Judy Ledgerwood’s Playfully Subversive Patterns

Judy Ledgerwood | Hyperallergic

Judy Ledgerwood, "First Color" (2022), oil on canvas, 15 inches x 15 inches (all images courtesy Denny Gallery)

By John Yau

A lot of writers, myself included, have connected Judy Ledgerwood’s exuberant abstractions to the Pattern and Decoration art movement. Historically speaking, Pattern and Decoration (1972–1985) challenged the canon-making orthodoxies and conventions that dominated much art in the 1960s and ’70s, and that continue to cast their shadow. This challenge to the canon, which manifests itself as celebrations of the female body and sexuality in Ledgerwood’s work, is inseparable from her vocabulary of hand-painted quatrefoils, interlocking triangles, and thickly painted labial shapes. What distinguishes Ledgerwood’s work from the earlier generation of women artists working in the domain of Pattern and Decoration is its bluntness and humor. 

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How Uta Barth's Art Illuminates

Uta Barth | New York Times

Uta Barth, "…and of time (aot 4),” 2000.

By Arthur Lubow

The photography of Uta Barth unites the conceptual rigor that is characteristic of Germany, where she was born, with the fascination with light and space of California, where she has lived for the last 40 years.

Countering the instantaneous shutter click of the camera, Barth, who is 65, frequently works in series to explore how shifts in light alter our perception of a scene. It is not the scene that she takes as her subject, but the act of perception. Indeed, she intentionally turns her camera on unremarkable rooms and landscapes, as if to demonstrate that if you look closely and slowly, anything can become fascinating. And, at least in Barth’s images, beautiful.

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Avant L'Orage at The Pinault Collection

Diana Thater | Pinault Collection

(c) Les Graphiquants

Against the backdrop of the climate crisis, in the urgency of the present, before the storm breaks again, the artists in the exhibition invent unusual ecosystems that contain new seasons.

Whereas ancestral calendars were conditioned by cosmic movements, our frantic race for progress and abundance has irrevocably transformed our environment. Its disruption forces us to adapt in turn. Formerly the granary of Paris, the Bourse de Commerce building has been both a witness to and an agent in the global acceleration of predatory trade since 1889, resulting from colonisation and the intensive exploitation of the planet’s resources. The building embodies this new, desynchronised cycle of time. In the iron, glass, stone, and concrete architecture of the Bourse de Commerce, which could be that of a greenhouse, a series of fleeting and contradictory temporalities appear, including the landscape imagined by Danh Vo for the Rotunda.

In the other spaces, a display from the Pinault Collection supports this birth of a new cycle of seasons in the making, of mutating ecosystems, of micro-territories in gestation, bathed in a light approaching a mutating climatic dusk. Hicham Berrada’s Présage, which immerses the visitor in a landscape in the throes of transformation, makes us aware of the beauty of a world without us. Diana Thater’s Chernobyl takes us into an irradiated landscape, an apocalyptic theatre, while Pierre Huyghe’s film follows the movements of a monkey wearing a human mask, abandoned in the outskirts of Fukushima. Robert Gober’s Waterfall depicts a trompe l’oeil nature from which we are irretrievably separated, while Pierre Huyghe’s Untilled (a play on the words “untitled” and “uncultivated”) recreates the world as experienced by non-humans, from dogs to insects, in a compost committed to new possibilities for fertilising the world.

Exhibition runs from 8 February to 11 September 2023.

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Review: Uta Barth's photos come into stirring focus at Getty

Uta Barth | Los Angeles Times

Uta Barth, “#41,” 1994, chromogenic print. (Uta Barth / Getty Museum)

By Christopher Knight

In the 1960s, artist Robert Irwin famously forbade publication of photographs of his paintings — the spare abstractions of colored lines against colored fields, the tiny dots covering slightly bowed canvases to create a cloud of hazy gray atmosphere and the plastic or aluminum discs that stand out from the wall but visually appear as orbs that hover in space, like mysterious floating eyeballs.

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After 25 Years, an Artist’s Home Reopens as an Art Gallery

Jorge Pardo | Hyperallergic

View of River Styx at Sea View with works by Erica Mao, Coco Young, Heidi Lau (hanging), Joseph Elmer Yoakum, and Gretta Solie (bench and chair) (photography by Nice Day Photo, courtesy Sea View)

By Matt Stromberg

In 1993, the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) in Los Angeles offered Jorge Pardo an exhibition as part of its Focusseries. The young Cuban-born artist had begun making a name for himself with objects that blurred the lines between art and design, but this would be his first solo museum show in LA, where he had settled after receiving his BFA from Art Center College of Design in Pasadena in 1988. Instead of creating pieces to display inside a museum, he conceived of an artwork that would exist entirely outside of it. “I have a sloped lot and an idea for a house,” he told Hunter Drohojowska-Philp in the Los Angeles Times in 1998. “How can I take those ingredients and make them do something you wouldn’t expect?”

