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Sunday, October 19, 2025 |
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Darren Waterston deconstructs the pastoral in Works and Days exhibition at DC Moore Gallery |
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Darren Waterston, Swans Like Me, 2025. Oil on wood panel, 60 x 60 inches.
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NEW YORK, NY.- DC Moore Gallery is presenting Darren Waterston: Works and Days, an exhibition of new paintings, works on paper, and a site-specific mural. Waterstons new body of work explores the history of landscape painting and the inherent tensions in the genre. Following the completion of site-specific murals for the Frick Collection this year, the new paintings further develop his study of the pastoral landscape. Taking inspiration from Italian and Northern Renaissance landscapes, Waterston complicates these idealized visions of nature and reveals their underlying psychological dimensions.
This new body of work also draws inspiration from the ancient Greek poet Hesiods epic poem Works and Days, from which the exhibition takes its title. A foundation of pastoral literature, Hesiods conception of human life as gradually degrading from an idyllic harmony with nature was later taken up by Renaissance painters. The figure of the shepherd appears as witness and caretaker of natural phenomena and the cycles of life and death in nature. Waterston was inspired by this balance of hope and pessimism in the human condition. The paintings embrace this unresolved tension between beauty and toil, merging abstracted and figurative forms in a destabilized pictorial space.
Waterston also weaves in the history of the sublime landscape, a vision of nature that reaches a deeply psychological level of both fright and awe. Considering the sublime as a site of simultaneous beauty and discomfort, he confuses our sense of perspective, shifting between scales that could either be microscopic or monumental. Each painting operates in its own visual syntax, evoking its own sense of time, rhythm, and movement.
In many of the works, Waterston stabilizes the foreground with figurative elements, such as thin, spectral trees or rocky mountain faces. Beyond these grounding elements lies unknowable, seemingly infinite expanses. In Swans Like Me (2025), the horizon line is disrupted by undulating blue vibrations that overwhelm the mountain vistas. These wave-like forms evoke geodes and sine waves, suggesting a timescale that exists beyond the perceived world.
The mural, painted on four walls, extends the fantastical environments of the paintings, creating an immersive atmosphere within one room of the gallery. Inspired by woodblock prints and etchings, the graphic patterning contrasts with the lush, layered paintings.
Later this year, Darren Waterston will be the Artist-in-Residence at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, leading towards a 2027 exhibition at the same museum. His celebrated installation Filthy Lucre: Whistlers Peacock Room Reimagined, a detailed and decadent re-interpretation of James Abbott McNeill Whistler's famed Peacock Room, will be exhibited at the Museum of Arts and Design in New York in 2027. Filthy Lucre was previously exhibited at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (2020); The Freer/Sackler Gallery at the Smithsonian, Washington, DC (2015-17); and originally at MASS MoCA, North Adams, Massachusetts (2014-15).
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Today's News
October 19, 2025
Chrysler Museum celebrates Susan Watkins and her contemporaries in fall exhibition
Wolfgang Tillmans weaves constellations of image and time in new Munich exhibition
Sonia Gomes debuts first UK solo exhibition at Pace London
Christopher Wool's expansive exhibition opens at Gagosian London, highlighting interconnected practice
Walter De Maria's final sculpture, Truck Trilogy, makes European debut at Gagosian Le Bourget
VMFA appoints Dr. Wai Yee Chiong as the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Curator of East Asian Art
Tetsuya Yamada's playful and poetic ceramic works on view at Paula Cooper Gallery vitrine
Christie's 20/21 Marquee Week in London achieves a running total of $189,670,078
Ruoxi Jin's debut solo exhibition at Mennour navigates fear, separation, and rebirth
Van Gogh Museum appoints WildBrain CPLG for global licensing representation
The Museum of Modern Art appoints Jodi Hauptman as The Robert Lehman Foundation Chief Curator of Drawings and Prints
Stephen Lawrence Prize 2025 awarded to St Mary's Walthamstow
First posthumous retrospective of Ruth Asawa's work explores the full range of the artist's practice
Largest-ever survey of Maruja Mallo's innovative art arrives at Museo Reina Sofía
Academy Art Museum appoints Brian J. Lang as Director of Curatorial Affairs
Best show of 2025 awarded to Anselm Kiefer exhibition
Edmund de Waal unveils site-specific installations at The Huntington
S.M.A.K. presents first museum solo exhibition for Belgian photographer Marc De Blieck
New display at the New York State Museum illuminates a forgotten industry
Darren Waterston deconstructs the pastoral in Works and Days exhibition at DC Moore Gallery
1899 Bank of Egypt pound brings record $66,000 to lead Heritage's World Paper Money Auction above $2 million
Five Hours, Fifty Days, Fifty Years: David Claerbout's survey of technical imagery opens at Konschthal Esch
Juergen Teller inaugurates Onassis Ready with his largest Greek solo exhibition
MOCA Toronto presents Jeff Wall Photographs 1984-2023
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