Armchair Traveler

The art world too global for you? Each month, Interview highlights in pictures the shows you’d want to see—if you could jet-set from one international hub to the next. Bon voyage!

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Armchair Traveler

Lisa Ponti, “Untitled,” Pencil, sticker and wheat on paper, 11 3/4 x 8 1/4 inches. Courtesy Galleria Federico Vavassori, Milan and Ortuzar Projects, New York. © Archivio Lisa Ponti.

Lisa Ponti: Drawings 1993-2019

Ortuzar Projects, New York

April 6 – May 22, 2021

Lisa Ponti’s significant contribution to the art and culture in postwar Italy has long been overshadowed by the fame of her charismatic father, architect Gio Ponti, with whom she collaborated throughout her career. Ortuzar Projects is now putting a spotlight on her work with the presentation of about fifty drawings made at the height of Ponti’s career, from 1993 until 2018—shortly before her death at age 97. In some cases, the drawings double as poems or letters, and incorporate text into figurative designs, almost like calligraphy.

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Matthew Brannon, “Paper Moon,” 2021, Silkscreen with hand painted elements on paper, 142 x 125.5 x 5 cm framed (detail), Photo: Kevin Frances, Courtesy: the artist; Gió Marconi, Milan.

Matthew Brannon: Cold Shoulders / Foreign Affairs / Seafood Dinners / Pregnant DĂ©cor / Power Vacuums / and The Last Gate at the End of a Long Terminal

Gio Marconi, Milan

April 8 – June 3, 2021

Matthew Brannon, best known for his expansive approach to printmaking, is presenting a series of vibrantly colored plane interiors. The unique silkscreen works are all forms of still lives, full of varied objects and carefully researched details. Brannon’s skill to translate artworks into rich stories is apparent throughout the exhibition, which reminds us of the bygone pleasures of travel and movement.

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Kahlil Joseph, BLKNWS¼, 2018–. Installation view, Hammer Museum. Two-channel fugitive newscast. Courtesy of the artist. Made in L.A. 2020: a version. Installation view at Hammer Museum, Los Angeles. Photo: Joshua White / JWPictures.com.

Armchair Traveler

Monica Majoli, “Blueboy (Carl) (left),” 2019; “Blueboy (Roger) (right),” 2018. Installation view, Hammer Museum. Made in L.A. 2020: a version. Installation view at Hammer Museum, Los Angeles. Photo: Joshua White / JWPictures.com.

Made in L.A. 2020: a version

Hammer Museum, Los Angeles & Huntington Library, San Marino

April 17–August 1, 2021

The fifth edition of this acclaimed biennial presents works by 30 Los Angeles-based artists. There will be a versioning and a mirroring between the Hammer Museum and The Huntington Library, where each artist of the exhibition has a work in each venue, creating an uncanny sense of déjà vu. The three main threads of this edition are entertainment, horror, and the theater-film convention of the fourth wall. Participating artists include Aria Dean, Buck Ellison, Kahlil Joseph, Nicola L., Mathias Poledna, Diane Severin Nguyen, Monica Majoli, and Sabrina Tarasoff, among others.

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Armchair Traveler

Aaron Gilbert, “Empire State of Mind/Flaco 730 Broadway,” 2020, oil on linen, 40 x 46 inches. Courtesy of Aaron Gilbert and P·P·O·W, New York.

Armchair Traveler

Martin Wong, “Sharp & Dottie,” 1984, acrylic on canvas, 60 x 48 inches. Courtesy of the Estate of Martin Wong and P·P·O·W, New York.

Martin Wong & Aaron Gilbert: 1981–2021

P.P.O.W., New York

April 2 – May 1, 2021

The latest exhibition at the Tribeca gallery P.P.O.W. juxtaposes the work of the Brooklyn-based artist Aaron Gilbert and the late Chinese American painter Martin Wong. This intergenerational dialogue focuses on two artists whose work chronicles a continuum of life within a city under siege. Their practices allude to the societal pressures of the New York communities they inhabit, as well as the turmoil of their private lives. Few artists match the nuanced poetry and symbolic density of Wong’s documentations of the constellation of social life during his lifetime. Much like Wong, Gilbert directs his lens to his home, neighborhood, and surrounding New York City community.



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