin, with an exchange rate set at one Bitchcoin to 25 square inches of a Meyohas print. (As the value of her work changes over time, so too will the value of the coins.) In an art world that was grappling, often dismissively, with the shift toward art-as-investment, Meyohas’s take on the Bitcoin addressed the world of finance with unusual directness and a cooperative stance. It seemed to offer collectors a tool for using Meyohas's artworks as investments. 

The New York Times: In Rachel Rossin’s ‘Lossy,’ the Virtual Reality of Living in a Painting

The New York Times: In Rachel Rossin’s ‘Lossy,’ the Virtual Reality of Living in a Painting

In Rachel Rossin’s ‘Lossy,’ the Virtual Reality of Living in a Painting

By Martha Schwendener

Nov. 5, 2015

THE BROOKLYN RAIL: CAROLYN SALAS

THE BROOKLYN RAIL: CAROLYN SALAS

THE BROOKLYN RAIL

CAROLYN SALAS

JUL-AUG 2015

By Mary Proenza

This is an elegant, cohesive set of sculptures, and the show is only Salas’s second New York solo exhibition. It’ll be good to see what she goes on to do. Her sculptures have a restrained beauty that’s clearly felt and are wonderful in their suggestive powers

The Shifting, Shining, Shimmering Abstractions of Eric Freeman Have an Unexpected Muse

The Shifting, Shining, Shimmering Abstractions of Eric Freeman Have an Unexpected Muse

JUNE 3, 2015

Freeman’s new works on view at Launch F18 continue the artist’s approach to abstract illusion, where a play of light within the painting’s surface seems to create movement within the stillness of pure color. —Hannah Gregory

ARTNEWS: Sarah Meyohas - A New Cryptocurrency Enters the Art Market: BitchCoin

ARTNEWS: Sarah Meyohas - A New Cryptocurrency Enters the Art Market: BitchCoin

FEBRUARY 8, 2015

Artist Sarah Meyohas launched her own personal cryptocurrency on Sunday night in the Financial District at Trinity Place, a bar located across from the birthplace of the Occupy movement, Zuccotti Park. Called BitchCoin, perhaps a feminist play on the name of the most famous cryptocurrency of them all, the currency is the subject of an exhibition on prediction at Where, a think tank and exhibition space based out of a shipping container in Brooklyn.

Architectural Digest - Kour Pour’s First Solo Exhibition Opens

Architectural Digest - Kour Pour’s First Solo Exhibition Opens

2014

Architectural Digest chats with Kour Pour as he prepares for the debut of his first solo show in Los Angeles.

By 
Michael Slenske

 

 

Rather than shy away from the drama of the art market, Pour is jumping right into the fire with his Los Angeles solo debut, “Samsara,” at West Hollywood’s Depart Foundation. Whereas the screen prints of his early works were entirely painted over by hand, the six paintings in this new show leave some traces of the screens, drawing parallels between hand-knotted carpets with artisan dyes and factory-made rugs with artificial colors.

NORWEGIAN ARTS: Anatidaephobia by Martine Poppe at Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery

NORWEGIAN ARTS: Anatidaephobia by Martine Poppe at Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery

Anatidaephobia by Martine Poppe

at Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery

October 17 to November 16, 2014

Poppe’s work plays with perspective and the nature of her artwork shifts depending on how you look at it, offering up secret glimpses of hidden motifs from certain angles.

Architectural Digest: Painter Enoc Perez's Latest Work

Architectural Digest: Painter Enoc Perez's Latest Work

2013

Known for his paintings of modernist buildings, artist Enoc Perez is pushing his work in bold new directions

By 
Stephen Wallis
November 1, 2013

 

Perez’s signature works—large, seductive paintings of modernist buildings, from hotels in his native Puerto Rico to icons such as New York’s Lever House and Chicago’s Marina City towers—are owned by major museums and influential collectors like Peter Brant and Aby Rosen. The earliest examples were made via a meticulous process of transferring oil-stick drawings to canvas, sometimes dozens of layers of them, by hand. 

Frieze: Joe Andoe

Frieze: Joe Andoe

2004

An Oklahoman now based in New York, Andoe works with pared-down, deceptively biddable images: boxy 1960s automobiles, beer cans, two-lane blacktops and lickerish young women. His technique of applying paint and then wiping it away blurs the contours of his figures. Glimpsed quickly, the soft monochrome lines of his canvases suggest cosy snapshots from the late 1960s or early 1970s. But Andoe sidesteps reassuring nostalgia by using these symbols to show an underlying provinciality.