Tomma Abts
By Laura Hoptman, Bruce Hainley & Jan Verwoert

Phaidon Press, 2008
posted August 18, 2008

Tomma Abts By Laura Hoptman, Bruce Hainley & Jan Verwoert, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image to purchase on Amazon

This volume on Tomma Abts (b. 1967) is published in conjuction with the exhibition at New York's New Museum of Contemporary Art (April 9 - June 29, 2008). It explores how the artist creates forms that delight the eye and challenge the mind. While working within strict parameters, Abts has reinvented abstraction for the twenty-first century. This is the first monograph on Abts, providing an extensive overview of more than ten years of work. It includes illuminating essays by three top critics, as well as full color reproductions of virtually every painting and drawing made by the artist since 1997.

 

Billy Gruner: Collective Monochrome 13
Sarah Keighery: Abstract Lines
Hebel_121, Basel, Switzerland

August 9 — October 11, 2008
posted August 18, 2008

Billy Gruner: Collective Monochrome 13 Sarah Keighery: Abstract Lines Hebel_121, Basel, Switzerland, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Installation by Billy Gruner

Billy Gruner: Collective Monochrome 13 Sarah Keighery: Abstract Lines Hebel_121, Basel, Switzerland, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Installation by Sarah Keighery
Click images for Hebel_121

Hebel_121 presents a two-person exhibition by Australian artists Billy Gruner and Sarah Keighery.  Both Gruner and Keighery will be included in MINUS SPACE's upcoming exhibition at PS1 in October 2008.

 

My Eyes Keep Me in Trouble
The Physics Room, Christchurch, New Zealand

August 20 — September 13, 2008
posted August 18, 2008

My Eyes Keep Me in Trouble The Physics Room, Christchurch, New Zealand, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image for The Physics Room

Organized by CCNOA and curated by Tilman, the exhibition includes artists Justin Andrews (AUS), John Beech (UK/USA), Kjell Bjorgeengen (N), Helen Calder (NZ), Julian Dashper (NZ), Matthew Deleget (USA), Alexandra Dementieva (RUS/B) & Aernoudt Jacobs (B), Ward Denys (B), Billy Gruner (AUS), Andre Hemer (NZ), Clemens Hollerer (A), Andrew Huston (UK/USA), Simon Ingram (NZ), Kyle Jenkins (AUS), Klaas Kloosterboer (Nl), Pippa Makgill (NZ), Rossana Martinez (USA), Simon Morris (NZ), Rose Nolan (AUS), Miranda Parkes (NZ), Léopoldine Roux (F/B), Esther Stocker (I), Tilman (D/B), Emmanuelle Villard (F/B), Dan Walsh (USA), Tamara Zahaykevich (USA), Beat Zoderer (CH).

 

Properties
IS Projects, Leiden, The Netherlands

August 17 — October 5, 2008
posted August 18, 2008

Rene Eicke, Properties IS Projects, Leiden, The Netherlands, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
René Eicke, gesso on canvas, 70x100cm
Click image for IS Projects

Featuring artists Iemke van Dijk, René Eicke, Pieter Geraedts, Jasper van der Graaf, Sarah Keighery, Alexandra Roozen, Léopoldine Roux & Clary Stolte.

 

Und
Croxhapox, Ghent, Belgium

August 31 — September 14, 2008
posted August 15, 2008

Und Croxhapox, Ghent, Belgium, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Image by Ward Deny
Click image for Croxhapox

Organized by Billy Gruner (AUS), Tilman (D/B) & Jan van der Ploeg (NL) in cooperation with CCNOA Brussels (B). Participating artists include: Julian Dashper (NZ), Koen Delaere (NL), Ward Denys (B), Sacha Goerg (CH/B), Michelle Grabner (USA), Billy Gruner (AUS), Ro Hagers ((NL), Kyle Jenkins (AUS), Sarah Keigherty (AUS), Andrew Leslie (AUS), Gerold Miller (D), Leopoldine Roux (F/B), Ton Schuttelaar (NL), Ingrid-Maria Sinibaldi (F), Michal Skoda (CZ), John Tallman (USA), Tilman (D/B), Jan van der Ploeg (NL), Machiel van Soest (NL), Pieter Vermeersch (B), Jan Maarten Voskuil (NL) & Lars Wolter (D).

 

American Abstract Art of the 1930s and 1940s:
The J. Donald Nichols Collection
By Robert Knott

Published by Harry N. Abrams, 1998
posted August 15, 2008

American Abstract Art of the 1930s and 1940s: The J. Donald Nichols Collection By Robert B. Knott, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image to purchase on Amazon

This book is new to us, although it's been out for more than a decade.  We just saw it today at The Morgan Library & Museum bookstore.  About the book: After attending Wake Forest University on an athletic scholarship, J. Donald Nichols played professional baseball with the Baltimore Orioles. From there he went into the real estate development business. He has built more than 175 shopping centers throughout the country, and his company, JDN Realty, is listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Nichols first began collecting American Impressionist paintings in the 1970s, buying one painting as his personal reward for each shopping center he built. After ten years, he began looking for a new area in which to collect. The J. Donald Nichols Collection is now recognized as perhaps the finest collection of American abstract art of the 1930s and 1940s ever assembled.

