|
|
| The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
 |
Established in 1996 |
|
Sunday, March 29, 2026 |
|
| Eric Firestone Gallery unveils 'Couples' featuring 26 artist pairs |
|
|
Chris Martin, Untitled, 2024. Acrylic, acrylic gel medium, glitter and sequins on aluminum foil mounted on canvas, 51 x 47 in. 129.5 x 119.4 cm.
|
NEW YORK, NY.- Eric Firestone Gallery is presenting Couples, an exhibition of work by 26 artist partners. A throughline in the exhibition is artwork that visualizes component parts, distinct but coming together into a whole. This aesthetic becomes a metaphor for connection, partnership, and individuals belonging to a larger community and consciousness. Many of these abstract paintings and sculptures suggest the bridging of spaces between personhood, the digital world, and the cosmos.
Historic work by three artist-couples associated with American Surrealism are included: Jeanne Reynal and Thomas Sills; Luchita Hurtado and Lee Mullican; Madge Knight and Charles Houghton Howard. Hurtados work fuses abstraction, landscape, and the body. Reynal used individual hand-cut mosaic tiles to create topographic and resonant surfaces a parallel to Mullicans vibratory fields. Sills, a Black artist originally from North Carolina, used a delicate and unusual palette to synthesize the figure/ground relationship with optical equivalencies between colors. This is the first time the gallery is presenting work by the Bay Area based Surrealists Madge Knight (who was British-American), and Charles Houghton Howard. Howards meticulous compositions suggest the metamorphosis of forms floating in voids.
Views through layered grids and screens are fundamental to work by Alfred Jensen, Regina Bogat, Tamara Gonzales, Garth Weiser, Trudy Benson, and Alicia McCarthy. Jensens grids were informed by a spectrum of information, from numerical systems to theology and planetary movements. Bogats stick paintings of the 1980s use repeating, patterned structures to disrupt a monochrome ground. Benson references early computer art, while Weiser overlays handmade marks with a pixelated grid. McCarthys grids embrace imperfection with their painterly drip; Gonzales exuberantly blends mysticism and modernism.
Other artworks utilize a combination of techniques to suggest portals and multidimensional worlds. Russell Tyler uses a pared- down vocabulary of color and form to visually guide us between illusory spaces. Joyce Robinss glazed and hand painted circular ceramics are pierced throughout, allowing light to move through them and evoking constellations. Michelle Segre also invokes nebulae in her free standing sculptures constructed with metal, acrylic polymer and yarn; they are like screens between two worlds. Jackie Saccoccios work explores atmosphere through paints fluidity; Caitlin Lonegan incorporates metallic pigment to cultivate flickering light in her work.
Surface layering, and the playful incorporation of untraditional materials is a theme running through the exhibition. Chris Martins work incorporates sequins, and glitter; Spencer Lewiss abstractions are densely impastoed paintings on jute. Steve DiBenedetto allows visceral encrustations of oil paint to build into networks of forms. Subtle humor in materiality runs through the post-pop auto-painted aluminum sculpture of Carl DAlvia, as well as the plastic (vacuum formed and painted polycarbonate) modular wall works of Ed McGowin.
An embrace of domesticity and the intimate can be found in work by Francesca DiMattio, Sahar Khoury, and Claudia DeMonte, who each use materials associated with craft.
DiMattio layers a cacophony of references, including a diaper box and household cleaning spray, into her towering figurative ceramic and stoneware sculpture. Khoury, who refers to her work as dioramas, incorporates a cat food box as the support for her more intimate, geometric sculpture made of paper maché, ceramic, and resin. DeMontes Charmed Life, made of acrylic and pulp paper, references personal charm trinkets, arranged on the wall into a playful community. The aggregation of materials and references becomes a spark of optimism about radical connection.
|
|
|
|
|
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
|
|
|
|
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful
|
|