Tag Archives: OSCAR TUAZON

ART IN THE AGE OF THE ANTHROPOCENE

“While geological epochs are known as products of slow change, the Anthropocene has been characterized by speed. Runaway climate change, rising water, surging population, non-stop extinction, and expanding technologies compress our breathless sense of space and time.”*

Organized around seven themes—Deluge, Raw Material, Consumption, Extinction, Symbiosis and Multispecies, Justice, and Imaginary Futures—the traveling exhibition THE WORLD TO COME—ART IN THE AGE OF THE ANTHROPOCENE explores the ongoing crisis through the work of over forty artists.

THE WORLD TO COME—ART IN THE AGE OF THE ANTHROPOCENE*

Through March 3.

Harn Museum of Art

University of Florida

3259 Hull Road, Gainesville.

From April 27 through July 28:

A. Alfred Taubman Gallery

University of Michigan Museum of Art

525 South State Street, Ann Arbor.

See: Antek Walczak, “Welcome to the Anthropocene: Tornadoes of Cash and Hurricanes of Capital,” in Oscar Tuazon Live (Los Angeles: DoPe Press/Cologne: Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther König, 2014), 55–62.

THE WORLD TO COME includes work by Jennifer Allora and Guillermo Calzadilla, Claudia Andujar, Sammy Baloji, Subhankar Banerjee, Huma Bhabha, Liu Bolin, Edward Burtynsky, Sandra Cinto, Elena Damiani, Dornith Doherty, Charles Gaines, Mishka Henner, Felipe Jácome, Chris Jordan, William Kentridge, Wifredo Lam, Maroesjka Lavigne, Eva Leitolf, Dana Levy, Yao Lu, Pedro Neves Marques, Noelle Mason, Mary Mattingly, Gideon Mendel, Ana Mendieta, Kimiyo Mishima, Richard Misrach, Beth Moon, Richard Mosse, Jackie Nickerson, Gabriel Orozco, Trevor Paglen, Abel Rodríguez, Allan Sekula, Taryn Simon, Nicole Six and Paul Petritsch, Laurencia Strauss, Thomas Struth, Bethany Taylor, Frank Thiel, Sergio Vega, Andrew Yang, and Haegue Yang.

From top: Nicole Six and Paul Petritsch, Spatial Intervention 1, video still, 2002. Courtesy the artists. © Bildrecht, Vienna, 2017; Taryn SimonWhite Tiger (Kenny), Selective Inbreeding, Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge and Foundation, Eureka Springs, Arkansas (detail), 2006–07, from the series An American Index of the Hidden and Unfamiliar, 2007, © Taryn SimonLiu Bolin, Hiding in the City, No. 95, Coal Pile, 2010, image courtesy the artist, © Liu BolinRichard Mosse, Stalemate, 2011, courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York; Maroesjka LavigneWhite Rhino, Namibia, from the series Land of Nothingness (2015), courtesy of the artist.

SPERM CULT

Celebrating ethnographic sexual taboos and occult practices, SPERM CULT—curated by Hamza Walker at LAXART—expands on Elijah Burgher and Richard Hawkins’ original Bad Dimension publication to include other artists “whose work shares similar themes of sexuality, transgression, desire, and ritual”: ektor garcia, Ryan M. Pfeiffer and Rebecca Walz, Ariana Reines and Oscar Tuazon, and Scott Treleaven.*

SPERM CULT*

Through January 6.

SPERM CULT WALK THROUGH WITH HAMZA WALKER

Sunday, January 6, at 2 pm.

LAXART, 7000 Santa Monica Boulevard, Hollywood.

Top: Elijah Burgher and Richard HawkinsSperm Cult, 2018, manipulated inkjet photo. Courtesy the artists and LAXART.

Publication image credit above: Burgher, Hawkins, and Bad Dimension Press.

Below: Sperm Cult installation view; Ryan M. Pfeiffer and Rebecca Walz (left), and Ariana Reines and Oscar Tuazon (right). Photograph by Ruben Diaz.

Thanks to Darius Sabbaghzadeh.

JAY DEFEO

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THE RIPPLE EFFECT pairs the work of Jay DeFeo with eleven younger artists—Trisha Donnelly, Sam Falls, Rachel Harrison, Wyatt Kahn, Ron Nagle, Gay Outlaw, Tobias Pils, R. H. Quaytman, Ugo Rondinone, Bosco Sodi, and Oscar Tuazon—in an exhibition in Aspen.

Co-organized with Le Consortium in Dijon, the Aspen Art Museum show is curated by Franck Gautherot and Seungduk Kim, with the participation of The Jay DeFeo Foundation in Berkeley.

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JAY DEFEO—THE RIPPLE EFFECT, through October 28.

ASPEN ART MUSEUM, 637 East Hyman Avenue, Aspen.

aspenartmuseum.org/jay-defeo-the-ripple-effect

Above: The Ripple Effect installation view. Photograph by Tony Prikryl .
Below: Jay DeFeo, Untitled, part of the Eternal Triangle series, 1980. Image credit: Aspen Art Museum.
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OSCAR TUAZON — FIRE

Themes of fire, water, sustainability, and justice come together in FIREOscar Tuazon’s new exhibition of sculptures and watercolors at Maureen Paley.
Through July 29.
Maureen Paley
21 Herald Street, Bethnal Green, London.

Top: Oscar Tuazon, Solar Sage Burner for Leonard Peltier [NSRGNTS], 2018, cast iron bus bench, Foamex print, abalone shell, sage, and concave mirror.

Above:  Oscar Tuazon(FIRE) for Winona LaDuke [Peter van den Berg, Antoine Rocca], 2018, stainless steel, refractory brick, wood, fire.
Bottom: Oscar TuazonFire Circle, 2018, watercolor on paper.

BRADLEY — TUAZON — WILLIAMS

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A new show of paintings, drawings, and sculptures by Joe Bradley, Oscar Tuazon, and Michael Williams is now on view thirty minutes north of Manhattan.

 

JOE BRADLEY — OSCAR TUAZON — MICHAEL WILLIAMS, through October 1.

BRANT FOUNDATION, 941 North Street, Greenwich.

brantfoundation.org/exhibitions/joe-bradley-oscar-tuazon-michael-williams/

Above: Joe Bradley, Baba, 2016. Private collection.

Bottom: Oscar Tuazon, Model Mother, 2018. Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Eva Presenhuber, Zurich/New York.
Photograph by Stefan Altenburger.

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