 

Löffelhardt, Norberg, van der Ploeg
DREI, Raum für gegenwartkunst, Cologne, Germany

August 29 — October 18, 2008
posted August 15, 2008


Jan van der Ploeg, Wall Painting No. 251, 2008
Acrylic on wall, 365 x 372 cm
[no web site]

 

Geo/Metric: Prints and Drawings from the Collection
Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY

June 11 — August 18, 2008
posted August 15, 2008

Geo/Metric: Prints and Drawings from the Collection Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Lyubov Popova, Untitled from Six Prints. (c. 1916-1917)
Linoleum cut title page with water color & gouache
additions from a portfolio of six linoleum cuts

This exhibition, which inaugurates a series of newly opened galleries on the Museum's second floor, surveys the widespread and recurring impulse toward geometric abstraction in modern and contemporary art. Artists representing various movements and geographical backgrounds are featured: Cubist, Dada, and Russian avant-garde artists of the 1910s and 1920s, with their images of flat, intersecting planes and floating shapes; artists associated with Minimalism, Op art, and hard-edge abstraction in the 1960s and 1970s, whose primary interest lay in the investigation of reductive form and color; and contemporary artists who continue to exploit the infinite potential of simple geometries. Among the exhibition's highlights are several recent acquisitions, including major projects by Lyubov Popova (Russian, 1889–1924), Sol LeWitt (American, 1928–2007), Gabriel Orozco (Mexican, b. 1962), and Mark Grotjahn (American, b. 1968).

 

Marietta Hoferer: Off the Grid
Academy Art Museum, Easton, Maryland

August 1-30, 2008
posted August 14, 2008

Marietta Hoferer: Off the Grid Academy Art Museum, Easton, Maryland, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image for Academy Art Museum

Hoferer creates dazzling hybrid forms that are rooted in elements of drawing, collage, craft and the all-encompassing mixed-media. The resulting, unframed works present rich layers of pattern and light that inspire through their craftsmanship and subtle beauty. One reviewer from the Boston Globe offered his observation of Hoferer's work stating, "(They) could be lace doilies, or enlarged snowflakes -- no one like another. . . Sometimes it splatters over a design, as bright as sun on water, but in crystalline patterns. Sometimes it looks like white gold; sometimes it's a shadowy taupe." Hoferer's work can be found in the permanent collections of the Arkansas Arts Center, Little Rock; the Bellagio Collection, Las Vegas; the Busch-Reisinger Museum, Harvard Art Museums; and Werner Kramarsky, New York.

 

Jasper Johns: Gray
By Douglas W. Druick & James Rondeau
Published by Art Institute of Chicago, 2007
posted August 14, 2008

Jasper Johns: Gray By Douglas W. Druick & James Rondeau Published by Art Institute of Chicago, 2007, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image to purchase on Amazon

The exhibition catalogue includes essays by James Rondeau; Douglas Druick; Mark Pascale, associate curator, prints and drawings, Art Institute of Chicago; Richard Shiff, Effie Marie Cain Regents Chair in Art, University of Texas-Austin; Barbara Rose, noted Johns scholar; and Kelly Keegan, assistant painting conservator, and Kristin Lister, conservator of paintings, Art Institute of Chicago; as well as an interview with the artist by Nan Rosenthal, senior consultant, Department of 19th-Century, Modern, and Contemporary Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

 

Leiden Assemblage No. 1
Gallery Le Petit Port, Leiden, The Netherlands

August 24 —September 7, 2008
posted August 14, 2008

Leiden Assemblage No. 1 Gallery Le Petit Port, Leiden, The Netherlands, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image for Gallery Le Petit Port

Gallery Le Petit Port in Leiden presents the international group show Leiden Assemblage No. 1. Guest curators and artists Billy Gruner (AUS) and Jan Maarten Voskuil gathered an international group of artists to integrate their work as a 'social assemblage' in a surround mural by Daniel Gottin (CH). This Swiss artist known for his spatial interventions, often with tape, made a design especially for the front room or window space from Le Petit Port. Invited artists are aside Gottin and the curators Daniel Argyle (AUS), Jasper van der Graaf, Kyle Jenkins (AUS), Andrew Leslie (AUS), Tilman (B), Thomas Wildner, Guido Winkler and Giles Ryder (AUS). They are all working in the 'Modernist' field of non objective art. This is an area nowadays often to be described as a decorative quoting or individual appropriation of former visual
appearances without the original ideological social concepts. In the Leiden assemblage some of this ideology will be revived. By nature of the space, the window gallery is a prominent part of the street, the show will direct itself to virtual everybody passing by; bringing back in memory the ideal social cultural participation. More important, the group concept drives the artists to modestly submit into a Gesamtkunstwerk.

 

Imi Knoebel: 24 Colors—for Blinky, 1977
Dia:Beacon, Beacon, NY

May 17, 2008 — ongoing
posted August 7, 2008

Imi Knoebel: 24 Colors—for Blinky, 1977 Dia:Beacon, Beacon, NY, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Installation view
Click image for Dia Art Foundation

Dia Art Foundation presents Imi Knoebel’s 24 Colors—for Blinky (1977), at Dia:Beacon. This epic cycle of 21 paintings marks Knoebel’s first sustained engagement with color in its manifold guises. Viewed by him as a gift from his close friend, German painter Blinky Palermo, color would become for Knoebel a primary agent in an ongoing exploration of the metaphysics of picture making. This presentation of 24 Colors—for Blinky will be the first time that the work—acquired for Dia’s collection shortly after it was realized—has been shown in North America.

Knoebel made 24 Colors—for Blinky shortly after the death of Palermo, whom he called “the master of color.” To create the monumental work, Knoebel constructed 24 individual panels from wood, none of them containing a right angle, and painted each with a single, unmixed hue, ranging from cadmium orange light and quinacridone crimson to phthalo turquoise green and Paynes grey. All but one of the elements of 24 Colors—for Blinky comprises a single-shaped painted wood element; the exception consists of three such panels superimposed on each other.

