More than just wine

Architecture & Art

Avid lifelong art collectors, Craig and Kathryn Hall are delighted to invite guests to enjoy expressive art and world-class wines. HALL St. Helena and HALL Rutherford feature select works that are sure to inspire the senses. Our Wine and Art Exploration experience at HALL St. Helena is perfect for in-depth tour of the art collection on the property. Featuring some of the most internationally acclaimed artists today, such as John Baldessari, Jim Campbell, Nick Cave, Jaume Plensa, guests will be guided through the collection, while tasting some of HALL's amazing wines.  

Book a private Experience

The HALL St. Helena art collection is curated by Virginia Shore, Shore Art Advisory

Download the HALL Art App to learn more about the architecture and art while you enjoy a glass of wine!

Patrick Dougherty

(1945 - Oklahoma City, Oklahoma)
Deck The Halls, 2013 - April 2016
willow saplings

About The Work

Patrick Dougherty uses tree saplings as his artistic medium. His interest in nature and its inherent magic dates back to his youth in rural North Carolina, where he would build tree houses, forts, lean-tos, and hide-outs to the delight of his many younger siblings. Created by interweaving branches and twigs together, Dougherty’s work alludes to nests, cocoons, hives, and lairs built by animals, as well as the manmade forms of huts, haystacks, and baskets. His work typically appears found rather than made, as if it had been created by the natural forces of a tornado. Dougherty intentionally pursues this effortless effect, as though his creations just fell from the sky in a gust of wind or grew up naturally in their settings.

Biography

Dougherty earned a BA in English from the University of North Carolina in 1967 and an MA in Hospital and Health Administration from the University of Iowa in 1969.  He later returned to the University of North Carolina to study art history and sculpture.  Combining his carpentry skills with his love of nature, Patrick began to learn more about primitive techniques of building and to experiment with tree saplings as construction material. In 1982 his first work, Maple Body Wrap, was included in the North Carolina Biennial Artists’ Exhibition, sponsored by the North Carolina Museum of Art. Over the last thirty years, he has built more than 230 sculptures. More about Patrick Dougherty at www.stickwork.net.

 

Patrick Dougherty

Lawrence Argent

Bunny Foo Foo, 2014
polished stainless steel 

About The Work

The 35 foot tall Bunny Foo Foo is anything but little, and is visible from highway 29 as it leaps up from our HALL St. Helena vineyard. We are thrilled to share Lawrence Argent's sculpture and we invite you to visit us at HALL St. Helena and discover all of the amazing new works of art on site.

When David and Jennifer (Kathryn’s children) were little we were living in Dallas but spent at least 1 weekend a month at my family’s vineyard in Mendocino. One of our daily routines was to walk through the vineyard singing the song ‘Little Bunny Foo Foo hopping through the vineyard scooping up the field mice and bopping them on the head’ note that we changed the word forest to vineyard because it was our song. I am very excited that we now have a new not so little Bunny Foo Foo hopping through our vineyard here in St. Helena. Life feels like it comes full circle.” –Kathryn Hall

Biography

After seeing the incredible works of famed artist Lawrence Argent, including his Leap rabbit installation at the Sacramento Airport and his I See What You Mean piece at the Denver Convention Center, the Halls were inspired to reach out to Argent and share their story with him.

Lawrence Argent

François-Xavier Lalanne

(1927 - Agen, France)
Beliers, 1994 | Mouton Transhumant, 1988 | Agneau, 1996
epoxy and bronze

About The Work

Francois-Xavier Lalanne’s whimsical sheep, or moutons, have become the artist’s most iconic works, embodying his approach to art and commenting on the nature of art itself. The epoxy and bronze sculptures epitomize Lalanne’s mission to capture the sheer joy that art can bring.

I first saw a softer version of the sheep twenty years ago in a Vogue article in Yves St. Laurent’s home. I loved them then, and I love them now. They make me smile, they are made out of a hard surface, but you still want to cuddle them (but, please don’t). Lalannes work is always full of fantasy and humor. These sheep are no exception.” –Kathryn Hall

Biography


François-Xavier studied sculpture, drawing, and painting at Académie Julian in Paris.  After completing mandatory military service, Francois-Xavier rented a studio in Montparnasse, next door to friend Constantin Brâncuși. He met his future wife, Claude Lalanne at his first gallery show in 1952. The show signified an end of painting for François-Xavier, as he and Claude began their career sculpting together.