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Gene A’Hern: the pilot and the passenger

Gene A’Hern | 1301SW

Gene A'Hern, Gust, 2022, Oil and pastel on linen, 180 x 194 cm.

By Jack Willet

the pilot and the passenger is a presentation of new works by Blue Mountains-based artist Gene A’Hern. After recent presentations in the US and central Europe, the pilot and the passenger is the artist’s first solo in Melbourne. Filling 1301SW in a flurry of colour and texture, this new series of large-scale paintings and works on paper continues his innovation, experimentation and emphasis of material, technique and process.

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A LEAP INTO THE VOID. ART BEYOND MATTER

Ann Veronica Janssens | GAMeC

From February 3, 2023, GAMeC presents A Leap into the Void. Art beyond Matter, the third and final chapter of the major exhibition project dedicated to the investigation of matter in twentieth and twenty-first-century art.

Launched in 2018 with Black Hole. Art and Materiality from Informal to Invisible, and continued in 2021 with Nothing is Lost. Art and Matter in Transformation, A Leap into the Void concludes the Trilogy of Matter exploring the theme of the dematerialization, with a transversal tale that triggers a connection between those investigations into the void, initiated by the first movements of the historical avant-garde and developed by experimental groups post-World War II, the investigations into flux undertaken in the years of early computerization, and the use of new languages and simulated realities in the post-digital era.

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Uta Barth at the Getty

Uta Barth | Contemporary Art Review Los Angeles

By Jessica Simmons-Reid

In her poem “There’s a certain Slant of light (258),” Emily Dickinson invokes the weightless “heft” of a beam of winter light—acutely slanted, knifelike, due to the sun’s low angle in the sky. This light, she writes, is “An imperial affliction/ Sent us of the Air -”—an ominous force capable of marking both the landscape and the psyche while paradoxically leaving nary a “scar.”1 Here, Dickinson juxtaposes the intangibility of light with its elemental ability to function as a conduit for somatic transformation. A touch of light, or its absence, can bestow life, growth, or death. It can also alchemize a fleeting image into a permanent one. In this vein, Dickinson’s poem is inherently photographic: Her words apprehend a transient choreography of light, leaving it indelibly burned to the page.

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Uta Barth: ‘Peripheral Vision’ Perception and the Act of Looking

Uta Barth | ArtNow LA

Uta Barth, white blind (bright red) (02.7), 2002, mounted archival pigment photographs, Six panels, 21 1/4  x 161 1/4 inches.

By Jody Zellen

Uta Barth has been exploring the way light interacts with walls, surfaces and spaces throughout her career. The work is often minimal, showing empty areas or flattened planes and it relies on repetition and difference, sometimes subtle, other times drastic or dramatic. Peripheral Vision, an exhibition organized by the Getty Center that traces the highlights of her career includes examples of her graduate student works created at UCLA in the mid 1990s (black and white photographs made in the darkroom) as well as a recent commission that combines color digital photography with a subtle slow-moving video, in celebration of the Getty Center’s 20th anniversary. What is unusual about the way the show is installed is that many of her series are recreated and presented in full as they might have appeared in previous exhibitions. Rather than choose just a few representational photographs, viewers can experience the works as Barth conceived of them— as extended sequences rather than as individual images.

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Exhibition Review: Uta Barth

Uta Barth | Musée Magazine

…and to draw a bright white line with light (11.2), 2011 printed 2021, Uta Barth. Pigment prints, 38 × 56 1/2 in. Getty Museum, 2021.51.1-.2. © Uta Barth

By Gabrielle Keung

Uta Barth’s exhibition titled “Peripheral Vision” at The Getty Centre presents a statement of her central artistic concerns. By zooming in on the illuminated surfaces of various colors and textures, she emphasizes the complementary relationship of light and shadows. By manipulating our sense of depth and playing with camera angles, she makes us reassert our vantage point as viewers and rethink the camera’s relationship to its subjects. By highlighting the vivid contrast between black and white in a picture where intricate and bare branches are set against a foil-like sky, she asserts the richness of monochrome prints. Barth’s works play with light and colors to appeal to our senses, expanding our imagination. 

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For artist Uta Barth, learning to photograph is a way of learning to see

Uta Barth | Los Angeles Times

By Leah Ollman

Uta Barth is a photographer, and her chosen tool, the camera, is integral to the making and understanding of her work. But when asked about art that has had the greatest impact on her, she says, “I rarely think of photography. I think of sculpture and installation and painting. I don’t categorize media the way the world likes to.”

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The J. Paul Getty Museum : Uta Barth : Peripheral Vision

Uta Barth | The Eye of Photography

Uta Barth (born in West Germany, 1958) makes photographs that investigate the act of looking. In her multipart works, she explores the ephemeral qualities of light as well as its ability to affect optical perception. Uta Barth: Peripheral Vision traces Barth’s celebrated career from her early experimentations while a student to later studies that probe the eye’s capacity and the camera’s role in translating visual information into a photograph. Organized chronologically, with sections dedicated to her most prominent series, the exhibition presents the first overview of the artist’s career in over twenty years.