In this vibrant suite, Knoebel employed so many different colors that the work connotes the idea of color as a formal entity in and of itself, rather than as a signifying agent. As with key earlier works, the installation of 24 Colors—for Blinky can be variously configured both in terms of sequencing and in the number of elements on view. For the exhibition at Dia:Beacon, 24 Colors—for Blinky has been completely restored by the artist.

 

Recent Brooklyn Rail Posts
posted August 7, 2008

Recent Brooklyn Rail Posts, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn

July 2008
Meeting Imi and Blinky at Dia: Beacon, by Sharon Butler

Philip Guston Works on Paper, by John Yau

June 2008
David Novros with Phong Bui, by Phong Bui

Wynn Kramarsky with William Corbett, by William Corbett

Tribute to Robert Rauschenberg (1925–2008), by Dorothea Rockburne & Nan Rosenthal

Mel Bochner, by David Markus

Milton Resnick: A Question of Seeing, by Thomas Micchelli

Weltanschauung and Abstract Painting, by Robert C. Morgan

Rebecca Horn: Cosmic Maps, by Joan Waltemath

Take Your Time: Olafur Eliasson, by Josh Morgenthau

May 2008
Abts’ Traction, by Sharon L. Butler

Helen Miranda Wilson, by John Yau

April 2008
Tadaaki Kuwayama’s Aesthetics of Infinity
, by Robert C. Morgan

Dan Walsh, by Cassandra Neyenesch

Ruth Root, by Nora Griffin

March 2008
Howard Smith Stroke and Structure, by Joan Waltemath

John Zinsser Recent Work, by Stephanie Buhmann

Agnes Martin, by Ben La Rocco

Thomas Nozkowski Paintings, by John Yau

Harriet Korman Recent Paintings and Drawings, by John Yau

Agnes Martin's Homework, by Jeremy Sigler

Freeze Frame, by Craig Olson

 

Laura Silver on Shinsuke Aso: Postcard (SAPC)
NYFA Current, July 30, 2008

posted August 2, 2008

Laura Silver on Shinsuke Aso: Postcard (SAPC) NYFA Current, July 30, 2008, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image to read article

Laura Silver is a freelance journalist and independent radio producer. She discusses Shinsuke Aso: Postcard (SAPC), presented by MINUS SPACE at the 2008 Atlantic Avenue Art Walk.

 

Subset (Conical Gets Shanghai'd)
Conical, Melbourne, Australia

July 26 — August 16, 2008
posted August 1, 2008

Billy Gruner, Subset (Conical Gets Shanghai'd) Conical, Melbourne, Australia, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Installation view with work by Billy Gruner

Partcipating artists include Daniel Argyle, Billy Gruner, Kyle Jenkins & Tilman.

 

Dirk Rathke: Bildobjekte, Malerie und Zeichnung
Hauser Hofmann Kunst, Thayngen, Switzerland

August 23 — October 4, 2008
posted August 2, 2008

Dirk Rathke: Bildobjekte, Malerie und Zeichnung Hauser Hofmann Kunst, Thayngen, Switzerland, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image for Hauser Hofmann

 

Imageless: The Scientific Study and Experimental Treatment of an Ad Reinhardt Black Painting
Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY

July 11 — September 14, 2008
posted August 2, 2008

Imageless: The Scientific Study and Experimental Treatment of an Ad Reinhardt Black Painting Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Walter Rosenblum. Thomas Hess papers,
Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution
Click image for Guggenheim Museum

Ad Reinhardt’s Black Painting, 1960–66 (1960–66) was donated to the Guggenheim Museum in 2000 by AXA Art Insurance Corporation as a study painting after it was deemed irreparably damaged. Over the course of seven years, conservators, scientists, curators, and artists collaborated to examine the issues surrounding the conservation of this painting, including the inherent vulnerability of monochromatic and minimalist paintings to the aesthetics of aging, experimental solutions for conservation, and the associated ethics of these strategies.

Physical examination and scientific analyses of the study painting contributed to a dossier of information about Reinhardt’s working methods and earlier restoration techniques. These findings are essential to the understanding of how one perceives an imageless surface of flat planes of color, how an artist’s hand (or lack thereof) confers meaning, and how one can define the essential criteria for a painting’s authenticity.

Imageless takes the viewer into the world of the conservator as forensic scientist to uncover the mystery hidden beneath the monochromatic black painting. The cutting-edge technologies used in this research project are being tested to expand the current repertoire of conservation techniques. Science, art, and perception co-mingle in this exploration of the motivation of the artist, materials of the painting, and possible treatment and preservation strategies for artworks that rely on unattenuated surfaces to convey meaning. The inherent fragility of these paintings challenges conservators to maintain a flawless surface while adhering to a stringent code of ethics. For comparative viewing and appreciation of the subtleties of surface, Imageless concludes with a selection of Reinhardt’s black paintings. Presented in low light levels in accordance with the artist’s intent, the paintings offer a rare opportunity to appreciate Reinhardt’s extraordinary technique and meet the perceptual challenges so often neglected by the casual museum visitor.

 

Buckminster Fuller: Starting with the Universe
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY

June 26 — September 21, 2008
posted August 2, 2008

Buckminster Fuller: Starting with the Universe Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Photo Librado Romero/The New York Times
Click image for Whitney Museum

One of the great American visionaries of the twentieth century, R. Buckminster Fuller (1895-1983) endeavored to see what he, a single individual, might do to benefit the largest segment of humanity while consuming the minimum of the earth's resources. Doing "more with less" was Fuller's credo. He described himself as a "comprehensive anticipatory design scientist," setting forth to solve the escalating challenges that faced humanity before they became insurmountable. Fuller's innovative theories and designs addressed fields ranging from architecture, the visual arts, and literature to mathematics, engineering, and sustainability. He refused to treat these diverse spheres as specialized areas of investigation because it inhibited his ability to think intuitively, independently, and, in his words, "comprehensively."