François-Xavier Lalanne

John Baldessari

(1931 - National City, California)
Camel (Albino) Contemplating Needle, 2013
fiberglass, aluminum, stainless steel, acrylic, and paint

About The Work

John Baldessari's sculpture Camel (Albino) Contemplating Needle highlights a confluence of belief from several different cultures. References to the camel and the needle appear in the Quran, the Bible, and the Midrash. A life-size dromedary with its neck extended inquisitively eyes a super-sized needle in a way that makes the viewer think it could actually pass through the needle's eye. The colorless beast with striking blue eyes is simultaneously intriguing and peculiar especially when stripped of its pigment and fur. 

Biography

John Baldessari is an American conceptual artist who lives and works in Santa Monica. He attended San Diego State University and did post-graduate work at the Otis Art Institute, Chouinard Art Institute and the University of California, Berkeley. He taught at the California Institute of the Arts in Valencia, California from 1970–1988 and the University of California at Los Angeles from 1996–2007.

John Baldessari

Tristano di Robilant 

(1964 - London, England)
Untitled, 2013
blown glass

About The Work

Tristano Di Robilant's exquisite glass forms represent a continuous investigation into the nature of glass and its paradoxical state: a substance that is both a liquid and a solid.  The artist's fascination with the surface of his chosen medium, the translucency of the glass and the dynamic interaction of light and reflection work together to achieve a kind of momentum and weightlessness.

Biography

Tristano di Robilant lives and works in Rome and London.  Working in both sculpture and drawing, di Robilant uses a variety of media from bronze and aluminum to glass. His work is in both private and public collections in Europe and the United States, including the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo and the Museo del Vetro in Murano. A comprehensive overview of the works of Tristano di Robilant was published by the magazine DOMUS in September 2010.

Tristano di Robilant

Russell Crotty 

(1956 - San Rafael, California)
The Bergfeld Array, 2013
ink and watercolor on paper on fiberglass spheres

About the Work

The overall theme of The Bergfeld Array is Crotty's signature California landscape work, having grown up in Marin and Mendocino. The globes are fabricated in fiberglass then covered with archival paper by professional paper conservators. Crotty draws directly onto the coated globe with a special archival ballpoint pen over a wash of watercolor, gouache, or acrylic.  Well known for paper-coated suspended globes and large-scale books containing a fervent network of ballpoint pen lines and color washes, Crotty’s vast body of work challenges the definition of drawing, pushing the genre towards minimal sculptural installation. The artist's practice chronicles his idiosyncratic commentary on aspects of the natural and manmade world. Direct physical engagement with the subject is at the heart of the work, with on-site field notes made in sketchbooks. These experiences become the context for his peculiar taxonomies -- of night skies, rock formations, coastal range ridgelines, seascapes, etc. Fields of text, a hybrid of rant and prose, refer to Crotty’s ruminations about the specific locality with which he’s engaging. The text serves not only as a formal drawing element denoting strata and volume, but also a discourse for his fixation on place, turf, and bearings. 

“It was important to find art that would complement the space and not detract from the awesomeness of the high ceiling. The beauty and calmness of Russell’s globes is the perfect fit. They reflect nature and at the same time do not interfere with enjoying this beautiful, historic building. It’s just like how Craig and I only drink wine made by people we like and admire, we buy art done by artists who we enjoy. Russell Crotty is not only a great artist, but also a wonderful person.” –Kathryn Hall

Biography

A native Californian, Russell grew up in the Bay Area, began and nurtured his art career in Los Angeles and now resides in Ojai and Upper Lake, California with his wife Laura Gruenther, a graphic designer.  His work is in the collections of the Whitney, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, among others.

Russell Crotty 

Joel Shapiro

(1941 - New York, New York)
Untitled, 1995
bronze

About The Work

Joel Shapiro creates compelling sculptures of humanlike forms, embracing an esthetic that lies between figuration and abstraction. Human activity is referenced through the large-scale geometric shapes, creating a dynamic, kinetic sense of movement and joy.

Biography

Born in New York City, Joel Shapiro became a well-known modernist sculptor of blocky, geometric designs that often resemble human figures. He earned a BA degree from New York University in 1964 and then served in the Peace Corps in India from 1965 to 1967. In 1969, he earned his MA from New York University and then focused his attention on his signature sculpture. He was commissioned to do projects for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., and has participated in numerous exhibitions including the Whitney Biennials.began their career sculpting together.

