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So excited to present Emily Furr “Metal Heart” at The Armory Show-booth P36- on view Sept 8-11 at The Javits Center NY.•...
08/29/2022

So excited to present Emily Furr “Metal Heart” at The Armory Show-booth P36- on view Sept 8-11 at The Javits Center NY.

Furr’s work is concurrently on view at the gallery in NYC through Sept 24

Image: Emily Furr “Battle Salute”, 2022, Oil and acrylic on linen, wood frame, 61 x 49 inches

Emily Furr | Metal Heart |Opening Wednesday, August 17th, 6-8pmSargent's Daughters is pleased to present Metal Heart, an...
08/16/2022

Emily Furr | Metal Heart |
Opening Wednesday, August 17th, 6-8pm

Sargent's Daughters is pleased to present Metal Heart, an exhibition of new paintings by Brooklyn-based artist Emily Furr, occurring in conjunction with a solo presentation of her works at The Armory Show in September.  This is Furr's third solo exhibition with the gallery.
In this new body of work, Furr draws upon Precisionism, Surrealism, and Pop Art to make work that feels both timeless and profoundly timely.  These sharp-edged, saturated paintings, all rendered in oil, depict nails stabbing gemstones, machines spewing out reels of stars, and missiles penetrating the sky.  Though their content is almost mystical, the style of the works draws to mind billboard advertisements or propaganda posters.  They bring to mind militarism and violence, with symbols that imply the presence of political or personal unrest.
Metal Heart is a continuation of Furr’s inquiry into human attempts to control the uncontrollable, producing disorienting images which insert intimately terrestrial objects into galactic star-scapes.  In each composition, Furr produces unexpected juxtapositions of scale.  She achieves this either by placing commonplace items into seemingly infinite settings, or by allowing a glimpse of the cosmos through the cracks of the quotidian.  In either case, the viewer is exposed to the incommensurability of the two realms, suggesting the futility of human development and consumption.
Engaging themes of industrialism, transformation, and the cosmic void, Furr’s work speaks to the fragility of human exploits in the face of the vastness of the universe.  Yet despite the danger, one can’t help but feel ensnared in their orbit.
 
Image: Emily Furr, Steel Passing (detail), 2022, 13 x 7 inches, Oil and acrylic on board, wood frame

Sargent's Daughters is thrilled to announce representation of Los Angeles-based artist Alex Anderson (b. 1990, Seattle, ...
08/15/2022

Sargent's Daughters is thrilled to announce representation of Los Angeles-based artist Alex Anderson (b. 1990, Seattle, WA).  The artist will have his first New York solo show at Sargent's Daughters in 2023. 

We are happy to present a Q & A with the artist and an online viewing room. 

Anderson received his Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and Chinese from Swarthmore College and his Master of Fine Arts in Ceramics from the University of California, Los Angeles. Anderson previously studied at the Jingdezhen Ceramic Institute in Jingdezhen, China and was awarded a Fulbright Grant in affiliation with the China Academy of Art in Hangzhou, where he continued his studies in ceramic art. His work has been exhibited internationally, and across the United States, including at Human Resources (Los Angeles, CA), The Long Beach Museum of Art (Long Beach, CA), the American Museum of Ceramic Art (Pomona, CA), Deli Gallery (New York, NY), Gavlak Gallery (Los Angeles, CA; Palm Beach, FL), and Jeffery Deitch Gallery (New York, NY), amongst others. His work has been reviewed by Artsy, Artforum, Contemporary Art Review Los Angeles, Cultured, The Los Angeles Times, amongst others. 

Today is the last day to catch Rachel Youn “No Pain No Gain” 🌱 Youn’s debut NYC solo show 🌸
08/13/2022

Today is the last day to catch Rachel Youn “No Pain No Gain” 🌱 Youn’s debut NYC solo show 🌸

Rachel Youn “No Pain No Gain” opens Thursday, July 7, 6-8PMSargent’s Daughters is pleased to present “No Pain No Gain,” ...
07/06/2022

Rachel Youn “No Pain No Gain” opens Thursday, July 7, 6-8PM

Sargent’s Daughters is pleased to present “No Pain No Gain,” the debut New York solo exhibition of sculptor and installation artist Rachel Youn (b. 1994, Abington, PA). Based in St. Louis, MO, Youn uses online secondhand shopping to source materials that evoke aspiration and failure, then combines them into kinetic sculptures through an improvisational and intuitive studio practice. These motorized objects are easily anthropomorphized, as their repeated movements suggest labor, melancholia, and a sardonic sense of humor.

