Miles McEnery Gallery

Miles McEnery Gallery Sometimes that happens organically: minds and bodies working in concert as insight and enjoyment dovetail gracefully. At other times it’s awkward. Often both.
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Miles McEnery Gallery is a contemporary art gallery in the Chelsea neighborhood of New York, NY with locations at 520 West 21st Street and 525 West 22nd Street. Miles McEnery Gallery presents exhibitions by a multigenerational roster of artists whose works are linked by their drive to discover the points at which the paths of pleasure and knowledge intersect. And unsettling. And consequential. Con

flict enters the picture when what you feel and what you know tug you in different directions. That tension creates experiences that compel you to reorganize your relationship to the world—starting with your self, which is, hopefully, a fairly complex constellation of experiences and imaginings, facts and fantasies, realities and relationships. The art exhibited at McEnery highlights the multilayered nature of identity, not to mention history and humanity. It also leaves people free to experience things for themselves. And once that individual experience has begun, it invites you to determine what that experience means for you, but not just to you alone. Freedom and responsibility—or independence and interconnectedness with others—take shape before works that do not strive to provide answers to life’s big questions so much as to draw visitors into conversations with themselves, with their friends, and with strangers. Both internal and external, these dialogues can be insightful, and they can also be infuriating. They are often both. At their best, they sharpen perceptions, excite the imagination, stimulate thinking, and change behavior by making us aware of realities previously unseen. Prescriptive art is nowhere to be found. Nor are one-dimensional works, single-issue statements, or academic rehashes of ideas that have been thoroughly worked through by previous generations. Painting and drawing predominate. This is not because these media are historically important or intrinsically valuable, but because they are basic: simple technologies that record, often in exceptionally nuanced ways, the gestures and maneuvers of a consciousness in action (making decisions, adapting to circumstances, working through rough spots, and coming to conclusions—only to start all over again in the next painting or drawing). The drama—of striving to do something and then striving to do more—opens up all sorts of stories. Each story has lots to say about all sorts of situations, artistic and otherwise. Both abstract and representational, the works at McEnery invite viewers into worlds within worlds. Familiar details give way to strangeness. What you thought you knew turns out to be different from what you actually know. Strangest of all, your journeys through the overlapping, intersecting worlds in these works do not take you away from the real world so much as they take you more deeply into it—more attentive to subtle differences and inspired to share such discoveries with others.

Join us in wishing David Allan Peters a very happy birthday!…
12/07/2022

Join us in wishing David Allan Peters a very happy birthday!


Daniel Rich: Flat Earth opens this Thursday, 8 December, at 525 West 22nd Street. Join us at the gallery that evening fr...
12/06/2022

Daniel Rich: Flat Earth opens this Thursday, 8 December, at 525 West 22nd Street. Join us at the gallery that evening from 6-8pm for the opening reception!

“This new body of work consists of twelve paintings in highly saturated colors that meticulously show, from the viewpoint of the street, oblique angles of modernist buildings in midtown Manhattan. Titled after a specific address, each painting seems convincingly real, as a sense of perspective draws the eye into space, as though we are seeing a representation of the semi-abstract exterior structure… The paintings are heavily cropped—we never see a full view from bottom to top, but instead are presented with a sharp corner…, a section of skyscraper with edge-to-edge material…, or a series of repeated window panes that recess into the distance… Windows and reflective glass abound in these works. The street is being watched and viewed, and the buildings bear witness.” - Wells Fray-Smith

Image (detail): Zeitenwende #3 / 909 3rd Ave, 2022, Acrylic on dibond, 83 x 60 inches, 210.8 x 152.4 cm


Spectral Visions, Rico Gatson’s second solo exhibition with the gallery, opens next Thursday, 8 December at 515 West 22n...
12/03/2022

Spectral Visions, Rico Gatson’s second solo exhibition with the gallery, opens next Thursday, 8 December at 515 West 22nd Street. Join us for the opening reception that evening from 6-8pm!

“Triangles and inverted triangles, circles of various diameters, vertical or horizontal stripes in negative space, aligned segments, remain his favored graphical tactics to organize the field. But new things are happening. The overlaps have grown more intense, their geometries more involved. The color decisions are intuitive and irregular. New forms are birthed in the vortex. Some are implicit, relying for their manifestation on the play of optics, the mind’s eye. Others are right there in the design. They break and tumble across the surface. Getting loose. Getting free,” Siddartha Mitter in her essay accompanying the exhibition’s catalogue.

