NEW YORK, NY.- Pace Gallery announced its representation of Irish artist John Gerrard (b. 1974, North Tipperary). Widely regarded as a key figure in the development of simulation within contemporary art, Gerrard creates works that at first appear to be traditional films or videos but are actually virtual worlds. Made using real-time computer graphics, a technology developed by the military and now used extensively in the gaming industry, his works are created over the course of months and sometimes even years. The nature of contemporary power in the broadest sense is central to Gerrards conceptual motivation, and frequently his work refers to structures of control and networks of energy that have made possible the expansion of humanity in the past century.
This week, Pace will inaugurate its presentation of Gerrards work at Frieze London (October 3 6, 2019) with the debut of two digital simulations, which will be displayed on framed LED wall panels at the gallerys booth. Gerrards work is also currently part of the Okayama Art Summit in Japan, which opened on September 27, 2019 and is being overseen by Pierre Huyghe, featuring Gerrards X.Laevis (Spacelab), 2017 alongside works by seventeen international artists.
Johns simulated worlds have helped us understand where art can go in the 21st century. The weight and lightness of our contemporary experiences are focused and reimagined in his universe. His works reconnect us to the powerful realities we have become blind to in our post-internet world. - Marc Glimcher, CEO and President of Pace Gallery.
Notable works by the artist include Western Flag (Spindletop, Texas) 2017, a depiction of the site of the Lucas Gusherthe worlds first major oil find in Spindletop, Texas in 1901which is now barren and exhausted. The site, recreated as a digital simulation by the artist, depicts a flagpole erected on the cite that bears a flag of perpetually renewing pressurized black smoke. Originally commissioned by Channel 4, UK for broadcast, the work has been presented as a major LED simulation at Somerset House, London and was part of DesertX in 2019. John Gerrards installation Solar Reserve (Tonopah, Nevada) 2014, which debuted at the plaza of New Yorks Lincoln Center in October 2014 and was recently on view at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 2018. The