Gabriel
Kuri works with a variety of media, including installation, sculpture, collage, and photography.
Not exact matches
Inspired in part by the SLG's proximity to the housing estate behind it, and the gallery's links with the residents, the
works are underpinned by
Kuri's reflection on the role of speculation in real estate.
Internationally acclaimed Mexican artist, Gabriel
Kuri, presents his first solo exhibition in a London public gallery with an entirely new body of
work.
The relationship between body and feeling is considered further by Gabriel
Kuri (b. 1970, Mexico) through his
work Self portrait as chart with looping volume (2012) which reflects on notions of unity and disembodiment.
Twenty - five
works from international artists including Pawel Althamer, Louise Bourgeois, André Breton and the Surrealists, Enrico David, Tracey Emin, Gilbert & George, Gabriel
Kuri, Yayoi Kusama, Linder, Aditya Mandayam, Raqs Media Collective, Prem Sahib and Cindy Sherman, reveal how these artists stage their own bodies or self - reflections to examine the different ways that we build our sense of personal identity.
ABRAHAM CRUZVILLEGAS, artist It was almost 30 years ago that I first learned about him, when my friend Gabriel
Kuri brought a catalogue of Hammons's
work to one of our weekly meetings at Gabriel Orozco's studio in Mexico City.
There are also early
works by Danish artists such as Olafur Eliasson, John Kørner and HuskMitNavn, as well as
works by Anna Boghiguian, Anselm Reyle, Gabriel
Kuri, Dearraindrop, Chris Johanson, Wes Lang, Kendell Geers, Graham Hudson, Ingen Frygt, William Kendtridge, Juan Muños, Lea Porsager, T.M. Davy, Robert Kusmirowski, Victor Man, Adrian Ghenie, Katherine Bernhardt, Francine Spiegel, Dash Snow, Rory Macbeth, and others.
Gabriel
Kuri, Allora & Calzadilla, and Erika Verzutti all reference everyday objects in their
work as well, from cigarette butts, to solar panels, bananas, and more.
Kuri's sculptures and collages are often fashioned from the residue of monetary exchanges and consumed goods that the artist collects on a daily basis, but their richness lies in their unusual calibration of manual and conceptual properties: his
works reward eye and mind equally.
Presented in the Foundation's third floor Ballroom Gallery, the exhibition features
work by artists from Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Cuba, Mexico, Peru, Puerto Rico, and Venezuela, including Allora & Calzadilla, Pia Camil, Alex Da Corte, Jose Dávila, Haroldo Higa, Gabriel
Kuri, Gabriel Orozco, Damián Ortega, Analia Saban, Gabriel Sierra, Adrián Villar Rojas, and Erika Verzutti.
On view in the third - floor Ballroom gallery is
work by artists including Allora & Calzadilla, Pia Camil, Jose Dávila, Gabriel
Kuri, Adrián Villar Rojas, Gabriel Orozco, Damián Ortega, Analia Saban, Erika Verzutti, and more.
Using Gabriel
Kuri's
work as a starting point, the groups brainstormed ideas relating to the artwork and...
During a day's workshop at the South London Gallery, Havering Sixth Form students
worked with artist Katriona Beales to explore the themes of monumental versus unmonumental in Gabriel
Kuri's exhibition.
Students presented their
work alongside
Kuri's installation.
The exhibition also includes
work by: Enrico David, Tracey Emin, Gilbert & George, Gabriel
Kuri, Yayoi Kusama, Linder, Aditya Mandayam, Raqs Media Collective, and Prem Sahib.
An early champion of Latin American artists — notably, Gabriel Orozco, Abraham Cruzvillegas, and Gabriel
Kuri — Lopez has assembled a nearly 3,000 -
work collection of international stature.
abc - gallery night: On Wednesday night before the start of abc, the participating galleries will present their gallery openings, including shows of
work by artists such as Cecily Brown, Mario Garcia Torres, Gabriel
Kuri, Camille Henrot, Sofia Hulten, Gedi Sibony, Florian Slotawa, and Juergen Teller.