Joel Shapiro

Anya Gallaccio 

(1963 - Paisley, United Kingdom)
Because Nothing Has Changed, 2001
cast bronze

About The Work

Anya Gallaccio’s work is often about change, decay, and transformation. She makes site-specific installations, often using organic materials as her medium, creating a lack of predictability and an ephemerality that is remarkably difficult to document.  Gallacio cites the strong influence of the Arte Povera group, figures such as Michelangelo Pistoletto, Jannis Kounellis and Marcel Broodthaers, on her work, both its materials and concepts. 

Biography

Anya Gallaccio attended Kingston Polytechnic and Goldsmiths College at the University of London.  She has exhibited extensively on an international level, including solo exhibitions at the Tate Modern, London (2003); Sculpture Center, New York (2006); Camden Art Centre, London (2008); and Eastshire Museum, Scotland (2010), among others. Gallaccio’s work is featured in numerous public and private collections, including the Tate Gallery, London; Victoria & Albert Museum, London; Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney; and South Gallery, London. The artist lives and works in San Diego, California.

Anya Gallaccio 

Jaume Plensa

(1955 - Barcelona, Spain)
Sanna, 2013
marble and lead

About The Work

Predominantly producing figurative sculptures, Plensa has created Sanna as a larger-than-life-sized head constructed of marble and lead. "Sculpture is not only talking about volumes," he has said. "It is talking about something deep inside ourselves that without sculpture we cannot describe. We are always with one foot in normal life and one foot in the most amazing abstraction." 

“This is an example of how scale can be a critical part of the message of a work. If we saw this face in life-size form, we would surely think it is beautifully crafted, but to have the scale so monumental we watched this more closely, much like we look at Georgia O’Keeffe flowers. Sanna’s face is sublime and peaceful as we would expect a child to be, but she is also powerful because of her size.” –Kathryn Hall

Biography

For more than 25 years, Jaume Plensa has produced a rich body of work in the studio and the public realm. By combining conventional sculptural materials (glass, steel, bronze, aluminum) with more unconventional media (water, light, sound, video), and frequently incorporating text, Plensa creates hybrid works of intricate energy and psychology. His work is invested in evoking emotion and stimulating intellectual engagement. By posing conceptual dualities in his work (inside/outside, front/back, light/dark), Plensa seeks to connect with his viewers on an intuitive level. Often, the viewer participation, or the object/viewer relationship, is what completes Plensa's work.  Jaume lives and works in Barcelona. 

Jaume Plensa

Jesus Moroles

(1950 – Corpus Cristi, Texas)
Reflection of Life, 2014 and Sacred Fire and Water Fountain, 2014
granite and water

About The Work

Craig invited Jesus out to the winery before any construction started and asked him what he would feel inspired to do as one or two works that could be unique and one-off commissions for the winery only. While standing on top of the old 1885 winery during the early stages of renovation from what is now the second floor, Jesus looked out and quickly imagined a long fountain that could reflect the mountains and the vineyards. Jesus more-or-less on the spur of the moment, named his two pieces Sacred Fire and Water Fountain and Reflection of Life. In a separate area, Jesus envisioned a piece similar to one that he made 20 years ago, as a combination of fire and water fountain.  Jesus bought the granite for each of the fountains in various quarries. The large reflections of life granite came from a quarry in California, but the stone was shipped to Texas for cutting, and brought back to California. The fire and water stone is actually from Texas.

As Jesus was spending days and days fitting and putting together, and shaping the final fountains, a Native American woman stopped by and was watching him work. She said she was moved by the pieces and asked if she could bless them. Upon Jesus’ consent, she went into a long chant and dance.  Jesus was moved by the long and very deep blessing that the woman offered for the fountains and there in lied his addition to the front of the name of the fire and water piece Sacred Fire and Water Fountain. He hopes that both of these pieces will be gathering places for many to enjoy and reflect on their lives just as the spiritual Native American woman did in her very special blessing.

Biography

Jesus Moroles is a great international artist, and someone who Craig and Kathryn have collected for many years.  Jesus grew up in Texas and became renowned for his large-scale abstract granite sculptures. Moroles received a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of North Texas in 1978.  After graduating, he spent at year in Italy and was motivated by marble-carving techniques and when he returned to Texas, he decided to take those techniques and use them on stone.  Among many highlights in his career, Jesus was recognized with the prestigious National Medal of Arts from the U.S. Congress in 2008.

