kurimanzutto and Luhring Augustine open major two-part exhibition of works by Julio Galán
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kurimanzutto and Luhring Augustine open major two-part exhibition of works by Julio Galán
Julio Galán, Sí y no, 1990. Acrylic and collage on canvas (Diptych), 120 1/8 x 203 1/8 inches (305.1 x 515.9 cm). Diego Sada Collection © Julio Galán; courtesy of the Galán family, kurimanzutto, Mexico City/New York, and Luhring Augustine, New York. Photo: Farzad Owrang.



NEW YORK, NY.- kurimanzutto and Luhring Augustine announced a major two-part exhibition of works by the late Mexican artist Julio Galán. Marking the first significant solo presentation of Galán’s work in New York in over two decades, the show is being held simultaneously at both galleries’ Chelsea locations from March 6 through April 19, 2025.


Rediscover the vibrant and enigmatic art of Julio Galán. This comprehensive publication offers a revitalized look at his Neo-Expressionist works. Click here to purchase 'A Rabbit Split in Half' and delve into his unique artistic vision.


Galán’s brilliant career, which spanned from the mid-1980s until his untimely death in 2006, was primarily centered in New York City, Paris, and Monterrey, Mexico. While his work has not been broadly exhibited outside of his native country since his passing, his work was exhibited internationally extensively during his life, and he is widely considered the preeminent Mexican painter of his generation. Galán’s nonconformist and expansive multidisciplinary practice addresses issues of identity, gender, culture, and social constructs in works that layer self-representation and aspects of the personal with larger themes of cultural and sexual difference. Infused with an allegorical quality and woven throughout with a complex array of signifiers—enigmatic iconography and cultural references—his works, as well as his carefully crafted public persona, embraced a self-conscious othering and an ambiguous mutability that refused fixed interpretation. As art historian and professor Teresa Eckmann writes, “On canvas, he recounted and constructed illogical visions, teasing out the line between the real and artifice, his artwork deemed an “inaccessible yet formally intoxicating fabrication of self.” Galán hid from the viewer his artwork’s content as much as he revealed it; simultaneously, with his body, he explored fluid identity through masquerade.”

Rendered in a pastiche of styles, with a syncretic approach to culture, Galán’s work blends references and influences from Mexican folk and religious imagery to Surrealism, Pop Art, and graffiti. While he has often been associated with the Neomexicanismo movement of his native country and the Neo-expressionism of his peers in New York, these were characterizations he resisted, much in the way that he deliberately rejected any form of restrictive definition or singular interpretation. Magalí Arriola, former director of Museo Tamayo and curator of Galán’s most recent major retrospective, notes, “Though in some of his work [he] resorted to an iconography associated with popular Mexican culture…the use of stereotypical figures such as the charro of the Tehuana, was also related to his interest in transvestism and disguises as strategies to subvert sexual identities and other cultural constructs.” Galán’s approach exposes the limitations and issues inherent in the interrelated sentiments and systems that create and uphold any form of binary classification or fixed characterization, be they related to sexuality, nationality, spirituality, or any categorization. As writer Evan Moffitt notes, “Galán’s adoption of Mexican stereotypes and Platonic personalities reveals nationalism to be a kind of pompous drag…. There’s plenty of kitsch in Galán’s paintings, to be sure, but that kitsch is fundamental to their radicalism." Continuing to resonate today are the remarkable energy, intelligence, and theatricality of Galán’s work, and the questions he explored regarding the relationship of individual identity and the creation of the self to oversignified notions of culture and nationalism.

Julio Galán was born in 1958 in Muzquiz, Mexico, and passed away in 2006. After receiving his degree in architecture at the University of Monterrey, Galán moved to New York City in 1984, where he began to focus exclusively on his art practice, primarily painting. In New York, his circle included Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Francesco Clemente, among others. Galán’s work was included in the watershed exhibitions Magiciens de la terre at the Center Georges Pompidou, Paris in 1989 and Latin American Artists of the Twentieth Century, at Museum of Modern Art, New York in 1993. In 2022 a major presentation of his work, Julio Galán: A Rabbit Cut in Half, was presented at Museo Tamayo, Mexico City, Mexico along with Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Monterrey, Monterrey, Mexico; and in 2021 his work was in Greater New York 2021, MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY. During his lifetime, Galán’s work was exhibited individually and collectively at Museo Tamayo, Mexico City (2022); Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid (2006); Museo Amparo, Puebla (2001); Fundación Proa, Buenos Aires (1997); Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Monterrey, Monterrey (1994); National Gallery Pittsburgh; Center for the Arts, Pittsburgh (1993); Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (1992); Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, Houston (1992); Museo de Arte Moderno, Mexico City (1990); and Musée National d’Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (1989), among other institutions; it was also included in biennials such as The Whitney Biennial, New York (1995) and the Havana Biennial, Havana (1983).


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