The Studio Museum in Harlem presents 'Charles Gaines: Gridwork 1974-1989'
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The Studio Museum in Harlem presents 'Charles Gaines: Gridwork 1974-1989'
Walnut Tree Orchard, Set 4 (version 2), 1975– 2014. Photograph, ink on paper Triptych: 29 × 23 in. each; 31½ × 25½ × 1½ in. (framed). Courtesy the artist and Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects. Photo: Robert Wedemeyer.



NEW YORK, NY.- This summer, The Studio Museum in Harlem presents Charles Gaines: Gridwork 1974–1989, the first museum survey of the Los Angeles–based conceptual artist’s early work. On view from July 17–October 29, 2014, the exhibition features seventy-five works from the beginning of a singular career that now spans four decades.

Highly regarded as both a leading practitioner of conceptualism and an influential educator at the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts), Charles Gaines is celebrated primarily for his photographs, drawings and works on paper that investigate systems, cognition and language. His early experiments examined the roles that systems and rule-based procedures play in the construction of forms, objects and meaning. Charles Gaines: Gridwork 1974–1989 traces Gaines’s career, from his groundbreaking work in the 1970s—some of which debuted in exhibitions at famed New York galleries Leo Castelli and John Weber—to his investigations of subjectivity in the late 1980s. Exploring the ways in which Gaines’s early works on paper can be viewed as a crucial bridge between the first generation conceptualists of the 1960s and 1970s and the conceptually-based practices of artists who emerged in the ensuing decades, the exhibition includes rare and never- before-seen works, some of which were presumed lost.

Charles Gaines: Gridwork 1974–1989 comes at a moment of renewed discussion about conceptual and Postminimalist art. The exhibition presents selections from ten early series, including “Regression” (1973–74), one of Gaines’s first explorations of mathematical and numeric systems; “Walnut Tree Orchard” (1975–2014) and “Faces” (1978–79), which use photography as a foundation for graphic deconstructions; and “Motion: Trisha Brown Dance” (1980–81), a collaboration with the world-renowned choreographer and dancer. In each series Gaines explores logic, pattern, linguistic systems and chance, following a path set by influential composer and artist John Cage.

Considered against the backdrop of the Black Arts Movement of the 1970s and the rise of multiculturalism in the 1980s, the works in Charles Gaines: Gridwork 1974–1989 are radical gestures. Eschewing overt discussion of race, they take a detached approach to identity that exemplifies Gaines’s determination transcend the conversations of his time and create new paths in artistic innovation.

“These works, and this exhibition, are part of a larger story that still needs to be told about the many parallel streams of artistic practice that emerged in the late 1960s and early 1970s,” says Studio Museum Director and Chief Curator Thelma Golden. “I am so proud that The Studio Museum in Harlem can play a part in unpacking, uncovering and presenting the many aspects of this story.”

Charles Gaines (b. 1944) received his MFA from the Rochester Institute of Technology in 1967. Over the course of his career, he has been represented by Leo Castelli Gallery and John Weber Gallery, New York; Margo Leavin Gallery, Los Angeles; Young Hoffman, Chicago; Richard Heller, San Francisco; and Galerie Lavignes-Bastille, Paris. He is currently represented by Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects and Paula Cooper Gallery, New York. In 2013, he received a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship and presented a critically acclaimed solo exhibition, Notes on Social Justice, at Paula Cooper Gallery, New York. In 2012, Gaines was the subject of a mid-career survey at the Pomona College Museum of Art and the Pitzer College Art Gallery in Claremont, California. His works are in the collections of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, Lentos Museum, Linz, Austria; Galerie der Stadt Esslingen, Esslingen, Germany; and Villa Merkel, Esslingen, Germany. Gaines’s work has been featured in recent major group exhibitions including Blues for Smoke (Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, 2012) and Now Dig This! Art and Black Los Angeles 1960–1980 (Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, 2011). He has participated in the 2014 Montreal Biennial and the 2007 Venice Biennale, as well as group exhibitions at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; UCLA Hammer Museum; Lentos Museum; Deichtorhallen; Kunsthalle Basel; Contemporary Art Museum, Houston; and REDCAT Gallery. Gaines has published several essays on contemporary art, including “Theater of Refusal: Black Art and Mainstream Criticism” (University of California, Irvine, 1993) and “The New Cosmopolitanism” (California State University, Fullerton, 2008). He currently resides in Los Angeles and has been full-time faculty in the School of Art at the California Institute of the Arts since 1989.










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