Jesus Moroles 

Ivan Navarro

(1972 - Santiago, Chile)
Delay, Remain, Surrender, Try, and Witness, 2013
fluorescent lights, resin, mirror, one-way mirror and electric energy

About The Work

Ivan Navarro is perhaps best known for his light works—socio-politically-charged environments, comprised of fluorescent, neon, or incandescent lights. Referencing social issues and political events, including the aftermath of Pinochet's reign and the effects of other dictatorships in Latin America, Navarro creates light works that reflect on the trauma of recent history. Often constructing works that are shaped like chairs, doors, or billboard signs, Navarro repurposes familiar materials to comment on past events.

“Our son David spent a semester at the Catholic University Business School in Santiago. One time when we were visiting David, the three of us went to the National Museum where we were mesmerized by Ivan Navarro’s use of neon. These works in the Workshop have an amazing ability to bring depth to a flat surface. Ivan chose the words, and we think they also reflect the contemplative quality of this work.” -Kathryn Hall

Biography

Ivan Navarro was born and raised in Santiago, Chile. He obtained his BFA from the University of Chile in Santiago, Chile. Navarro's works have been exhibited in galleries and museums across the globe, including the North Dakota Museum of Modern Art in Grand Forks; the Millennium Museum in Beijing, China; the Archill Gallery in Aukland, New Zealand; and the 27/7 Gallery in London, England.  Navarro currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.

Ivan Navarro

Spencer Finch

(1962 - New Haven, Connecticut)
Painting Air (Napa), 2013
glass, hardware, and wall painting

About the Work

Painting Air (Napa) is a site-specific installation created for the HALL St. Helena tasting room. Finch sourced the colors for the wall painting by sampling the natural environment around the winery – from soil samples to local grasses and trees to the color of the sky.  As the colors change in the shifting light of day, and as gentle air currents create movement in the hanging glass panels, viewers are immersed in an environment of changing reflections.  The resulting kaleidoscopic effect of the work brings these diverse references to the exterior landscape into the interior space of the tasting room, and also makes reference to terroir in wine-making, which is the set of special characteristics that the geography, geology and climate of a certain place bring to a wine’s complexity in taste.

Biography


With both a scientific approach to gathering data and a true poetic sensibility, Brooklyn-based artist Spencer Finch creates installations, sculptures and works on paper, which filter perception through the lens of nature, history, literature and personal experience.

Spencer Finch was born in New Haven, Connecticut, in 1962. He has a BA in comparative literature from Hamilton College and an MFA in sculpture from the Rhode Island School of Design. Finch lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.

Spencer Finch

Shahzia Sikander 

(1969 - Lahore, Pakistan)
Untitled, 2013
video and animation projection

About The Work

This is one of my favorite pieces on the property. I love its use of technology, as well as its scale. During an event, Shahzia’s work will bring energy to the winery that I know will inspire our visitors. Shahzia is a lovely and fascinating person. She is Pakistani and was at the age of seventeen, a nationally celebrated artist in her country. She has become famous since working in the United States and has shown in some of the most important museums supporting art in Pakistan. She is returning in fact to her native country to do an exhibition there, a difficult place to be as an American, as she is now perceived in Pakistan. But she is committed to enhancing art because of the positive impact she feels it brings to society.” –Kathryn Hall 

Biography

Internationally recognized, Pakistani-American artist, Shahzia Sikander is best known for her experimentation with the formal constructs of Indo-Persian miniature painting in a variety of formats and mediums including video, animation, mural, and collaboration with other artists. Over the years, she has pioneered an interpretive and critically charged approach to the anachronistic genre of miniature painting, while examining cultural and political boundaries as a space for discussion and intervention. In the 1990's, her work helped launch a major resurgence in the Miniature Painting Department at the National College of Arts in Lahore inspiring others to examine the miniature tradition.

Shahzia Sikander received her BFA in 1992 from the National College of Arts, Lahore, Pakistan, and her MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1995.

Shahzia Sikander 

Jim Campbell 

(1956 - Chicago, Illinois)
Exploded View (expanding), 2013
1,728 LEDs, custom electronics, wire, steel

About The Work

"In 1988, coming from a technical background in engineering and an artistic background in filmmaking, I began to create interactive video installations that involve the viewer and the viewer's response to a given situation. In creating interactive video art work, my goal has been to move away from the conventional computer screen 'button pushing' interface and instead to move towards creating works that have a more intuitive level of interaction. Making a distinction between a work that is controllable and a work that is responsive, I have tried to create installations that are less about a viewer dominating a work, and more about viewers participating in the developing personality of a work. My work incorporates electronic memory, prerecorded images, and live images.