Although Fuller believed in utilizing the latest technology, much of his work developed from his inquiry into "how nature builds." He believed that the tetrahedron was the most fundamental, structurally sound form found in nature; this shape is an essential part of most of his designs, which range in scale from domestic to global. As the many drawings and models in this exhibition attest, Fuller was committed to the physical exploration and visual presentation of his ideas. The results of more than five decades of Fuller's integrated approach toward the design and technology of housing, transportation, cartography, and communication are displayed here, much of it for the first time. This exhibition offers a fresh look at Fuller's life's work for everyone who shares his sense of urgency about homelessness, poverty, diminishing natural resources, and the future of our planet.

 

To Be Looked At...
Larry Becker Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, PA

July — September 2008
posted August 2, 2008

Howard Smith, To Be Looked At... Larry Becker Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, PA, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Howard Smith, Untitled (UBD #5), 2003
Oil on linen, 34 x 32 inches
Click image for Larry Becker

An exhibition of work by gallery and invited artists with some changes and special projects.

 

Op Art Revisited
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY

July 18, 2008— January 25, 2009
August 2, 2008

Op Art Revisited Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image for Albright-Knox Art Gallery

Op Art Revisited: Selections from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery aims to explore the vast influence of Op art that today has seen a resurgence of interest from both contemporary artists and the public alike.


NOS 2008: Open
La Barraliere, Tulette, France

June 15 — September 7, 2008
posted July 29, 2008

Lars Wolter, NOS 2008: Open La Barraliere, Tulette, France, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Installation view of work by Lars Wolter
Click image for NOS

Non-Objectif Sud (NOS) presents its third annual exhibition entitled NOS Open. NOS invites artists, curators and colleagues to spend several days together, collaborate on and install an exhibition.
This summer, the participating international artists include Tanya Barr, Tania Kitchell, Ati Maier, Clive Murphy, Gary Rough, Blair Thurman and Lars Wolter who are exhibiting at NOS for the first time. Working in a variety of media from wall painting, drawing, photography and video to site-specific installations, sculpture and landwork, several artists interact with the surrounding provencal landscape.

Site-specific projects include Gary Rough’s first land work titled Eighteenth hole (for the Stonebreakers), a homage to St Andrew’s famed golf course, and Lars Wolter’s concrete/non-objective wall mural Untitled, a fractured grid overlayed with negative space.  Other works by Rough comprise two series of drawings and an installation entitled Not too many, not too few , thirteen crosses made on site with materials gleaned from the property as part of the NOS residency. Tanya Barr introduces her first video entitled Principle of Polarity, a pulsating nocturne shot from the rooftops of Williamsburg in Brooklyn as well as an installation entitled As Above, So Below created on site.  Tania Kitchell’s The Garden Grows presents a series of wooden reliefs composed of drawings and texts addressing ideas of space and vegetation in the landscape and her own memories of previous visits to La Barralière. Ati Maier’s compact paintings and drawings explode the idea of landscape from a singular view to a weaving vision of terrrestrial, cosmic and abstracted spaces in carnival colours. Her paintings carefully control a fleating chaos before the viewer, up–ending any sence of classical perspective. Clive Murhpy’s piece, a searing text into the wall, entitled You are beautiful because we care, was created as a performance during the opening. Blair Thurman works primarily in neon and his piece Good Hex offers a contemporary hex for the French barn.

An illustrated catalogue with a text by the free-lance writer Mark Baillie will presently be available.

 

Meg Shirayama: L Series Paintings
Rocket Gallery, London, United Kingdom

August 1 —September 27, 2008
posted July 29, 2008

Meg Shirayama: L Series Paintings Rocket Gallery, London, United Kingdom, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image for Rocket Gallery

First solo show by Slade 07 graduate, with minimal three-dimensional paintings which are influenced by aspects of furniture design and which explore colour and materials.

 

Sequence: Susanne Ackermann & Rossana Martinez
Gallery Sonja Roesch, Houston, TX

July 12 — August 30, 2008
posted July 6, 2008

Sequence: Susanne Ackermann & Rossana Martinez, Gallery Sonja Roesch, Houston, TX, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Drawings by Susanne Ackermann & Rossana Martinez (left to right)
Click image for Gallery Sonja Roesch

Gallery Sonja Roesch presents the exhibition Sequence, featuring work by Susanne Ackermann (Karlsruhe, Germany) and Rossana Martinez (Brooklyn, NY). The line, a basic mark-making gesture, transforms itself when repeated. It is through the layering and repetition, or sequence, of a line that shape, form, and depth are achieved. Both Susanne Ackermann and Rossana Martinez explore the line in a non-representational, expressive, and almost meditative manner.

Susanne Ackermann’s drawings examine the line quality within the self-imposed rigid process-based work ethic. She carefully investigates not only placement and arrangement of lines, but also the color dynamics between the lines. Through repetition and arrangement, the individual colored pencil lines become part of shapes that in turn take on form. Rossana Martinez, working conceptually project based, is interested in the Body-Space relationship - a body moving through space in relation to nature and in case of this work, the ocean. A single line made out of blue thread stays constant as the drawn colored pencil lines change from rigid to dynamic.

