(Marketing Mondays will return next week with "The Rogue Consultant").More Armory Week here, here and here .
Armory: Joachim Schonfelt at Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg
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Seeing so much stacked work at the fairs, it occurred to me that the format represented a large slice of what was being shown throughout the fairs: taxidermy, abject or commonplace materials, textiles, structure, materiality. If the medium is obvious, or shown in detail, I'm not mentioning it. Those of you who were there, I'd love to hear how your impressions jibe with mine.
Armory: Artist unknown at Tanya Leighton Gallery, Berlin.
I love these little sculptures, the way the different lengths of pencil fit together, the way the points meet the surface of the shelf, and the way the artist selected particular rubber bands to bind the stacks. But it's also true that you can put almost anything on a shelf or pedestal and call it art.
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Armory: Tony Tasset at Kavi Gupta Gallery, Chicago..
Armory Modern: Peter Hallery at Galerie Forsblom.
Armory: Rosa Brun at Galeria Oliva Arauna, Madrid.Detail below
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Armory: Ebru Eygun at Dirimart, Istanbul
Full view below.
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Armory: Lisa Lapinski at Richard Telles Fine Art, Los Angeles.Detail below
(I think they're squares of wallpaper that have been overprinted or painted).
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Armory: Jim Lambie, painted or polished aluminum, at The Modern Institute, Glasgow.
Installation view below.
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Armory: Jose Pedro Croft at Galeria Senda, Barcelona..
Armory: Omar Careno at Faria Fabregas Galeria, Caracas(Painting inset with painted and stacked wooden blocks)
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Volta: Nikolai Bendiz Skyum Larsen at Galerie Vanessa Quang, Paris
(Stacked and glued business cards)
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Armory: Jacob Dahlgren at Andrehn-Schipjenko, Stockholm(Stacked plastic hangers). So we started with stacked animals and ended with the stacked figure of a person. Next (and last) post: some geometry. Did you think I wouldn't cover that? Oh, no, you dittn't.