Symbiosis at Berkshire Botanical Garden

Berkshire Botanical Garden presents Symbiosis, the first of a four-part art exhibition.

Including outdoor sculptures in the gardens and indoor artwork in the Leonhardt Galleries, “Symbiosis” aesthetically merges art and the botanical world. Curated by renowned art collector Beth Rudin DeWoody, “Symbiosis” will not only focus on the interaction between two organisms that mutually benefit each other, but also will speak in a greater sense about the overall interconnectivity of living things. 

“I am thrilled to continue my ongoing collaboration with the Berkshire Botanical Garden — this time with ‘Symbiosis,”’ said DeWoody, who curated last year’s “Taking Flight” sculpture exhibit at BBG. “Throughout my collecting, I see patterns in the works that artists are creating. This exhibition focuses on the natural world and the relationships among living things and is reflective of what I have been seeing within the greater art world.”

“I am bringing to BBG lots of exciting, emerging artists that have been on my radar for a while,” DeWoody continued. “I’m also happy to show artists within this exhibition that are more world-renowned. Curating always gives me the opportunity to support and share my vision beyond just my collection. Enjoy!”

Chairman of The Rudin Family Foundations and Executive Vice President of Rudin Management, DeWoody is known for her vast art collection, which she houses and exhibits by appointment at The Bunker Artspace in West Palm Beach, Fla. She is the Vice Chairman of the Whitney Museum of American Art and Life Trustee at The New School in New York City. Her board affiliations also include Empowers Africa, Save A Child India, Inc, The Glass House in New Canaan, Conn., and the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles.

The outdoor sculpture portion of “Symbiosis” is on exhibit from June 10 through Oct. 28. It will feature works by Michele Oka Doner, Daniel Gordon, Brandon Lomax, Yassi Mazandi, Thaddeus Mosley, Ben Wolf Noam, Kiki Smith, Ned Smyth, Wade Tullier, and Erwin Wurm.

The first of three indoor “Symbiosis” exhibits this season in BBG’s Leonhardt Galleries will run from June 10 through July 24. It will feature works by Jose Alvarez (D.O.P.A.), Ann Craven, Michele Benjamin, William Binnie, DABSMYLA, Robert Davis, E.V. Day, Jordan Doner, Walton Ford, Daniel Gordon, Karen Gunderson, Judi Harvest, Steven & William Ladd, Lee Relvas, Kathy Ruttenberg, Sean Mellyn, Dana Sherwood, Alan Sonfist, Ana María Velasco, Paul Villinski, LeRone Wilson, Rob Wynne, and Firooz Zahedi.

The second indoor exhibition will run from July 29 through Sept. 11, and feature works by Christopher Adams, Charles Arnoldi, L.C. Armstrong, Madeleine Bialke, David Brooks, Leidy Churchman, Peter Dayton, Margot Glass, Mimi Gross, Paula Hayes, Robert Hawkins, Marc Horowitz, Kathy Klein, Seffa Klein, Nancy Monk, Charles Ray, Tomás Saraceno, Max Hooper Schneider, Katherine Sherwood, Simone Shubuck, Coleen Sterritt, and Tabboo!

The third indoor exhibition will run from Sept. 16 through Oct. 30, and feature works by John McAllister, Lou Beach, Helen Chung, Elliot Green, Adler Guerrier, Sophia Heymans, Marsia Holzer, Max Jansons, Poppy Jones, Iran Issa-Khan, Lacey Leonard, Matt Murphy, Peter Nadin, Rose Nestler, Jonathan Peck, Alexandra Penney, Rob Raphael, Megumi Shinozaki, Elizabeth Thompson, Celina Teague, Henry Vincent, Gabrielle Vitollo, Shanna Waddell, Faith Wilding, and Anna Zemánková.

“Symbiosis” is produced by Laura Dvorkin, co-curator of The Bunker Artspace and Beth Rudin DeWoody Collection.


AG2021-W&E_1890103a3

Untitled (Wander and Errancies–memories within; citrus in Saint Augustine). 2021. Archival pigment print. MNP.

