1. The Paul Kasmin Gallery Displays a Group Show in NYC

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    artwork: Peter Saul - "Still Life in the Bedroom", 2005 - Acrylic on canvas - 182.9 x 274.3 cm. Courtesy the artist and Paul Kasmin Gallery, where it is on view in "Pretty on the Inside" until August 19th.

    New York City.- The Paul Kasmin Gallery is proud to present the exhibition "Pretty on the Inside", organized by Erik Parker and KAWS. This is the first time that the two artists have collaborated to organize an exhibition. Pretty on the Inside includes works in a range of media by seven American artists: Todd James, KAWS, Tony Matelli, Erik Parker, Joyce Pensato, Peter Saul, and Karl Wirsum. At first glance, these artworks challenge the viewer through their visual intensity, but upon closer inspection, they reveal an inner beauty. Many of the artists included make ironic or subversive works, hijacking the language of cartoons and comics to both celebrate and criticize contemporary culture. "Pretty on the Inside" is on view at the gallery until August 19th.


    artwork: Erik Parker - "Brink", 2010 Acrylic on canvas - 203.8 x 177.8 cm. - Courtesy the artist & Paul Kasmin Gallery.Todd James (b. 1969) makes large-scale installations, drawings, animated videos, and gouache paintings that appropriate the style of Saturday morning cartoons to make social and political commentary. KAWS (b. 1974) draws from the traditions of Pop art and Geometric Abstraction, while revitalizing the figure by altering and recombining animated forms and features to create new hybrid images. Tony Matelli (b. 1971), known for his elaborately rendered sculptures, contributes Double Meat Head (2008)— a compelling self-caricature rendered from various cuts of meat. In its various stages of decomposition, the sculpture is a rumination on death, decay, and rebirth. Erik Parker’s (b. 1968) figurative paintings feature eye-popping colors and psychedelic designs, yet take their inspiration from Francis Bacon, Vincent Van Gogh, and Pablo Picasso.

    The exhibition will represent the New York premier of Parker’s new high-octane take on the still life genre. Joyce Pensato’s (b. 1941) expressionistic black and white canvases and charcoal drawings of bug-eyed iconic characters are the anti-Disney, where her sources are transformed into psychologically charged compositions through barrages of action painting. Peter Saul (b. 1934) and Karl Wirsum (b. 1939) first rose to prominence in the 1960s. Saul’s provocative paintings mix acid color and images of exaggerated violence and sexuality to tackle taboo topics and provide sharp-witted cultural critiques. Wirsum, an original member of Chicago’s surrealist art group the Hairy Who, makes brightly hued paintings and sculptures of original characters, partially inspired by Peruvian and Mezzo-American art.

    The Paul Kasmin Gallery on Tenth Avenue in new York City represents several generations of internationally recognized modern and contemporary painters, sculptors, photographers and filmmakers including Mattia Bonetti, Ian Davenport, Susan Derges, Angus Fairhurst, Barry Flanagan, Caio Fonseca, Walton Ford, Al Held Foundation, Robert Indiana, Mark Innerst, Deborah Kass, Claude and Francois-Xavier Lalanne, Annette Lemieux, Morris Louis, Santi Moix, James Nares, Jules Olitski, Eric Parker, Elliott Puckette, Nancy Rubins, Mark Ryden, Kenny Scharf, Petroc Sesti, Frank Stella, Tseng Kwong Chi and Andy Warhol. Visit the gallery's website at ... http://www.paulkasmingallery.com


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