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Image of TOM WESSELMANN's Still Life #8, 1962

TOM WESSELMANN

Still Life #8, 1962

mixed media and collage on board
53 x 59 x 3 in.
134.62 x 149.86 x 7.62 cm 

 

JCG17557

Image of KELLY SINNAPAH MARY's Madeleine de Proust, 2024

KELLY SINNAPAH MARY

Madeleine de Proust, 2024

Acrylic on canvas

18 1/8 x 15 x 3/4 in.
46 x 38 x 2 cm

 

JCG17962

Image of JJ MANFORD's Interior with Kachina Doll, Braque, and Greek Minoan Terracotta Vase, 2024

JJ MANFORD

Interior with Kachina Doll, Braque, and Greek Minoan Terracotta Vase, 2024

Oil stick, oil pastel, and Flashe on linen

40 x 50 in
101.6 x 127 cm

 

JCG17938

Image of HOPIE HILL's Still Life with Flowers and Pepper Mill, 2024

HOPIE HILL

Still Life with Flowers and Pepper Mill, 2024

Acrylic on linen

48 x 36 in
121.9 x 91.4 cm

 

JCG17877

Image of POPPY JONES's Anemones, 2024

POPPY JONES

Anemones, 2024

Oil and watercolour on suede, soldered aluminium frame

16 1/2 x 23 3/8 x 1 in
41.9 x 59.4 x 2.5 cm

 

JCG17977

Image of ANDIE DINKIN's Hunt Breakfast (Ode to Leonora), 2024

ANDIE DINKIN

Hunt Breakfast (Ode to Leonora), 2024

Acrylic on canvas

44 x 34 in
111.8 x 86.4 cm

 

JCG17879

Image of SIMON EVANS ™'s  Bananas, 2024

SIMON EVANS ™

Bananas, 2024

Gouache, graphite pencil, glass beads, watercolor, latex house
paint, felt tip pen, invisible tape, glue, colored pencil, fruit sticker,
gel pen, colored papers on board

30 x 22 in.
76.2 x 55.9 cm

 

JCG17654

Image of STEPHANIE H. SHIH's Death comes, too, for those who tear the lemon trees down, 2024

STEPHANIE H. SHIH

Death comes, too, for those who tear the lemon trees down, 2024

Ceramic, German silver

20 x 54 x 23 in
50.8 x 137.2 x 58.4 cm

 

JCG17550

Image of NICHOLAS BONO KENNEDY's  Ping, 2024

NICHOLAS BONO KENNEDY

Ping, 2024

Acrylic and oil on canvas

40 x 30 in
101.6 x 76.2 cm

 

JCG17829

Image of THÉRÈSE MULGREW's Toast, 2024

THÉRÈSE MULGREW

Toast, 2024

Oil on canvas

40 x 30 in
101.6 x 76.2 cm

 

JCG17833

Image of PAUL ROUPHAIL's Inquirer, 2024

PAUL ROUPHAIL

Inquirer, 2024

Oil on linen

25 x 35 in
63.5 x 88.9 cm

 

JCG17818

Image of SPANISH SCHOOL's Still Life with Squash, Gourds, Stoneware, and a Basket with Fruit and Cheese, mid-17th Century

SPANISH SCHOOL

Still Life with Squash, Gourds, Stoneware, and a Basket with Fruit and Cheese, mid-17th Century

Oil on canvas

20 1/2 x 24 1/2 in
52.1 x 62.2 cm

 

JCG17838

Image of ALISON ELIZABETH TAYLOR's Hercules and Diomedes, 2024

ALISON ELIZABETH TAYLOR

Hercules and Diomedes, 2024

Marquetry Hybrid

21 x 17 in
53.3 x 43.2 cm

 

JCG17960

Image of SOPHIE TREPPENDAHL's  Figure Study, 2024

SOPHIE TREPPENDAHL

Figure Study, 2024

Oil on canvas

32 x 32 in
81.3 x 81.3 cm

 

JCG17932

Image of ANNA VALDEZ's  Books, Bones, and Botany, 2024

ANNA VALDEZ

Books, Bones, and Botany, 2024

Oil on canvas

40 x 35 in
101.6 x 88.9 cm

 

JCG17816

Press Release

James Cohan is pleased to present The Superfluity of Things, a group exhibition that celebrates the enduring vitality of the still life tradition for contemporary artists. This exhibition presents an intergenerational cross-section of artists working within and against the genre to plum its expressive possibilities across a variety of media, including painting, photography, and sculpture. The Superfluity of Things will be on view at 52 Walker Street from September 6 through October 19, 2024. The gallery will host an opening reception on Friday, September 6, from 6-8 PM.

 

Throughout the history of art, depictions of the table and its contents have been used as a storytelling device to convey skillfully coded meaning and sociocultural significance to the viewer. Taking the genre of still-lifes as its entry point, this exhibition expands upon art historical precedents to think about the table not only as a site and signifier of power, position, and social status but also a place of gathering, sharing, communal pleasure, and on occasion, discord.

 

One of the most enduring motifs throughout this exhibition is a series of varied approaches to vanitas painting; traditionally, still lives that contain allegorical collections of objects symbolic of the inevitability of death, the transience of life, and the vanity of earthly pursuits and pleasures. There is both a sense of horror and carnal delight infused in these highly detailed depictions of consumption and consumerism. In the hands of the contemporary artistic interpreters featured in this exhibition, these images often take a turn for the surreal and the humorous. 

 

Other artists in the exhibition examine the ways in which the table functions as connective tissue within families, across generations, or among friends. In these sensitive and sometimes fantastical depictions of memory making, the table is the stage for drama, celebration, and imaginative possibility. There is an intimacy to these scenes, often staged in private or domestic settings, within which the viewer is afforded a precious but fleeting glimpse of the moments that bind us together. 

 

In the creative consciousness, the studio as the crucible for generative thought and self-actualization looms large. For several artists in The Superfluity of Things, the drafting table or desk is fundamental and equally as meaningful a site for creative expression as any other. In several works in this exhibition, reference materials stack high, visualizing the many channels of thought that stream together to create an artwork.

 

The Superfluity of Things features a group of artists working across generations and techniques, including Leonard Baby, Plum Cloutman, Andie Dinkin, Simon Evans™, Spencer Finch, Hopie Hill, Poppy Jones, Nicholas Bono Kennedy, JJ Manford, Rachel Simon Marino, Kelly Sinnapah Mary, Therese Mulgrew, Emma Prempeh, Paul Rouphail, Stephanie H. Shih, Kyungmi Shin, Alison Elizabeth Taylor, Tecla Tofano, Sophie Treppendahl, Anna Valdez, Tom Wesselmann, and Rachel Whiteread. 

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