Attempting to create systems that respond and progress in recognizably non-random, but at the same time unpredictable ways, I have tried to create works that have destines of their own. Having always been fascinated with the philosophical analogies of certain scientific disciplines, my work has been very influenced by science, in particular some of the ideas relating to chaos and quantum mechanics. Using technological tools and scientific models as metaphors for memory and illusion, my work seeks to interpret, represent, and mirror psychological states and processes, and their breakdown. Time and memory, individual and collective, electronic and real are the elements of my work.”

Biography

Jim Campbell’s electronic artwork is included in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.; the Whitney Museum of American Art; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; the de Young Museum, San Francisco, and the Berkeley Art Museum. He is the recipient of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’s 13th Annual Bay Area Treasure Award as well as a Rockefeller Foundation in Multimedia, three Langlois Foundation Grants and a Guggenheim Fellowship. He has two Bachelor of Science degrees in mathematics and engineering from MIT and as an engineer holds nearly twenty patents in the field of video image processing. 

Jim Campbell 

Alyson Shotz 

(1964 - Glendale, Arizona)
Viewscope, 2006
stainless steel tubes, glass and plastic lenses

About The Work

Alyson Shotz investigates issues of perception and space with sculptures made from a range of synthetic materials such as mirror, glass beads, plastic lenses, thread, and steel wire.  Alyson Shotz remarks "Viewscope has multiple eye pieces, all with different lenses on the end and differing focal lengths. When one looks through them, it is impossible to see things from one perspective. Everything is shifted forward and back and spun around due to the mirror-polished surface inside each tube." 

Biography

Alyson Shotz is based in Brooklyn, New York.  She graduated with a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1987 and an MFA from the University of Washington in 1991. Her works are in the collections of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Indianapolis Museum of Art, and Whitney Museum of American Art.

Alyson Shotz 

Graham Caldwell 

(1973 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
Red Rain, 2013
steel and blown glass

About The Work

In speaking about the artwork, Graham mentioned "I use glass as a medium because it is historically and intrinsically associated with the act of looking, from the early lenses that allowed glimpses into the microscopic world, to the eyeglasses, ubiquitous windows, and mirrors inside telescopes that allow humankind to peer into space. Much of my work focuses on glass as a conduit or modulating agent for sight. A clear glass lens on a windowsill is not merely a transparent skin, but actually produces a kind of upside down, miniaturized, three dimensional version of the blue sky and horizon beyond, and brings the outside landscape inside. Here is a parallel with the way the eye actually functions, using a lens that flips the world upside down and then brings the outside into the brain where it is reassembled.

The largest part of the eye is called the vitreous humor. Vitreous means having the attributes of glass. In my work the opposite is also often true; that glass has attributes of the body and the organic. Much of my work is based on imperfect, interconnected organic systems that take the form of bone, plant tendrils or blood vessels being gently pulled on by gravity. Using glass to produce these systems with a grotesque, or disturbing undercurrent introduces the push and pull of an inherently beautiful medium and dark subject matter.”

Biography


Graham Caldwell was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1973. He grew up in Washington, D.C. and received a BFA in Glass from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1998. Caldwell has had solo shows at Martos Gallery in New York; G Fine Art, the Millennium Arts Center, and Addison Ripley Fine Art in Washington, D.C.; Bank in Los Angeles; Luis de Jesus Seminal Projects in San Diego; and Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum in Santa Barbara, California.  Collections include Katten Muchin Rosenman, LLP; Dickstein Shapiro, LLP; Certus Bank; Arington County, Virginia, Public Art Permanent Collection.  He lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.

Graham Caldwell 

Jim Drain & Ara Peterson

Jim Drain (1975 - Cleveland, Ohio) and Ara Peterson (1973 - Boston Massachusetts)
Pinwheels 2013
riveted aluminum, enamel paint, and pneumatics

About The Work

Jim Drain and Ara Peterson have worked collaboratively since 2003.  The primary focus of their work has been to explore visual phenomenon not only as an optical experience but one that is also sublime and comprehensive.  Working collaboratively is an unconventional artistic working method; however it allows Drain/Peterson to achieve new territory, or a “third mind” that they could not find working individually.  Absurdity and Order play dueling roles in their work; Drain/Peterson’s work typically explores a ‘visually unified’ space using a bold palette, the play of scale and by exploring the uses of straight-forward systems to achieve airy moments of a day-dream state. 