Untitled (Expanded Light Consciousness II), 2022, Acrylic paint and glitter on wood, 36 x 80 inches, 91.4 x 203.2 cm


Wishing a very happy birthday to our good friend, Brian Alfred!…
12/02/2022

Wishing a very happy birthday to our good friend, Brian Alfred!


An exhibition of new works by Tomory Dodge opens 8 December at 520 West 21st Street. That evening, join us for an openin...
12/02/2022

An exhibition of new works by Tomory Dodge opens 8 December at 520 West 21st Street. That evening, join us for an opening reception to celebrate the artist from 6-8pm!..
“Philosophical skepticism is an approach to questioning both our assumptions about reality and our ability to know and understand. In the hands and mind of the painter Tomory Dodge, it is a method of painting, of questioning each aesthetic choice by building up an image and painting it out—scraping down and rebuilding the work to leave a history in the rich surfaces.

The results of his approach leave a poetic record of the painting’s process of becoming. It is a form of subjective archaeology: The lexicon of colors, forms, patterns, and lines make up the artifacts of a rich dig into the loamy, synaptic soil of his imagination and memory. Dodge has said that by using this method, he earns the poetic resolution that his paintings convey. The results are, in a sense, the broken fragments of an ancient figure, discovered through the methodical process of sifting through the soil of his cultural and personal history, and pieced back together to contain some kind of homage to truth.” - Gary Brewer

Map Maker, 2022, Oil on canvas, 48 x 48 inches, 121.9 x 121.9 cm


Miles McEnery Gallery is pleased to announce representation of Jim Isermann. Isermann’s inaugural solo exhibition at the...
11/29/2022

Miles McEnery Gallery is pleased to announce representation of Jim Isermann. Isermann’s inaugural solo exhibition at the gallery will take place June 2023.

A longtime resident of Palm Springs, Jim Isermann is known for his artistic practice that spans an array of media over nearly four decades. Situated at the intersection of fine art, mid-century design, and decorative craft, Isermann’s work is acutely attentive to pattern, color theory, and geometry. Moreover, Isermann’s art has been crucial to the elevation of design and the Arts and Craft movement as disciplines holding the same powerful and critical capacity of painting and sculpture.

Rooted in queerness and camp aesthetics, Isermann’s work builds off his personal identity. With a desire to upend the restrictions of domestic space, he challenges the historically-gendered lens of both the Minimalist and Craft art movements. Intention is at the work’s core. Occasions of precision and asymmetry, feelings of joy and chaos: each mark, mold, and tuft is weighed and calculated, evolving into an oeuvre overflowing with spontaneity and life.

Visit the link in our bio to read the full announcement.

[1] Jim Isermann in his studio, 2022 by Jason Schmidt [2] Untitled (Flower S**g Painting), 2022, Wool, acrylic paint on canvas over aluminum panels, 68 x 68 x 2 1/2 inches


We are thrilled to share that Rico Gatson’s work Toni  #2 (2021) has been acquired by the Nasher Museum of Art!…‘Toni  #...
11/26/2022

We are thrilled to share that Rico Gatson’s work Toni #2 (2021) has been acquired by the Nasher Museum of Art!

‘Toni #2 comes from an ongoing series of Icons, sparse geometric compositions incorporating appropriated photographs of cultural luminaries with colorful rays emanating from their bodies. These works draw on some of the formal qualities of the Bauhaus and Constructivism; they adopt the black, gold and green colors of pan-Africanism; and most importantly, they have been inspired by the 1960s political graphic design of Emery Douglass, the Black Panthers’ minister of culture.

In bringing together these elements, Gatson creates images that are part devotional object and part political poster, encouraging us to consider connections between the cultural figures themselves and the greater socio-political impact of their work. Depicted here is the American novelist and Nobel Laureate, Toni Morrison, whose best-known works include Song of Solomon and the highly-acclaimed Beloved.’

Visit the link in our bio to read the Nasher’s full acquisition announcement.

Toni #2, 2021, Color pencil and photograph collage on paper, 22 x 30 inches



James Siena’s current solo exhibition is reviewed by John Yau in Hyperallergic! Read the full review at the link in our ...
11/25/2022

James Siena’s current solo exhibition is reviewed by John Yau in Hyperallergic! Read the full review at the link in our bio and visit Siena’s exhibition at 525 West 22nd Street.