 

Anonima Group Archive
posted July 6, 2008

Anonima Group Archive, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image for Anonima Group Archive

The American artist collaborative, Anonima Group, was founded in Cleveland, Ohio in 1960 by Ernst Benkert, Francis Hewitt and Ed Mieczkowski. Propelled by their rejection of the cult of the individual ego and automatic style of the Abstract Expressionists, the artists worked collaboratively on grid-based, spatially fluctuating drawings and paintings that were precise investigations of the scientific phenomena and psychology of optical perception. The work was accompanied by writings: proposals, projects and manifestos - socialist in nature - which the artists considered essential to the experience and understanding of their work.

Their drawings, paintings and writings, which had much in common with the positions of artist Ad Reinhardt, and with the Russian Constructivists, were included in the 1965 Responsive Eye exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art. Along with other artists in the exhibit , Anonima's work was incorrectly relegated to what came to be the highly commercialized and publicized category of Op Art. A recent reconsideration and recontextualization of Op Art, the expansive 2006 Optic Nerve exhibit at the Columbus Museum of Art, places the Anonima as the sole American collaborative group, along with the European Zero Group, Gruppo N, GRAV and others, who were examining new optical information at that time.

 

New IS Editions Box Available: Speed of Colour
posted July 1, 2008

New IS Editions Box Available: Speed of Colour, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image for IS Editions

IS projects announces its second limited edition box featuring work by the artists from the show 'The Speed of Colour'. This box contains 5 pigment piezo prints (including a folding sculptural pop up piece) and one silkscreen. This is a limited edition of 41 sets and sells for 235 Euros. Boxes may be ordered from guido[at]guidowinkler.com.

Includes prints by Henriëtte van 't Hoog (pop-up), John de rijke (silkscreen), John Tallman, Gilbert Hsiao, Eric de Nie &
Tony Harding.  Essay by Marijke Uittenbroek. Dimensions 30x42cm.

 

Belinda Cadbury & Takashi Suzuki
Bartha Contemporary, London, United Kingdom

July 3-26, and by appointment until September 6, 2008
posted July 1, 2008

Belinda Cadbury & Takashi Suzuki, Bartha Contemporary, London, United Kingdom, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Works by Takashi Suzuki
Click image for Bartha Contemporary

Bartha Contemporary is delighted to announce the forthcoming exhibition of works by Belinda Cadbury and Takashi Suzuki. The exhibition will showcase a selection of recent paintings by Takashi Suzuki and a single site-specific work on paper by Belinda Cadbury.

 

La Vie en Rond
H29, Brussels, Belgium

June 21 — September 20, 2008
posted June 21, 2008

La Vie en Rond, H29, Brussels, Belgium, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image for H29

H29 presents La Vie en Rond, including nearly 50 artists from Belgium, Europe, the US and Australia. Many of the participating artist have long been working exclusively with the formal vocabulary of the round: meander, dot, circle or shere. The media ranges from wall painting, video, photography, sculpture and performance.

 

Manfred Mohr: Upcoming Exhibitions
posted May 24, 2008

Manfred Mohr, Upcoming Exhibitions, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Manfred Mohr, P350-d, 1984-91, 200 x 200 cm
View of It from Bit: Manfred Mohr & Gabriel Orozco
Grazyna Kulczyk Foundation

bit international - [Nove] tendencije
Computer und visuelle Forschung - Zagreb 1961-1973

ZKM | Medienmuseum Karlsruhe, Germany
February 23, 2008 — February 22, 2009

Bildertausch 3: New Presentation of Marli Hoppe-Ritter Collection
Ritter Museum, Waldenbuch, Germany
May 18 — September 28, 2008

It from Bit: Manfred Mohr & Gabriel Orozco
Grazyna Kulczyk Foundation, Poznan, Poland
May 31 — September 30, 2008

Manfred Mohr: "visuell zuhören"
Kunstverein Pforzheim, Germany
June 8 — August 24, 2008


No Chromopobia
OK Harris Works of Art, New York, NY

May 31-July 11, September 2-6, 2008
posted May 22, 2008

No Chromophobia, OK Harris Works of Art, Li-Trincere, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Works by Li-Trincere
Click image for OK Harris

An exhibition of non-objective color paintings. Participating artists include Carla Aurich, Diane Ayott, Kate Beck, Siri Berg, Sharon Brant, Cathleen Daley, Julie Gross, Molly Heron, Kazuko Inoue, Marthe Keller, Joanne Klein, Pat Lipsky, Joanne Mattera, Lynn McCarty, Joan Mellon, Margaret Neill, Mary Obering, Doug Ohlson, Rose Olson, Paula Overbay, Susan Post, Cora Roth, Rebecca Salter, Susan Schwalb, Yuko Shiraishi, Louise P. Sloane, Linda Stillman, Rella Stuart-Hunt, Soonae Tark, Li Trincere, Suzanne Ulrich, Jean Wolff, & Tamar Zinn.

 

Dan Flavin: Constructed Light
The Pulitzer Foundation, St. Louis, MO

February 1 — October 4, 2008
posted May 22, 2008

Dan Flavin, Constructed Light, Pulitzer Foundation, St. Louis, Missouri, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Cilck for The Pulitzer Foundation

The focus of this exhibition is the experience of Dan Flavin's work - sculptural installations composed of mass-produced light fixtures and fluorescent tubes - within the architecture and shifting natural light of the Pulitzer building.

 

Focus: Ad Reinhardt and Mark Rothko
Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY

March 7, 2008 – ongoing
posted May 8, 2008

Focus, Ad Reinhardt and Mark Rothko, Museum of Modern Art, New York, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image for Museum of Modern Art

This installation, drawn from the Museum's collection of paintings by Ad Reinhardt and Mark Rothko, focuses specifically on the fertile years between the late 1940s and the early 1960s, during which each artist identified the style and format that would engage him for the rest of his career. Reinhardt's and Rothko's ideas about form and color challenged and reconsidered European artistic traditions and philosophies, giving rise to a unique American sensibility in art in general, and particularly in painting. Their paintings were characterized not by the grand, expressive gestures and brushwork of their Abstract Expressionist colleagues, including Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning, but rather by subtleties in color, form, and composition.