Pinwheels integrates functionally and aesthetically into the fermentation tank room: the pinwheels complement both the prevailing visual language of the room while directly drawing from the winery’s pneumatic system: nozzles shoot intervals of pressurized air onto the back of the pinwheel fins to make each pinwheel spin. The riveted aircraft-style construction echoes the visual language of the space’s galvanized I-beams, the stainless steel tanks and the grey of the mezzanine floor. The tank room itself becomes animated by the motion of the works and the sound of the pneumatics.  The pneumatics allow for a more extreme optical experience by allowing for independent motion and continual speed change. It is as if the entire tank room itself becomes the artwork, transforming it into a landscape of industrial daydreams.

“At first we were concerned about the noise because we thought it would disturb folks working in the tank room. But then after watching the pinwheels start, we realized the noise is a part of the installation. This feels like Willy Wonka coming to Napa, and with the sound effects of the train starting up, the spirit of fantasy is even more enhanced. We think it is important to have art in spaces that are not necessarily open to the public. We want all the HALL team to work around and enjoy the art. It brings creativity to the work place that is important to nurture.” –Kathryn Hall 

Biography

Ara Peterson and Jim Drain have exhibited both separately and together in the United States and internationally.   Previous to working as a duo, both artists were part of the four-person collaborative Forcefield, a music performance and video group that began working together in 1996. As the collaborative Drain/Peterson they were included in the Lyon de Biennale in Lyon, France (2003); in the exhibition titled, “Bizarre Love Triangle” at the Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (2003); in the exhibition titled, “Wiggin Village” at the Moore Space, Miami, Florida (2004-2005); at the exhibition titled “Hypnogoogia” at Deitch Projects, New York (2005-2006); “The New York Minute” curated by Kathy Greyson at MACRO Future, Rome, Italy (2009);  “The New York Minute” curated by Kathy Greyson at the Garage, Moscow, Russia (2011).

Jim Drain & Ara Peterson

Doug Aitken 

 (1968 - Redondo Beach, California)
ONE, 2012
LED lit lightbox, hand silk-screened acrylic paint on layered epoxy

About The Work

Doug Aitken begins the process of creating his pictorial lightboxes with mounting a photographic transparency onto a LED light box in the shape of a word or symbol, ultimately fusing text and images into a single presence. In the case One, the word "one" illuminates it surroundings with both light from within and the brilliant colors of the delicate leaves pictured on the surface of three letters, energetically deconstructing the differences between the sign and signified and function and form.

“A piece of art should make you stop and think. I hope when people look at this work, they not only enjoy the beauty but also ponder what is the meaning of the word one? Does it even have a meaning? I’ll leave that to you to ponder.” –Kathryn Hall

Biography

Doug Aitken currently lives and works in Los Angeles and New York.  Ranging from photography, sculpture, and architectural interventions, to films, sound, single and multi-channel video works, and installations, Aitken's body of work has been featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions around the world at such institutions as the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris.

 

Doug Aitken 

Nick Cave

(1959 - Jefferson City, Missouri)
Garden Plot, 2006
found beaded and sequined garments

About The Work

Trained as both a visual artist and dancer, Nick Cave works in a wide range of mediums, including sculpture, installation, performance, and video. He is perhaps best known for his Soundsuits, which are carefully and obsessively handcrafted from found objects, recycled remnants, and discarded materials.  Of his work, Cave says: “My ability to make objects sing lies within the multiple readings of each work.”

This piece Craig and I gave each other for our anniversary. Nick teaches in Chicago and comes from a design background. His use of textiles is the best among his contemporaries. He is also a pure delight. My daughter Jennifer and I had dinner with him a couple years ago and we were fascinated by his thoughtfulness, creativity, and humor. Before I first saw this piece it was first described to me as 'eye candy' by our curator, Virginia Shore. Every time I look at it I’m reminded how right Virginia was.” –Kathryn Hall 

Biography

Nick Cave was raised in Missouri in the company of many siblings and modest means, to which he attributes his interest in assemblages and found objects. He graduated from the Kansas City Art Institute in 1982, where he learned to sew and began studying dance through an Alvin Ailey program, both in Kansas City and New York City.  Cave went on to earn an M.F.A. from the Cranbrook Academy of Art in 1989.  He directs the fashion graduate program at the School of the Art Institute in Chicago.  His work is in a variety of collections, including the Brooklyn Museum; Crystal Bridges; the Detroit Institute of Arts; the High Museum; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden; the Norton Museum of Art; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Birmingham Museum of Art; the De Young Museum; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; the Orlando Museum of Art; the Smithsonian Institution; and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, among others.