Des grains de poussière sur la mer: Sculpture contemporaine des Caraïbes françaises et d’Haïti 

Dust Specks on the Sea: Contemporary Sculpture from the French Caribbean & Haiti opens on June 11 at Villa du Parc Contemporary Art Center in Annemasse, France; show runs through September 18, 2022. 

Raphaël Barontini, Sylvia Berté, Julie Bessard, Hervé Beuze, Jean-François Boclé, Alex Burke, Vladimir Cybil Charlier, Gaëlle Choisne, Ronald Cyrille, Jean-Ulrick Désert, Kenny Dunkan, Edouard Duval-Carrié, Adler Guerrier, Jean-Marc Hunt, Nathalie Leroy-Fiévée, Audry Liseron-Monfils, Louisa Marajo, Ricardo Ozier-Lafontaine, Jérémie Paul, Marielle Plaisir, Michelle Lisa Polissaint & Najja Moon, Tabita Rezaire, Yoan Sorin, Jude Papaloko Thegenus, Kira Tippenhauer

Des grains de poussière sur la mer – Sculpture contemporaine des Caraïbes françaises et d’Haïti présente les œuvres de vingt-six artistes issus de la Guadeloupe, de la Martinique, de la Guyane française et d’Haïti. L’exposition met en scène différentes approches matérielles et conceptuelles témoignant des pratiques des artistes de cette région du monde ; elle vise à souligner leur participation à un monde de l’art globalisé tout en poussant dans ses retranchements la question de savoir qui est au « centre » et qui est à la « périphérie ». Conçue à partir du médium de la sculpture, l’exposition présente les œuvres d’art de manière à la fois distincte et intégrée afin d’évoquer un réseau d’idées autour du patrimoine, de l’histoire, de l’identité, du corps social et de la politique.

L’exposition Des grains de poussière sur la mer – Sculpture contemporaine des Caraïbes françaises et d’Haïti a été créée par Arden Sherman pour la Hunter East Harlem Gallery du Hunter College New York en 2018. Elle a été rendue possible par le soutien généreux des services culturels de l’ambassade de France aux Etats-Unis et du Hunter College. Elle a également été soutenue par les directions des affaires culturelles de Martinique et de Guadeloupe, et la fondation FACE.

En France, l’exposition est coproduite par le Hunter College de New York, la Villa du Parc (74) et la Ferme du Buisson (77), centres d’art contemporain d’intérêt national.

Heitor dos Prazeres

Heitor dos Prazeres
(b. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 1898 – d. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 1966)
Sem título (A volta da roça), not dated
[Untitled (Return from the Plantation)]Oil on canvas
15.75 × 22.8 in.
Collection Museu de Arte de São Paulo Assis Chateaubriand
Gift of Maurício Buck, 2016
MASP.01651
© Patrimônio Família Heitor dos Prazeres
Digital image courtesy of Museu de Arte de São Paulo Assis Chateaubriand (MASP)
Heitor dos Prazeres
Sem título (Jogo de poker), 1963
[Untitled (Poker Game)]Oil on canvas
19 × 23.37 in.
Collection El Museo del Barrio, New York
Gift from Gale Simmons, Craig Duncan and Lynn Tarbox in memory of Barbara Duncan,
2007
2007.6.45
© Patrimônio Família Heitor dos Prazeres
Digital Image © El Museo del Barrio, N.Y. | Photo: Martin Seck
Heitor dos Prazeres
Festa de São João, 1942
[St. John’s Festival]Oil on canvas
25.5 × 31.75 in.
The Museum of Modern Art, New York
Inter-American Fund, 773.1942
© Patrimônio Família Heitor dos Prazeres
Digital Image © 2018 The Museum of Modern Art, N.Y./Licensed by SCALA/Art
Resource, NY

via Popular Painters & Other Visionaries at El Museo del Barrio. Checklist (pdf). Youtube.


Heitor dos Prazeres
Untitled, 1963
Oil on canvas
17 9/10 × 21 7/10 inches.
Presented by Almeida e Dale Galeria de Arte at Expo Chicago 2022.