 

On Kawara: 10 Tableaux and 16,952 Pages
Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, TX

May 18 — August 24, 2008
posted May 8, 2008

On Kawara, 10 Tableaux and 16,952 Pages, Dallas Museum of Art, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image for Dallas Museum of Art

For more than four decades, On Kawara has created paintings, drawings, and books that mark time in various ways, from paintings of individual dates to mailed postcards to diagrams and charts of weeks and months. On Kawara: 10 Tableaux and 16,952 Pages at the Dallas Museum of Art will mark one of Kawara’s very rare exhibitions in a United States museum, and will in fact be his first American museum exhibition in fifteen years. Kawara’s art is a record of life, not through self-expression but through everyday numbers, words, and images found in the public realm.

In this exhibition, he will feature his largest-scale paintings. A group of these make reference to the United States’ moon landings in July 1969, the first time that humankind was able to see its habitat within the context of the universe as never before. The paintings of five decades were produced in the years 1966, 1976, 1986, 1996, and 2006, creating a self-portrait of the artist.

 

Anish Kapoor: Past, Present, Future
Boston Institute of Contemporary Art , Boston, MA

May 30 — September 7, 2008
posted May 8, 2008

Anish Kapoor, Past, Present, Future, Boston Insitute of Contemporary Art, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Anish Kapoor, Past, Present, Future, 2006
Click image for Boston ICA

Anish Kapoor: Past, Present, Future assembles 13 works made since 1980, a period in which Kapoor's sculptures and installations have grown increasingly ambitious and complex. The first U.S. museum survey of Kapoor's art in more than 15 years, and the first ever to be seen on the East Coast, the exhibition premieres a new resin sculpture and features many pieces on view for the first time in this country.

 

Inner and Outer Space
Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh, PA

Curated by Dara Meyers-Kingsley
April 26, 2008 — January 11, 2009
posted May 4, 2008

Inner and Outer Space, Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh, Sarah Oppenheimer, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Work by Sarah Oppenheimer
Click image for Mattress Factory

 

Action/Abstraction: Pollock, de Kooning,
and American Art, 1940-1976
The Jewish Museum, New York, NY

May 4 — September 21, 2008
posted May 4, 2008

Action Abstraction, Pollock, de Kooning, and American Art, 1940-1976, The Jewiish Museum, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image for The Jewish Museum

In Action/Abstraction: Pollock, de Kooning, and American Art, 1940-1976, the first major U.S. exhibition in 20 years to rethink Abstract Expressionism and the movements that followed, over fifty key works by 32 artists – among them Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Helen Frankenthaler, Mark Rothko – will be viewed from the perspectives of influential, rival art critics Clement Greenberg and Harold Rosenberg, the artists, and popular culture.

 

Donald Judd: The Writing of 'Specific Objects', 1965
Judd Foundation, Marfa, TX

May 3 — September 30, 2008
posted April 27, 2008

Donald Judd, The Writing of Specific Objects, 1965, Judd Foundation, Marfa, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Click image for Judd Foundation

 

> log archive

 

UPCOMING PROJECTS

MINUS SPACE
Curated by Phong Bui
P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center / MoMA

Long Island City, NY

October 19, 2008 — January 19, 2009

MINUS SPACE Curated by Phong Bui P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center / MoMA Long Island City, NY
Click image for P.S.1

Curated by Phong Bui, artist, Brooklyn Rail publisher, and P.S.1. Curatorial Advisor, the exhibition will feature 54 artists from 14 countries.  The exhibition will mark MINUS SPACE's 5th anniversary. Please consider making a donation.

Participating artists include:
Soledad Arias, Shinsuke Aso, Marcus Bering, Hartmut Böhm, Richard Bottwin, Sharon Brant, Michael Brennan, Henry Brown, Vicente Butron, Bibi Calderaro, Melanie Crader, Mark Dagley, Julian Dashper, Christopher Dean, Matthew Deleget, Lynne Eastaway, Gabriele Evertz, Daniel Feingold, Kevin Finklea, Linda Francis, Zipora Fried, Daniel Göttin, Julio Grinblatt, Billy Gruner, Terry Haggerty, Lynne Harlow, Gilbert Hsiao, Andrew Huston, Simon Ingram, Kyle Jenkins, Mick Johnson, Steve Karlik, Sarah Keighery, Danny Lacy, Andrew Leslie, Daniel Levine, Sylvan Lionni, Lotte Lyon, Gerhard Mantz, Rossana Martinez, Juan Matos Capote, Douglas Melini, Manfred Mohr, Salvatore Panatteri, Dirk Rathke, Karen Schifano, Analia Segal, Edward Shalala, Tilman, Li-Trincere, Jan van der Ploeg, Don Voisine, Douglas Witmer & Michael Zahn

 

PAST PROJECTS

Shinsuke Aso: Postcard (SAPC)
Presented by MINUS SPACE
Atlantic Avenue ArtWalk08

Atlantic Gardens, Brooklyn, NY

June 2008

Shinsuke Aso, Postcard, SAPC, Presented by MINUS SPACE, Atlantic Avenue ArtWalk 08, Atlantic Gardens, Brooklyn
Click image for Atlantic Avenue ArtWalk 2008

MINUS SPACE presented Shinsuke Aso: Postcard (SAPC) — part installation, part performance, part micro enterprise.  SAPC is a postcard company run by artist Shinsuke Aso as a long-term performance. He makes postcards with found cardboard, packages, newspapers, and magazines, and then sells them for 25 cents each. The idea for SAPC derives from the global market system, in which anything can be a source of business, as well as how small economies can depend on trust among people. The postcard is simultaneously an artwork and a communication device, all depending on how the audience chooses to view it.