Nick Cave

Peter Wegner

(1963 - Sioux Falls, South Dakota)
Red Rooms, 2013
die-cut paper mounted flush to wall, aluminum frame

About The Work

Wegner notes, "The edge of a piece of paper doesn't amount to much. You might miss it if you weren't looking for it – and who would bother to look for it? It is, literally, almost nothing. Yet if you put enough edges next to one another, they start to become something. In this case, I've put almost half a million sheets next to one another. The result is now insistently, emphatically there. It's not nothing. But what is it? The surface is lush and painterly, it's flat like a painting, it's framed like a painting – but it's not painted. It has the weight and mass of sculpture, presumably; paper weighs a lot for the same reason trees do. But these aspects of the work are muted, implied but hidden from view. So if it's sculpture, you can't tell. And while the name alludes to architecture, and the composition suggests architecture, and the piece itself is embedded in the architecture, Red Rooms isn't architecture. Just when you think it might be one thing, it seems to become something else. Its defining characteristic is to elude definition.

Likewise with the color. Any of the reds in this piece might seem objectively red if viewed in isolation. Yet viewed together, any given red is only arguably red, only more or less red than the red next to it. In this way, we proceed from certainty to ambiguity, from objectivity to subjectivity, from what-it-is to how-you-see-it. Reds within reds within reds. Rooms within rooms within rooms.  In art as in life, the more you see, the less you know.”

“There are many ways to make an installation. A particularly confounding one was employed in this work using paper by the artist Peter Wegner. He began with dozens of samples of commercially available reds, each slightly different from the others. Wedged together in varying rhythms – six sheets of one color next four sheets of another, and so on – the 443,520 colored edges optically mix to create richly varied monochromes.” –Kathryn Hall 

Biography

Peter Wegner is an American artist focused on the intersection of art and architecture. He is a graduate of Yale University, where he delivered a lecture in spring 2014 on the color blue. His work can be found in many museums, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York, New York; The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum of Art, New York, New York; The L.A. County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, California; The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, California; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, California; and the Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Connecticut.

Peter Wegner

Vibha Galhotra

(1978 - Chandigarh, India)
Between, 2012
nickel coated ghungroos, fabric, thread, and polyurethane coat

About The Work

Emerging from the rapidly radically shifting topography of India under the explosive impact of globalization, Vibha Galhotra's art focuses on the context of displacement, nostalgia, identity, existence construction or deconstruction, the banal cultural condition in, around an environment of negotiation in a new and constantly changing urban atmosphere. Galhotra works in a variety of mediums, including photography, animation, found objects, and performative objects such as ghungroos, installation and sculpture to create experiential spaces.

“I love art that makes me smile, the snake is definitely in this category. It is such an apparently tactile piece that you want to touch it, but please don’t. I promise you, it is just as you think; it is soft and scrunchy and a little scaly to the touch.” –Kathryn Hall 

Biography


Vibha Galhotra received her BFA from Government College of Arts, Chandigarh, and her MFA from Kala Bhavan, Santiniketan.  Her solo shows include "Intruder" Indigo Blue Art Gallery, Singapore in 2010 and "Metropia" Project 88, Mumbai in 2008.  She has also participated in many group shows at Essl Museum in Austria in 2010, Art Basel, Miami, Jack Shainman Gallery, among others.

Galhotra was awarded the Inlaks Foundation Fine Arts Award in 2003 and a National Scholarship from the Ministry of Culture, Government of India, in 2001. She has also served as a visiting member of the faculty at the National Institute Fashion Technology, New Delhi.  The artist's work is in many private collections in India and abroad such as the Gates Foundation, Essel Museum in Austria, and the Devi Art Foundation in India. Galhotra lives and works in New Delhi.

Vibha Galhotra

Avish Khebrehzadeh

 (1969 - Tehran, Iran)
Maskhara 6Maskhara 47Maskhara 22Maskhara with Squirrel, 2013
graphite and marker on layers of paper

About The Work

These works are all part of a series called "Maskhara" (pronounced mass-kha-rah--Maskhara is a Farsi word for masquerade, which also has a double meaning: ridiculous). It all started with a book project called "He Ridiculed, He Mocked, He Transformed." In that project I was exploring the more abstract idea of "the mask" and it's role in our lives and the illusion caused by the masks that we wear in our daily lives. Then I started expanding the idea by developing a series of multi-layer-ed drawings depicting imaginary masks, some fairly trivial in nature and some more incomprehensible, including some depicting vines. I have always been fascinated with vines in general; with its form as a plant, its glorious fruit, and the role of wine in our social lives. In a way, I think wine has an unmasking role which adds another layer to the irony of the concept of "Maskhara.Biography