For several years, personal massage devices and plastic flora have been Youn’s primary media. Affixed to the motorized devices, the fake plants appeared to gyrate and groove in stylized installations that comment on q***r joy, eroticism, and the absurd. While Youn’s new body of work retains the same core components, it introduces implements of stereotypically masculine confinement and control, including a pull up bar, a gun rack, a tire jack, and a hand strengthener, all of which constrict the movement of the motorized flowers.

“No pain, no gain,” was a phrase frequently recited by Youn’s father as they were growing up. Though the aphorism is commonly used to promote exercise, Youn’s immigrant father was speaking more broadly about the existential toil inherent to modern American life. The phrase also echoes the emphasis on sacrifice and suffering in the Christian faith, from the crucifixion of Christ to narratives of persecution and martyrdom. Youn, who was raised Baptist, places the plants in restrictive positions so they appear to writhe in pain, questioning if suffering is necessarily a productive force.

Youn sums up the ethos of these works as a “Sisyphean dance-until-you-die-ness.” The motion of the plants is unending and viscerally uncomfortable, akin to exercise or menial labor. Though the exhibition’s title implies that there is gain to be had, the extended stasis of these hybrid objects only seems to result in more anguish, but perhaps there is pleasure in the pain.

Rachel Youn’s debut NYC solo show “No Pain No Gain” opens Thursday, July 7, 6-8PMImage: Rachel Youn, “10,000 hours”, 202...
07/01/2022

Rachel Youn’s debut NYC solo show “No Pain No Gain” opens Thursday, July 7, 6-8PM
Image: Rachel Youn, “10,000 hours”, 2022, shiatsu massager, artificial plants, wire stand, flower frogs

HOT DROP JULY 1💥 Emily Furr on  💥The Zwirner Platform Anniversary Capsule features a special selection of just over 40 n...
06/29/2022

HOT DROP JULY 1💥 Emily Furr on 💥The Zwirner Platform Anniversary Capsule features a special selection of just over 40 new artworks from some of the most in-demand artists from Platform's first year.
photo by

Rachel Youn’s debut NYC solo show opens THURSDAY JULY 7 🌺 Rachel Youn (b. 1994, Abington, PA) is an artist living and wo...
06/29/2022

Rachel Youn’s debut NYC solo show opens THURSDAY JULY 7 🌺 Rachel Youn (b. 1994, Abington, PA) is an artist living and working in St. Louis, MO. Working across sculpture and installation, Youn sources materials with a history of aspiration and failure through online secondhand shopping. Youn rescues electric massagers from suburban limbo, fastening artificial plants to the machines to create kinetic sculptures that are clumsy, erotic, and absurd. Haunted by their immigrant father’s pursuit of the American Dream, their work identifies with the replica that earnestly desires to be real, and the failed object that simulates care and intimacy.

On August 10, Public Art Fund will present Travels Pretty, an exhibition based on 12 new paintings by artist Wendy Red S...
06/28/2022

On August 10, Public Art Fund will present Travels Pretty, an exhibition based on 12 new paintings by artist Wendy Red Star created for JCDecaux bus shelters in New York City, Chicago, and Boston. Continuing her practice of mining museum archives and collections that house Apsáalooke (Crow) objects, for this new series, Red Star has explored parfleches, the “suitcases” of the nomadic tribes of the North American Great Plains. These hand-painted rawhides--used to store and transport food and personal possessions--were traditionally made by women and served as a compelling means of tribal and self-expression for those who created them. They constitute one of the great traditions of imagery created by Native artists. Red Star’s 12 detailed and vibrant paintings celebrate the communal knowledge of Apsáalooke parfleches, which were unique utilitarian containers instrumental to nomadic life. By taking the parfleches outside the museum walls, where many are currently housed, and reinterpreting them for the city streets, Travels Pretty makes these objects newly visible and accessible, sharing Indigenous cultural perspectives with a broad public audience. Travels Pretty is Red Star’s first public art exhibition and will be on view from August 10 to November 20, 2022 on 300 JCDecaux bus shelters across New York City, Chicago, and Boston. 