Shinsuke Aso (b. 1979, Gunma, Japan) has exhibited his work nationally and internationally.  Recent exhibitions include Tobey Fine Arts, The Center for Book Arts, Flux Factory (all NYC), and Maebashi Cultural Institute (Gunma, Japan).  He holds a BFA from the School of Visual Arts, NYC, where he first began his SAPC project. Aso lives and works in Brooklyn.

Shinsuke Aso: Postcard (SAPC) was generously supported by Barbara Koz Paley, Art Assets & Atlantic Assets Group.

 

Words Fail Me
Steve Karlik, Li-Trincere & Don Voisine

H29, Brussels, Belgium

Curated by Matthew Deleget
May 24 - June 7, 2008

> WEB SITE

Words Fail Me, Steve Karlik, Li-Trincere, Don Voisine, H29, Brussels, Belgium
Installation view (left to right): Li-Trincere, Steve Karlik & Don Voisine

H29 presented Words Fail Me, a group exhibition featuring artists Steve
Karlik, Li-Trincere & Don Voisine. The exhibition was curated by Matthew Deleget, artist and co-founder of MINUS SPACE in Brooklyn, New York.

Abstraction has a tenuous relationship with language. It often eludes description. Words Fail Me included three New York City-based painters, each of whom contributed one painting to the exhibition.

 

Machine Learning — Henry Brown, Terry Haggerty, Gilbert Hsiao & Douglas Melini
Gallery Sonja Roesch, Houston, TX
Curated by Matthew Deleget
March 8 – May 3, 2008
> WEB SITE

Machine Learning, Henry Brown, Terry Haggerty, Gilbert Hsiao, Douglas Melini, Gallery Sonja Roesch, Houston
Click to view exhibition

 

Machine Learning, Reductive Artists Get to the Point, by Olivia Flores Alvarez, Houston Press, March 9, 2007, Gallery Sonja Roesch, Houston   Machine Learning exhibition catalog, Henry Brown, Terry Haggerty, Douglas Melini, Gilbert Hsiao, by Matthew Deleget
Machine Learning:
Reductive artists get to the point
by Olivia Flores Alvarez
Houston Press, March 9, 2007
  Machine Learning catalog
by Matthew Deleget
     
The Front Row, Machine Learning at Gallery Sonja Roesch, Interview with Matthew Deleget, Henry Brown, Gilbert Hsiao, Houston Public Radio KUHF.FM, April 24, 2008    
The Front Row:
Machine Leaning at Gallery Sonja Roesch, Interview with Henry Brown, Matthew Deleget & Gilbert Hsiao
Houston Public Radio (KUHF.FM)
April 24, 2008
   

 

A traveling exhibition examining pattern painting in the information age, featuring four NYC-based artists Henry Brown, Terry Haggerty, Gilbert Hsiao & Douglas Melini.

 

Mark Dagley
Shaped Canvas, Selections from 1987
MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn, NY
April 2008

Mark Dagley, Shaped Canvas, Selections from 1987, MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn
Click to view exhibition

 

Mark Dagley, Shaped Canvas, Selections for 1987, exhibition catalog, Matthew Deleget, Nora Griffin, Don Voisine, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn, Abaton Book Company, Jersey City, New Jersey   The Girls on YouTube, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Mark Dagley: Shaped Canvas, Selections from 1987 catalog
  The Girls on YouTube
Video 1  | Video 2
     
Plastic Fantastic Formalism, by Nora Griffin, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn   Punk Noise & Paint, Interview with Mark Dagley, by Don Voisine, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Plastic Fantastic Formalism
by Nora Griffin
  Punk Noise & Paint
Interview with Mark Dagley
by Don Voisine

 

Upside Down
Sydney Non Objective Artists
MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn, NY
March 2008

Upside Down, Sydney Non Objective Artists, MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn
Click to view exhibition

 

Post-Formalism in Recent Australia Art, Artist Notes by Billy Gruner, Sydney Ball, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn   Myopia part 1, by Danny Lacy, Sir Donald Bradman, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Post-Formalism in Recent
Australian Art
Artist Notes by Billy Gruner
Image: Sydney Ball,
Canto No. XXX, 1966
  Myopia (part 1)
by Danny Lacy
Image: Sir Donald Bradman

 

Upside Down featured eleven artists affiliated with Sydney Non Objective (SNO), Australia. The exhibition included work in a variety of media exploring a broad range of conceptual and formal concerns. Many of the artists exhibited in the United States for the first time.

Participating artists included:
Justin Andrews, Vicente Butron, Lynne Eastaway, Anthony Farrell, Kate Fulton, Billy Gruner, Kyle Jenkins, Sarah Keighery, Andrew Leslie, John Nixon & Salvatore Panatteri

 

Lynne Harlow: BEAT
MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn, NY

December 2007
> WEB SITE

Lynne Harlow, Beat, MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn
Click to view exhibition

 

Small Differences Make All the Difference, by Lynne Harlow, Pictures of Nothing, Kirk Varnedoe, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
  Interview with Lynne Harlow, by Matthew Deleget, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Small Differences Make All
the Difference
by Lynne Harlow
  Interview with Lynne Harlow
by Matthew Deleget

 

 

Machine Learning — Henry Brown, Terry Haggerty, Gilbert Hsiao, Douglas Melini & Michael Zahn
The Painting Center
, New York, NY
Curated by Matthew Deleget
November 27 - December 22, 2007
> WEB SITE