For the realization of this project, Cruzvillegas and
Kuri asked themselves the following questions when considering which colleagues to include, which
works to put together, and what issues would be the best to address:
Artists: Leonor Antunes, Allora & Calzadilla, Marieta Chirulescu, Abraham Cruzvillegas, Minerva Cuevas, Jimmie Durham, Daniel Guzmán, Jonathan Hernández, Gabriel
Kuri, Dr. Lakra, Gabriel Orozco, Damián Ortega, Gabriel Sierra, Adrián Villar Rojas, Danh Vo, and Haegue Yang Exhibition title: from here to there, kurimanzutto travels to Jessica Silverman Gallery Venue: Jessica Silverman Gallery, San Francisco, US Date: January 12 — March 5, 2016 Photography: images copyright and courtesy the artists and Jessica Silverman Gallery, San Francisco Jessica Silverman Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of
works by artists affiliated with Mexico City's famed kurimanzutto gallery.
Shown together, the
works in the installation represent the result of a dialogue between Cruzvillegas and
Kuri, who are also long time friends and colleagues, creating an idealized world of cultural exchange that is defined by affinities rather than differences.
Another noteworthy set of
works is that of around 100 pieces belonging to the collector Enea Righi, which has been on loan to Museion since 2008, and which in many respects consolidates existing themes in the collection, as in the case of the photographic
works by Francis Alÿs, Nan Goldin and Wolfgang Tillmans, or the light art, with Gabriel
Kuri, or individual artists like Alighiero Boetti, Miroslaw Balka, Peter Friedl, Roni Horn and Gordon Matta - Clark.
On display are, among other
works, Elmgreen & Dragset's VIP door «But I'm on the Guest List» (2007), Jeff Koons» «Ball Total Equilibrium Tank (1986), Gabriel
Kuri's bauble's in a barrow, «Carretilla IV» (1999), Sherrie Levine's cast bronze urinal «Buddha» (1996), Gabriel Orozco's «Oval Billiard Table» (1996), Robert Gober's «Urinal» (1985).
The exhibition also includes
work by Dennis Adams, Chris Burden, Andreas Gursky, Robert Heinecken, Alfredo Jaar, Gabriel
Kuri, Dan Peterman, Michel Rovner, and Greg Stimac, among others.
Despite the fact that his
work occasionally takes the form of text, collage or photography, everything in Gabriel
Kuri's
work reflects sculptural research — the formal and conceptual possibilities of sculpture — in a fascinating to - and - fro between the abstractions of forms, the codifications connected to them and their potential uses.
The
work of the younger artists is generally object - based, abstract, tentative, and modest in scale: Think of Nairy Baghramian's rubber casts of absent sculptures, Gabriel
Kuri's delicately balanced bamboo pole, or Anya Titova's provisional - looking screens of thin metal and colored Plexi.
Gabriel
Kuri is a Mexican artist who has attracted international critical acclaim for his
work exploring the nature and possibilities of sculpture.
For those of you who saw
Kuri's exhibition at the South London Gallery at the end of last year, you will recognise sculptural forms combining panes of glass, concrete and plywood layered and set upright on wooden pallets, creating index and diagram - like assemblages, offering a counterpoint to the cheeky
works upstairs.
Gaillard's was not the only
work from the Hammer, as Los Angeles gallery Regen Projects exhibited site - specific
work by Gabriel
Kuri, sculptures that mimic the marble flooring of the museum's second - floor smoking patio.
The group — which included Damián Ortega, Abraham Cruzvillegas and Dr. Lakra — regularly showed its
work at the Mexico City gallery Kurimanzutto, co-owned by
Kuri's brother José.
After 10 years of living and
working as an artist in Brussels, the 43 - year - old
Kuri moved his family to Los Angeles in August, for personal and professional reasons.
Among the 136 artists and collectives — both Mexican and foreign — who have created some 200
works in Mexico City over the period of a decade are Francis Alÿs, Minerva Cuevas, Damian Ortega, Abraham Cruzvillegas, Gabriel
Kuri, Carlos Amorales, Teresa Margolles, Lourdes Grobet, Jimmie Durham, Fernando Ortega and Thomas Galssford.