David Castillo presents Poetics of Place

David Castillo presents Poetics of Place, a group exhibition of paintings, prints, and photographs by María de los Angeles Rodríguez Jiménez, Adler Guerrier, and Lyle Ashton Harris.

Poetics of Place charts three trajectories—tracing the distinct practices of the represented artists—through which the notion of place is deconstructed, reimagined, and conveyed visually as an artifact of personal experience. The exhibition approaches place beyond its geographical dimensions and envisions it as a temporal construct and as an embodied extension of the self. At the center of Poetics of Place are the means and methods through which each artist locates and maps themself within their work. Referring to Édouard Glissant’s rhizomatic evocation of poetics, the exhibition acknowledges that place is conceived along a multiplicity of shifting and non-linear conditions that one is never fully able to pin down and grasp.

For Rodríguez Jiménez, place becomes localized in her own understanding of the body as a vessel that contains various versions of the self. Referencing personal histories of migration and the at-times sanguineous corporeality of Afro-Cuban ritual traditions, the artist’s womb-like works confront her own feelings of being torn between diverging conceptions of herself. Her sculptural paintings are made of mixed materials including paint, razor wire, wax, and textiles that drape, stretch, or fold in on themselves. The structures of Rodríguez Jiménez’s works approximate the fleshiness and fragility of the body, heightened in these times by the contexts of pandemic, isolation, and loss. Her practice alludes to place as embodiment and the body as a place that cannot be adequately contained or defined.

Inhabiting the role of flâneur and cultural cartographer, Guerrier approaches the at-times mundane visual vernaculars of cities as a means of deducing the social and political circumstances that have brought to bear those urban aesthetics. Across yards, parks, sidewalks, and streets in locales like Miami and San Antonio, Guerrier approaches place as a strategy towards understanding the Utopian impulse, its material impossibility, and how populations have come to live among the peculiar and overlapping conditions of natural and built environments. Capturing these sites on camera and translating them into lithographs of overlapped shapes and subjects, Guerrier looks to place as an ideological space that is continually reimagined and recontextualized in every instance of representation.

In his photographic practice, Harris mines periods of his own past to relate personal encounters of queer expression, representation, and life. Many of his works are derived from a vast archive of 35 mm Ektachrome slides that the artist captured between 1986 and 1996, a decade that Harris avidly documented. These images envision a portrait of the artist as a young man, pictured through the faces of his friends, family, and lovers; the settings he found himself memorializing on photographic film; and the backdrop of the queer community of the late 1980s and early 90s, a period that coincided with the second wave of AIDS activism. Works in the exhibition as well trace other periods of Harris’s life and career, such as his time living in Ghana from 2005-12. For the artist, place is a moment that encapsulates the ethos of an age and of a life lived, untethered from the linear, forward-moving path of time.

Place can be carnal, philosophical, and nostalgic. Poetics of Place ruminates on these potentials of place to connect bodies, beliefs, and pasts in a swirling imaginary composed of all the things—circumstances, politics, narratives—that have imprinted themselves upon a site.

Claudia Mattos, director of David Castillo Gallery.

Exhibition is on view between April 14 – June 4, 202.


Installation views via David Castillo.

Bernadette Despujols

Adler Guerrier (2021), Oil on canvas, 40 x 30 in. 

Spinello Projects presents I Love You, Man, the debut solo gallery exhibition by Venezuelan-born artist Bernadette Despujols. The exhibition features a suite of oil paintings depicting men who are close to the artist, on view at the Gesamtkunstwerk Building located at 2930 NW 7th Avenue. A special locals-only preview reception will take place Saturday, November 20, 6-10pm. Miami Art Week vernissage will take place Tuesday, November 30, 11am-4pm. Exhibition through January 15, 2022. Free and open to the public. 