"Parfleche designs go beyond the idea of abstract painting which is a Western lens of looking at them," says artist Wendy Red Star. "To me they represent a community of people immediately recognized as the Apsáalooke Nation. That’s a powerful portrayal of what a community stands for. By showcasing them on JCDecaux bus shelters denotes both me and my community in these cities. It gets back to the notion of collecting material culture of Native people and opens the conversation to that."
 

Cielo Felix-Hernandez is featured in an interview on  • click link in bio to read more about her thoughts on her work, n...
06/18/2022

Cielo Felix-Hernandez is featured in an interview on • click link in bio to read more about her thoughts on her work, natural dyes, Puerto Rico and important colors in her universe, Tweety Bird and why she’s looking forward to turning 40 (she has to wait a few years!) 🌺

Sargent's Daughters is thrilled to announce representation of New York-based artist Yevgeniya Baras (b. Syzran, former S...
06/16/2022

Sargent's Daughters is thrilled to announce representation of New York-based artist Yevgeniya Baras (b. Syzran, former Soviet Union).  The artist will have a solo show at Sargent's Daughters in the autumn of 2023. 

Baras' paintings take shape through a process of layering and accumulation, combining oil media with various found and unconventional materials. The resulting objects hover between painting and sculptural relief, with layers that frequently extend onto the sides and supports of the canvas, refusing any definitive boundary. Within these stratified compositions, Baras creates symbolic topographies which address ideas of language, migration, and translation. The material richness of the work serves to generate abstractions that are encoded and deeply personal to the artist.

Baras was named Senior Fulbright Scholar in 2022. She was a recipient of the New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in 2021, Guggenheim Fellowship in 2019, the Pollock-Krasner grant and the Chinati Foundation Residency in 2018, and the Yaddo Residency in 2017. She received the Artadia Prize and was selected for the Sharpe-Walentas Studio Program, and the MacDowell Colony residency in 2015. In 2014 she was named a recipient of the Rema Hort Mann Foundation’s Emerging Artist Prize.

Baras holds a BA in Psychology and Fine Arts and an MA in Education from the University of Pennsylvania (2003) and an MFA in Painting and Drawing from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2007). Baras teaches at Rhode Island School of Design.

In conjunction with the announcement of her representation by Sargent's Daughters we are happy to present a Q & A with the artist and an online viewing room of recent works.

Opens tonight at  in NYC: “The Clamor of Ornament: Exchange, Power, and Joy from the Fifteenth Century to the Present” f...
06/14/2022

Opens tonight at in NYC: “The Clamor of Ornament: Exchange, Power, and Joy from the Fifteenth Century to the Present” featuring Wendy Red Star’s “1880 Crow Peace Delegation” • Bringing together more than 200 objects produced over the past five centuries, The Clamor of Ornament: Exchange, Power, and Joy from the Fifteenth Century to the Present will explore ornament in architecture, art, and design through the lens of drawing. The exhibition will foreground ornament’s potential as a mode of communication, a form of currency, and a means of exchange across geographies and cultures. The Clamor of Ornament will seek to address the multilayered complexity of the history of ornament, including the dissonance between the unequal and destructive relationships that mediate its movement between sources. Together, the objects on view will both celebrate and interrogate ornament’s fluidity by making connections between motifs, methods, and intentions.

The exhibition will feature a broad range of drawings, prints, textiles and objects, including eighteenth-century Indian palampores; Pennsylvania Dutch Fraktur drawings; kosode paper designs; Navajo textiles; and Albrecht Dürer’s Islamic-inspired woodblock-print knots. This broad approach to the subject of ornament will also encompass original architectural drawings by Louis Sullivan and Sir David Adjaye; contemporary ornament in the form of logos from luxury fashion brands; and even present-day designs for patisserie.

Organized by Dr. Emily King, Guest Curator, with Duncan Tomlin and Margaret-Anne Logan

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