Manzutto was
working at the trend - setting Marion Goodman Gallery in New York City where she and
Kuri and Orozco were living and studying.
This publication accompanies his Aspen Art Museum exhibition, comprising a selection of
works that center on
Kuri's interest in the transactional residue of daily life and broad - based ideas of tracking systems in economics, politics, consumption and production.
Founded in 1999 by Mónica Manzutto and José
Kuri, the gallery started out without a fixed space for exhibitions in order to provoke a different way of
working, focused on promoting the careers of the artists represented.
Gabriel
Kuri's poetic
works composed of materials accumulated from the flux of life are showcased in the Modern's current exhibition México Inside Out: Themes in Art Since 1990.
Born in Mexico,
Kuri is an international artist who lives and
works in Mexico City, Brussels, and Los Angeles.
Over in the Giardini, ILLUMInations played out like an elegant museum exhibition: Gedewon's melodious drawings that recall Ethiopian narrative painting, Karl Holmqvist's writing on the wall, DAS INSTITUT's (Kerstin Brätsch & Adele Röder) gorgeous install of Blocked Radiants (for Ioana), Gabriel
Kuri's neo-povera balancing act, and Monika Sosnowska «s neo-Rococo wallpapered star - shaped parapavilion / nesting place for
works by David Goldblatt and Haroon Mirza, who won the Silver Lion for Promising Young Artist.
During his tenure, Bedford also garnered many significant gifts of artwork, including philanthropist Peter Norton's donation of 41
works by artists including Doug Aitken, Mark Dion, Nicole Eisenman, Omer Fast, Mike Kelley, Gabriel
Kuri, Christian Marclay, Damián Ortega, Kara Walker, Christopher Wool, and Lisa Yuskavage.
Come visit us at booth C14 where we will be presenting
works by Doug Aitken, Matthew Barney, Walead Beshty, Abraham Cruzvillegas, Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin, Dan Graham, Rachel Harrison, Elliott Hundley, Sergej Jensen, Anish Kapoor, Gabriel
Kuri, Liz Larner, Glenn Ligon, Scott McFarland, Marilyn Minter, Catherine Opie, Raymond Pettibon, Jack Pierson, Lari Pittman, Daniel Richter, Gary Simmons, Wolfgang Tillmans, Ryan Trecartin, Lawrence Weiner, James Welling, Sue Williams, and Andrea Zittel.
For his first solo exhibition in Switzerland,
Kuri will present older
works he categorizes under the «product testing» heading as well as a new series of sculptures created specifically for this project.
Come visit us at booth E207 where we will be presenting
works by Doug Aitken, Walead Beshty, Abraham Cruzvillegas, Anish Kapoor, Gabriel
Kuri, Liz Larner, Glenn Ligon, Catherine Opie, Raymond Pettibon, Jack Pierson, Lari Pittman, Wolfgang Tillmans, Lawrence Weiner, and James Welling.
On view will be
works by Doug Aitken, Matthew Barney, Walead Beshty, John Bock, Theaster Gates, Dan Graham, Rachel Harrison, Elliott Hundley, Sergej Jensen, Anish Kapoor, Toba Khedoori, Gabriel
Kuri, Liz Larner, Glenn Ligon, Marilyn Minter, Catherine Opie, Manfred Pernice, Raymond Pettibon, Jack Pierson, Lari Pittman, Daniel Richter, Gary Simmons, Wolfgang Tillmans, Ryan Trecartin, Lawrence Weiner, James Welling, and Sue Williams.
The Sculpture Park will be located along the waterfront of Randall's Island overlooking the East River (a two minute walk from the main pavilion), and will year contain
works new
works by James Angus, Rathin Barman, Christoph Büchel, Ernesto Neto, Tomás Saraceno, Katja Strunz and Cerith Wyn Evans as well as pieces by Louise Bourgeois, Joshua Callaghan, Subodh Gupta, Ryan Gander, Jeppe Hein, Gabriel
Kuri, Susan Philipsz and Jaume Plensa.