"Intrigued by both the connection and breakdown between machine and human, Siena’s art diverges from the Warholian model of the artist as robotic machine and the long-cherished model of the artist as omnipotent creator, maker of frozen moments in time. We don’t see time stopped in Siena’s work, but rather the pathways he’s taken to mark what he can neither break free of nor transcend: time passing. His work is about addressing his passage in time, knowing that mortality and termination are getting ever closer. It is when Siena most deeply inhabits this state of consciousness that his work become something to reflect upon, and get lost in.”

Installation image of Trectiuff, 2020, Acrylic and graphite on linen, 75 x 120 inches, 190.5 x 304.8 cm




Fiona Rae’s current exhibition is reviewed by Barbara A. MacAdam in The Brooklyn Rail!…"Playful and bookish, Rae punctua...
11/23/2022

Fiona Rae’s current exhibition is reviewed by Barbara A. MacAdam in The Brooklyn Rail!

"Playful and bookish, Rae punctuates her paintings with alphabetical triggers, using different fonts that she stretches out into bumpy, Disney-esque landscapes pocked with high and low associations. She plumbs time and space through a wilderness of symbols and references. Her palette over the years has segued from dense and dark to light and airy, with the newest work being pastel-hued, spacious and gestured, and set against a white ground. The paintings—oil and acrylic on linen and gauzy-toned works on paper—consist of stray forms, words, and cartoon characters in the act of becoming."

At the link in our bio, read MacAdam’s full review.

[1] I've seen things you people wouldn't believe, 2022, Oil and acrylic on linen, 60 x 50 inches



“Nielsen has studied the scientific processes behind color and light, learning how wavelengths and exposure times result...
11/22/2022

“Nielsen has studied the scientific processes behind color and light, learning how wavelengths and exposure times result in different hues and intensities. Look closely at the edges of some of her shapes or along whole borders, and you will see a layering of exposures, a sign that her work has its technical roots in photochemistry, however significantly it has evolved beyond the simple point-and-shoot. (There is no actual camera involved here.) The bleeding, wisping colors throughout each piece breathe movement and life into the work, providing a new level of depth. It is as if the whole thing is vibrating, pulsating off the page,” Grace Edquist.

Liz Nielsen: Edge of Forever is on view through this Saturday, 26 November. Visit the exhibition at 520 West 21st Street and explore the exhibition’s online viewing room at the link in our bio.


"In a dramatic shift in the way he pieces together his paintings, McGinness is now using a single drawing as the skeleto...
11/18/2022

"In a dramatic shift in the way he pieces together his paintings, McGinness is now using a single drawing as the skeleton or lattice for an entire canvas… The gateway was a series of 'Mother and Child' drawings McGinness began several years ago, including one based on a snapshot of his wife sitting in a mod Eero Aarnio-designed Ball Chair with their two daughters, Evelyn and Maxine. In McGinness’ simplified version, the central maternal form enfolds a child’s silhouette under each arm, all ensconced within the egg-like shape. It’s a new look at the age-old trope of Madonna and Child—an updated icon.”

In her essay on Ryan McGinness’ new body of work, Hilarie M. Sheets elaborates on the artist’s process of working from personal sketches rather than sourcing material from “the cultural and public domain.” At the link in our bio, read Sheets’ essay in the digital catalogue accompanying McGinness’ current exhibition, New Narratives. New Narratives, featuring Mother and Child (2022), is on view at our 515 West 22nd Street gallery through next Saturday, 26 November.

[1,2] Mother and Child, 2022, Acrylic and metal leaf on canvas, 84 x 60 inches [3,4] details


Fiona Rae is one of Artnet News’ 5 Novel and Noteworthy Artists to watch this month! Rae’s current exhibition at the gal...
11/16/2022

Fiona Rae is one of Artnet News’ 5 Novel and Noteworthy Artists to watch this month! Rae’s current exhibition at the gallery is on view through 26 November at our 511 West 22nd Street location.

“British artist Fiona Rae is perhaps best known for paintings that draw from an incredibly diverse range of inspiration, from Abstract Expressionism to Japanese anime and traditional typography. Rae’s inaugural solo show at Miles McEnery Gallery in New York (through November 26) features both recent paintings and works on paper. In her latest series, Rae investigates the many ways that abstraction operates both in visual art and in literature. Using lines drawn from classic and popular literature as titles of and as visual motifs, she challenges art hierarchies and at the same time explores new dimensions of the numerous influences that inform her work.”

Visit the link in our bio to read the full Artnet News article.



Address

525 W 22nd Street
New York, NY
10011

Opening Hours

Tuesday 10am - 6pm
Wednesday 10am - 6pm
Thursday 10am - 6pm
Friday 10am - 6pm
Saturday 10am - 6pm

Telephone

+12124450051

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