In I Love You, Man Bernadette Despujols paints the closest men in her circle. The paintings are a departure from her usual depictions of women in paintings. In previous paintings, Despujols positioned herself as the subject of her paintings although they were portraits of anonymous unconscious women sourced from pornography made by men. Holding the belief that to be a woman makes other people uncomfortable and ultimately poses a threat to men she turns her gaze and paints the cishet men in her life: friends, lovers, family. Despujols uses the portraiture of her male subjects to experience her relationships with deeper intimacy. Objectification and intersubjectivity (the relation or intersection between people’s cognitive perspectives) ebbs and flows between the painter and the painted. She objectifies the men in the paintings at times, focusing solely on one body part or their bare skin and bodies, but the men pose for the pictures with awareness and dignity. Nothing is stolen from them; Despujols may want to position these men ironically as muses but the truth is she defeats the irony of it with pure affinity and care towards the people she paints, leaving the men to decide what they want to wear and show of themselves. In the act of portraiture she experiences the vulnerability of these men through their quiet shyness or awkwardness with themselves, ways that would otherwise challenge the presumed status quo of manhood: tough, aggressive, aloof, qualities of patriarchy that, to Despujols, imprison both men and women in a cycle of violence. The paintings are formally infused with skewed perspectives, foreground and background foibles, and blank, paintless spaces furthering the playfulness she captures by being around the men she loves.


Available works click here

Viewpoints at Bakehouse Art Complex

Viewpoints: Expressions of an artist community

November 13, 2021 through March 27, 2022.

In celebration of its 35th anniversary season, Bakehouse presents Viewpoints: Expressions of an artist community, a group exhibition co-curated by visual artist Edouard Duval-Carrié and Bakehouse Curatorial + Public Programs Manager, Laura Novoa. The exhibition showcases twenty-five Bakehouse artists working predominantly in two-dimensional media, including painting, drawing, print-making, and photography. Duval-Carrié and Novoa draw on recent work to examine the creative output of a community and the way its constituent artists have navigated the changes and challenges of the last year and a half.

Recognizing the organization’s long tradition of group exhibitions and considering its current and future role as a local hub for art and art-making, Viewpoints hints at the array of individual styles and affinities coexisting in a shared space and how this diversity has come to define the spirit of the artists working, producing, and communing within Bakehouse.

Participating artists include Jason Aponte, Maria Theresa Barbist, Thomas Bils, Lujan Candria, Alain Castoriano, Rose Marie Cromwell, Gabriela Gamboa, GeoVanna Gonzalez, Adler Guerrier, Gonzalo Hernandez, Monique Lazard, Rhea Leonard, Amanda Linares, Philip Lique, Nicole Maynard-Sahar, Patricia Monclus, Najja Moon, Mateo Nava, William Osorio, Christina Pettersson, Jennifer Printz, Sandra Ramos, Nicole Salcedo, Tonya Vegas, and Almaz Wilson.

Afro Modern: Journeys through the Black Atlantic

This major exhibition, 29 January – 25 April 2010 at Tate Liverpool, (also traveled to Centro Galego de Arte Contemporánea, Santiago de Compostela, España, July – October 2010) inspired by Paul Gilroy’s seminal book The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness (1993), identifies a hybrid culture that spans the Atlantic, connecting Africa, North and South America, The Caribbean and Europe. The exhibition is the first to trace in depth the impact of Black Atlantic culture on Modernism and will reveal how black artists and intellectuals have played a central role in the formation of Modernism from the early twentieth century to today.

I made a post before. But I have recently found the dvd of installation images, dating April 2010.

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Images, courtesy of Tate Liverpool.

Natural Transcendence at Oolite Arts

Natural Transcendence’ curated by Rhonda Mitrani, which opens at Oolite Arts-928 gallery space, starting June 16. The group exhibition features video and photography work that reflects an ethereal sensibility toward nature. Exploring the intersection between humanity and nature even prior to the pandemic, not just in vast terrains, but in domesticated landscapes.

The exhibition features works by Adler Guerrier, Megan McLarney, Colleen Plumb, Anastasia Samoylova, Jennifer Steinkamp, Wendy Wischer and Antonia Wright.