Machine Learning, Henry Brown, Terry Haggerty, Gilbert Hsiao, Douglas Melini, Michael Zahn, The Painting Center, New York
Click to view exhibition

 

Intelligent Design, by John Goodrich, New York Sun, December 27, 2007, The Painting Center, Henry Brown, Terry Haggerty, Gilbert Hsiao, Douglas Melini
  Machine Learning exhibition catalog, Henry Brown, Terry Haggerty, Douglas Melini, Gilbert Hsiao, by Matthew Deleget
Intelligent Design
by John Goodrich
New York Sun
December 27, 2007
  Machine Learning catalog
by Matthew Deleget

 

A traveling exhibition examining pattern painting in the information age, featuring four NYC-based artists Henry Brown, Terry Haggerty, Gilbert Hsiao & Douglas Melini, with a special project room installation by Michael Zahn.

 

 

TILMAN
LOST AND FOUND | Concrete Findings

MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn, NY
September 2007

Tilman, Lost and Found, Concrete Findings, MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn
Click to view exhibition

 

Lost and Found, Concrete Findings, by Tilman, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn   Tilman, by Barbara A. MacAdam, ArtNews, January 2008, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
LOST AND FOUND
Concrete Findings
by Tilman
  Tilman
by Barbara A. MacAdam
ARTnews, January 2008
     
     
Interview with Tilman, by Chris Ashley, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn  
Interview with Tilman
by Chris Ashley
   

 

 

Machine Learning — Henry Brown, Terry Haggerty, Gilbert Hsiao & Douglas Melini
Boyden Gallery, St. Mary's College of Maryland
St. Mary's City, Maryland
Curated by Matthew Deleget
September 4-28, 2007
> WEB SITE

Machine Learning, Henry Brown, Terry Haggerty, Gilbert Hsiao, Douglas Melini, Boyden Gallery, St. Mary's College of Maryland, St. Mary's City
Click to view exhibition

A traveling exhibition examining pattern painting in the information age, featuring four NYC-based artists Henry Brown, Terry Haggerty, Gilbert Hsiao & Douglas Melini.

 

 

Escape from New York
Sydney Non Objective, Sydney, Australia

Curated by Matthew Deleget
August 3 - September 2, 2007
> WEB SITE

Escape from New York, Sydney Non Objective, Sydney, Australia
Click to view exhibition

A group exhibition surveying reductive strategies by artists living in and around New York City.  Each artist presented a single work, as well as an open letter to the artist community affiliated with Sydney Non Objective.  Participating artists included:

Soledad Arias, Richard Bottwin, Sharon Brant, Michael Brennan, Bibi Calderaro, Mark Dagley, Gabriele Evertz, Daniel Feingold, Kevin Finklea, Linda Francis, Zipora Fried, Julio Grinblatt, Lynne Harlow, Gilbert Hsiao, Andrew Huston, Steve Karlik, Daniel Levine, Sylvan Lionni, Rossana Martinez, Juan Matos Capote, Manfred Mohr, Karen Schifano, Analia Segal, Edward Shalala, Robert Swain, Li-Trincere, Don Voisine, Douglas Witmer & Michael Zahn

 

 

Michael Zahn
This, That, and the Other

MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn, NY
April 2007

Michael Zahn, This, That & the Other, MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn
Click to view exhibition

 

Interview with Michael Zahn, by Michael Brennan, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Interview with Michael Zahn
by Michael Brennan

 

The Greatest Game of All, by Michael Zahn, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
The Greatest Game of All
by Michael Zahn

     
Tiptoeing the Line, by Patrick Kennedy, Doylebrau, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Tiptoeing the Line
by Patrick Kennedy
Doylebrau.com
  What's This Shit Called Love, by Michael Zahn, NYFA Current, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
What's This Shit Called Love?
by Michael Zahn
NYFA Current

 

 

Michael Brennan
Knife Paintings

MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn, NY
December 2006

Michael Brennan, Knife Paintings, MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn
Click to view exhibition

 

Interview with Michael Zahn, by Michael Brennan, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Interview with Michael Brennan
by Michael Zahn
 
Profile on Michael Brennan & MINUS SPACE, Neighborhood Beat, Brooklyn Community Access Television, BCAT, MINUS SPACE, Brooklyn
Profile on Michael Brennan
& MINUS SPACE
Neighborhood Beat, Brooklyn Community Access Television
(see Episode 31)
     
Recent Texts by Michael Brennan
* Robert Yasuda at Elizabeth Harris Gallery (December 2006)
* Don Voisine and Richard Bottwin at Metaphor Contemporary Art (May 2006)
* Stephen Ellis at Von Lintel Gallery (May 2006)
* Joseph Marioni at Peter Blum Gallery (May 2006)
* Harvey Quaytman at David McKee Gallery (March 2005)
* Johanna Pousette-Dart at Charles Cowles Gallery (June 2004)
* David Reed: The Painter and Late Style (November 2004)
* Tony Smith at Matthew Marks Gallery, Anish Kapoor at Barbara Gladstone Gallery (July 2004)
* Jake Berthot at McKee Gallery
(March 2004)
* Terry Winters at Matthew Marks Gallery (December 2003)
* Bill Jensen at Mary Boone Gallery (July 2003)

 

 

Gilbert Hsiao
Two Vinyls
MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn, NY
September 2006

Gilbert Hsiao, Two Vinyls, MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn
Click to view exhibition

 

 

Jan van der Ploeg
MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn, NY
July 2006

Jan van der Ploeg, MINUS SPACE project space, Brooklyn
Click to view exhibition

 

> project space archive

 
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