Sara Anstis and the “Bath”
Perrotin Tokyo is pleased to present Bath, a solo exhibition of paintings and works on paper by London-based artist Sara Anstis (b. 1991 Stockholm). This is her first presentation with the gallery.
“Chambers” Painting: Angela Heisch @ GRIMM Gallery, Amsterdam
GRIMM is pleased to present Chambers, an exhibition of new paintings by Angela Heisch, on view at the Amsterdam gallery from March 15, until May 10, 2025. This is the artist’s third solo exhibition at the gallery and her second in Amsterdam.
Mark Yang: Cryptic Aperture
VSF announces Mark Yang’s fourth solo exhibition with the gallery and his second in our Los Angeles Space, Cryptic Aperture. In 2024 Yang began making paintings in pairs, not opposites or twins, but siblings and companions – compositions that emerge from a similar foundation and evolve into unique expressions of the same DNA. Yang’s signature figurative abstraction is on full display here, playing with deep and detailed looking at historical paintings and compositional strategies, Yang has built a body of work that arrives at an analysis of his understanding of the viewer’s perception of his own signature style.
Time Traveling: Danielle Mckinney in Conversation with Edward Hopper
We don’t need to remind you about our love and inspired writing and conversations about and with Danielle Mckinney: she has been the cover of the print edition and a recent guest on the Radio Juxtapoz podcast. Obviously, part of our admiration and interest in the work is the suspension of time in her works, this sort of incredible sense of intimacy, non-era-defined scenes, the solitary power of being alone. They are, indeed, powerful works. For TEFAF Maastricht, Marianne Boesky will pair the smokey, compelling and singular works of Mckinney with Edward Hopper, he too a painter of suspended time and nostalgic loneliness. It is, in so many ways, a perfect…
Eric McHenry is the One “Paying the Clowns”
I just found out that Britt Lower from Severence joined the circus between season 1 and season 2, and presumably, before they start shooting season 3. I don’t know why this is significant to Eric McHenry’s Paying the Clowns at One Trick Pony, but there is a surreal and sinister sort of portrayal coming from these works. But they are beautiful and quirky, a sort of kitsch meets nostalgic theatrical setting. But something about the performative aspect of the circus connects with a desire to witness an other, a differecnt dimension, a different reality and yet still be connected to the present. These works take you somewhere and give you…
Jeremy Fish and “The Moral Compass”
Harman Projects is bicoastal this week, first with a booth at the Outsider Art Fair and on the left coast, The Moral Compass, the third solo exhibition by 2x Juxtapoz cover artist and San Francisco-based artist Jeremy Fish. This body of work features new paintings and works on paper in collaboration with Fish’s mother Nicole, a life long librarian and teacher. Each piece is an illustration illuminating one of Ms. Fish’s fables that include a simple lesson and kernel of wisdom.
Jamie Reid: Eternal Ecstasy @ John Marchant Gallery, Brighton
John Marchant Gallery is very pleased to present a show of paintings and works on paper by beloved British artist Jamie Reid (1947-2023), focusing principally on a period of work which has largely remained unseen.
Whispers of Kindred Souls: Satoko Okuno @ The Trophy Room LA
The Trophy Room LA is thrilled to present Whispers of Kindred Souls a solo exhibition from artist Satoko Okuno. The exhibition runs from March 1st to March 30th, 2025, and there will be an artist reception on March 1st from 5 to 9 p.m. Please join the artist and gallery in celebration.
Dada Khanyisa: this is for you
In their first exhibition at Sadie Coles HQ, Radio Juxtapoz and featured artist alum Dada Khanyisa presents a group of ‘sculptural paintings’ that look to their immediate community in Cape Town, popular culture, and Khanyisa’s extensive research into the social and political histories of South Africa, producing lively figurative assemblages that convey the vibrancy and diversity of contemporary life. Throughout their labour-intensive practice – incorporating hand carved wood, meticulously compiled sculptural elements and found objects, and painted backdrops borrowed from candid or historic photographic sources – Khanyisa expresses interpersonal dynamics through the lens of their social observations and lived experience.
Many Rooms with “No Room for Emptiness” for Diane Dal-Pra in Milan
MASSIMODECARLO is delighted to present No Room for Emptiness, the first Italian solo exhibition by French artist Diane Dal-Pra. A title like this might hint at an overwhelming fullness, an attempt to keep emptiness at bay – but Dal-Pra subverts this expectation entirely. She courts emptiness, plays with it, stretches it until it becomes tangible. Her paintings exist in a state of beautiful instability: bodies flicker in and out of form, textiles morph into landscapes, and spaces fold in on themselves like fabric.