“For nearly 40 years, Uta Barth has worked in Los Angeles, garnering international acclaim for her innovative perspective and signature approach,” says Timothy Potts, Maria Hummer-Tuttle and Robert Tuttle Director of the J. Paul Getty Museum. “Through teaching, extensive exhibitions, and publications, she has influenced an entire generation of new artists who appreciate the ways she has challenged traditional notions of photography as a carrier of objective information. This exhibition will provide a critical overview of the evolution of her work from its earliest days as a student to the present day.”

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Celebrating 15 years

Jack Goldstein | e-flux

Photo by:

Just days before turning sweet16, the Schinkel Pavillon celebrates a milestone 15th birthday in retrospect with an anniversary mailing.

It is with great joy that Nina Pohl and her team look back on 15 years of not only exhibitions and performances, but also lectures, screenings, concerts, talks, and interventions realized by over 400 artists and countless supporters.

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The Modern Art Notes Podcast: No. 579 - Uta Barth

Uta Barth | The Modern Art Notes Podcast

Episode No. 579 of The Modern Art Notes Podcast features artist Uta Barth.

The J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles is presenting “Uta Barth: Peripheral Vision,” a retrospective of Barth’s work.For over forty years Barth has made work about the act of looking, perception, movement and the passage of time. The exhibition debuts Barth’s newest work: a project commissioned in celebration of the Getty Center’s twentieth anniversary. The exhibition was curated by Arpad Kovacs, and is on view through February 19, 2023. A catalogue is forthcoming in 2023.

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Perceptual Shift: Thoughts on the Photographs of Uta Barth

Uta Barth | The Getty

Watch Russell Ferguson, Jan Tumlir and Getty curator Arpad Kovacs discuss the work and oeuvre of Uta Barth in conjunction with the opening of Uta Barth’s monumental retrospective at the Getty Center, Los Angeles. Barth’s exhibition is open now and continues through February 19, 2023.

Diana Thater Monkeys Around With Our Future

Diana Thater | The Art Newspaper

Diana Thater Installation 1301PE

Installation view, Diana Thater: Practical Effects, David Zwirner, New York, November 10–December 10, 2022. Courtesy of David Zwirner.

By Linda Yablonsky

Rarity may add material value to an artwork, but its emotional impact can appreciate even more—an infrequent occurrence in these remotely accessed times. So, imagine my surprise when Practical Effects, an immersive new video installation by Diana Thater, had me falling for a robot. That was not just unusual, but downright unsettling.

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Art Matters With Edward Goldman

Uta Barth | Art Matters

Uta Barth, and of time, 2000. Image courtesy of The Getty.

By Edward Goldman

Uta Barth: Peripheral Vision traces her forty-year career. If you see her photos for the first time, you might find yourself wondering, "Why so little happens, there?" Someone’s hand moves translucent window shades with light waving through it. I’ve seen this image before and it always makes me think of it as a mysterious music score. I see, I hear the sound of a violin.

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Rirkrit Tiravanija poses fundamental human questions

Rirkrit Tiravanija | Korea Herald

Rirkrit Tiravanija Installation View of Exhibition Submit To The Black Compost

Installation view of "Rirkrit Tiravanija: Submit To The Black Compost" at Gladstone Gallery in Seoul (Courtesy of the artist and gallery)

By Park Yuna

Rirkrit Tiravanija is widely known for his intimate and participatory art, through which he engages with the audience. He would cook and serve up Thai food at an exhibition as part of the show, expanding the way in which people appreciate art.

A Thai born in Argentina and based in New York since the late 1980s, Tiravanija's Seoul debut exhibition at Gladstone Gallery, titled “Rirkrit Tiravanija: Submit To The Black Compost,” ended Oct. 7.

"For me, it has a deep meaning like looking at otherness, looking at difference and looking at the thing that is not you. Of course, in that sense empathy is very important because to function in a relationship to otherness, one needs their empathy,” Tiravanija said in a recent interview with The Korea Herald.

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There Is No Such Thing as Bad Weather

SUPERFLEX | Le Bicolore

There Is No Such Thing as Bad Weather, presented at Le Bicolore at Maison du Danemark, explores disparate ways of understanding the overwhelming reality of climate change.

In this exhibition, works by SUPERFLEX illustrate three different ways of approaching climate change :

- The technocentric

- The anthropocentric

- The ecocentric

Though these works were developed over three decades, SUPERFLEX’s practice does not simply tell a linear narrative.

There Is No Such Thing As Bad Weather offers a complex and prismatic view of an intractable problem while finding hope and energy in the range of possible responses.

Taking the idea of collaboration even further, recent works have involved soliciting the participation of other species.

For SUPERFLEX, the best idea might come from a fish.

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