Khebrehzadeh studied painting in the Academy of Fine Arts in Rome. Solo exhibitions of her work have appeared at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Rome, and the Rhode Island School of Design Museum in Providence. Khebrehzadeh was included in the 6th Istanbul Biennial in 1999, the 5th Liverpool Biennial in 2008 and was also a participant in the 50th Venice Biennale in 2003, where she received the Golden Lion Award for the best Young Italian Artist. Avish Khebrehzadeh's most recent works were featured in the Discoveries section of ART BASEL Hong Kong 2013 (Galleria S.A.L.E.S.) and her Installation work "Where Do We Go from Here?" will be featured in GAM collection during Artissima 2013.  Avish Khebrehzadeh lives and works in Washington, DC.

Avish Khebrehzadeh 

Nnenna Okore

 (1975 - Nsukka, Nigeria)
Shield Me, 2009
newspaper, acrylic color, starch, yarn, and rope

About The Work

Okore remarks, "My work broadly focuses on the concepts of recycling, transformation, and regeneration of forms based on observations from ecological and manmade environments. I am drawn to uniquely diverse and tactile characteristics of the collective physical world. I am astounded by natural phenomena that cause things to become weathered, dilapidated, and lifeless — those events slowly triggered by aging, death, and decay — and subtly captured in the fluid and delicate nature of life. My materials are biodegradable and comprised largely of old newspapers, found paper, ropes, thread, yarn, fibers, burlap, dye, coffee, starch, clay, etc. Through manually repetitive techniques as mirrored in both natural and mechanical reproductions, my processes of fraying, tearing, teasing, weaving, dyeing, waxing, accumulating, and sewing allow me to interweave and synthesize the distinct properties of materials.

I systematically deconstruct and reconstruct my media to yield subtle transformations of visual complexities. And much like impermanent earthly attributes, my organic and twisted structures mimic the dazzling intricacies of fabric, trees, barks, topography, and architecture.I desire to heighten through my works, the perception of textures, undulating contours and movements that exist within our ephemeral world; and to evoke reflections about how to better appreciate and preserve our earthbound surroundings.” 

Biography

Nnenna Okore is an associate professor of art at North Park University, Chicago, where she teaches sculpture. She earned a BA in painting from the University of Nigeria and an MA and MFA from the University of Iowa. She has exhibited internationally and has received several awards including the prestigious Fulbright Scholar Award. 

Nnenna Okore

Bill Armstrong

(1952 - Concord, Massachusetts)
Mandala, 2013
defocused photo collages on C-prints

About The Work


Armstrong recalls, “The Mandala photographs are loosely based on Buddhist paintings known as mandalas. Mandalas are concentric circles of images that depict central themes in Buddhism, such as the Wheel of Life or the Map of the Cosmos.  Through abstraction, simplification and blur, I hope to create a context for the exploration of these broad spiritual themes that, rather than relying on a codified system, remains open and invites the viewer's personal interpretation. 

Like the other portfolios in the Infinity series, the Mandalas are made from collages that have been photographed with the camera's focusing ring set on infinity. Extreme defocusing allows me to create rhapsodies of color that change as one gazes into them: they pulsate as if alive. This sense of "being" within the inanimate invites an inquiry into the idea of the interconnectedness of all things. Whether seen as celestial spheres, imaginary objects, or microscopic details, the Mandalas are meant to be meditative pieces — glimpses into a space of pure color, beyond our focus, beyond our ken. Their essential purpose is to create a sense of transcendence, of radiance, of pure joy!”

Biography

Bill Armstrong is a New York-based fine art photographer who has been shooting in color for more than 30 years. Armstrong is represented by ClampArt in New York, Hackelbury in London, and numerous galleries across the country and in Europe. His Mandala series was featured in a two-person exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 2008, and he had a mid-career retrospective at the Southeast Museum of Photography in Daytona Beach in 2010. He has presented work in numerous museum exhibitions including: Philadelphia Museum of Art; Hayward Gallery, London; Musee de l’Elysee, Lausanne; Centro Internazionale di Fotografia, Milan; and FOAM, Amsterdam.

Armstrong has been published in numerous periodicals including The New Yorker, The New York Times, Harper’s, House and Garden and Eyemazing. He is on the faculty at the International Center of Photography and the School of Visual Arts. 

Bill Armstrong