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Art Basel Miami Beach

December 4 – 7, 2014

Alexander Gray Associates

Alexander Gray Associates
Art Basel Miami Beach 2014
Installation view

Alexander Gray Associates

Alexander Gray Associates
Art Basel Miami Beach 2014
Installation view

Alexander Gray Associates

Alexander Gray Associates
Art Basel Miami Beach 2014
Installation view

Alexander Gray Associates

Alexander Gray Associates
Art Basel Miami Beach 2014
Installation view

Alexander Gray Associates

Alexander Gray Associates
Art Basel Miami Beach 2014
Installation view

Alexander Gray Associates

Alexander Gray Associates
Art Basel Miami Beach 2014
Installation view

Jack Whitten, 28 Black Holes (Dedicated To Jackie O), 1993-94

Jack Whitten

28 Black Holes (Dedicated To Jackie O), 1993-94
Acrylic and mixed media on canvas
60 x 60 in (152.4h x 152.4w cm)

Melvin Edwards, Southern Season, 1990

Melvin Edwards

Southern Season, 1990
Welded steel
14.75 x 14 x 10 in (37.47h x 35.56w x 25.4d cm)

Melvin Edwards, Igun Eronmwon, 1993

Melvin Edwards

Igun Eronmwon, 1993
Welded steel
12.5 x 11.88 x 11 in (31.75h x 30.18w x 27.94d cm)

Jack Whitten, Bessemer Dreamer II, 1992

Jack Whitten

Bessemer Dreamer II, 1992
Acrylic on Canvas
58 x 52 in (147.32h x 132.08w cm)

Melvin Edwards, Lesson 20, 1991

Melvin Edwards

Lesson 20, 1991
Welded steel
16 x 10.25 x 8.88 in (40.64h x 26.04w x 22.56d cm)

Melvin Edwards, Road to Goma, 1993-1994

Melvin Edwards

Road to Goma, 1993-1994
Welded steel
12 x 15.5 x 8 in (30.48h x 39.37w x 20.32d cm)

Jack Whitten, Amazing Popcorn, 1994

Jack Whitten

Amazing Popcorn, 1994
Acrylic and mixed media on canvas in 12 parts
Dimensions variable

Melvin Edwards, To Tell The Truth, 1994

Melvin Edwards

To Tell The Truth, 1994
Welded steel
13.38 x 10 x 9.25 in (33.99h x 25.4w x 23.5d cm)

Melvin Edwards, Because of Struggle, 1992

Melvin Edwards

Because of Struggle, 1992
Welded steel
15 x 15.5 x 15 in (38.1h x 39.37w x 38.1d cm)

Jack Whitten, Physis II (Dedicated to the Memory of David Budd), 1991

Jack Whitten

Physis II (Dedicated to the Memory of David Budd), 1991
Acrylic on Canvas
16 x 16 in (40.64h x 40.64w cm)

Melvin Edwards, To Cross Water, 1990

Melvin Edwards

To Cross Water, 1990
Welded steel
30 x 28 x 27 in (76.2h x 71.12w x 68.58d cm)

Jack Whitten, Presence I, 1994

Jack Whitten

Presence I, 1994
Sumi ink on rice paper
22.25 x 19.25 in (56.52h x 48.9w cm)

Jack Whitten, Presence II, 1994

Jack Whitten

Presence II, 1994
Sumi ink on rice paper
22.25 x 19.25 in (56.52h x 48.9w cm)

Melvin Edwards, Avenue B Wire Vari #2, 1973

Melvin Edwards

Avenue B Wire Vari #2, 1973
Spray paint and ink on paper
22.8 x 35 in (57.91h x 88.9w cm)

Melvin Edwards, A Symptom of, 1999

Melvin Edwards

A Symptom of, 1999
Welded steel
12 x 8.3 x 6.3 in (30.48h x 21.08w x 16d cm)

Melvin Edwards, Write When You Can, 1991

Melvin Edwards

Write When You Can, 1991
Welded steel
13 x 10.5 x 8 in (33.02h x 26.67w x 20.32d cm)

Melvin Edwards, Damn, 1996

Melvin Edwards

Damn, 1996
Welded steel
13.63 x 7.75 x 4.63 in (34.62h x 19.68w x 11.76d cm)

Melvin Edwards, Lo (For Locardia Ndandarika), 1997

Melvin Edwards

Lo (For Locardia Ndandarika), 1997
Welded steel
13.75 x 9.25 x 6.88 in (34.92h x 23.5w x 17.48d cm)

Press Release

Art Basel Miami Beach | Miami Beach, Florida | Galleries Sector | Booth K3

Alexander Gray Associates presented an exhibition of work made in the 1990s by Gallery artists Jack Whitten and Melvin Edwards. Investigating the two artists’ paintings and sculpture of this significant decade, the presentation examines their formal and material experimentations, and their use of abstraction to convey artistic, social, and political commentary. The exhibition spotlights Whitten and Edwards’ artistic innovations, with a majority of works not previously exhibited. The selection also affirms the artists’ dedication to abstraction in a polemical decade broadly characterized by identity politics.

Throughout his career, Jack Whitten has experimented with acrylic paint, pushing his chosen medium to its material limit. A pivotal decade for Whitten, the 1990s mark the point when he began creating acrylic tesserae through a complex process. Pouring the paint in a shallow mold and allowing it to dry, he cuts, tears, and shatters the resulting slab into smaller pieces, effectively making “tiles” out of paint. For Whitten, these tesserae are vessels of information, like DNA or pixels, connected to the realms of science and technology. In 28 Black Holes (Dedicated To Jackie O) (1993–94), Whitten pieces together these pixels of acrylic to configure a larger painting. Amazing Popcorn (1994) echoes this idea, as twelve distinct tesserae paintings come together to form one composition. Whitten is currently the subject of a major retrospective organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, CA, traveling to the Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, OH and Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN.

Melvin Edwards creates sculpture by manipulating and welding together steel industrial and agricultural objects. With a formal emphasis, these materials unfold multiple layers of symbolic significance as they relate to African and African American history and culture, as well as Edwards’ autobiography. Emblematic of the works on view, Edwards incorporates chains into his sculptures, which speak to the history of slavery and oppression while simultaneously representing the links between people and cultures. Since the 1970s, he has consistently traveled throughout Africa, which is often reflected in his titles, such as Igun Eronmwon (1993), a street in Benin City, Nigeria where bronze casting families live and work. Lo (For Locardia Ndandarika) (1997) is named after Locardia Ndandarika, a Zimbabwean stone carver whom Edwards met during his first trip to Zimbabwe in 1986. Edwards’ second retrospective will open at the Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas, TX in January 2015.

Film: Tomislav Gotovac
The Gallery’s contribution to Art Basel Miami Beach’s Film Sector features the work of Tomislav Gotovac, a pioneering figure in Eastern European film and performance. Gotovac is primarily concerned with structure over content, and his films investigate varied cinematic methods and techniques, often reduced to their most basic levels.

About Art Basel Miami Beach
Leading galleries from North America, Latin America, Europe, Asia, and Africa show historical work from the masters of Modern and contemporary art, as well as newly created pieces by emerging stars. Paintings, sculptures, drawings, installations, photographs, films, and editioned works of the highest quality are on display at the main exhibition hall, while ambitious artworks and performances become part of the landscape at nearby beaches, Collins Park and SoundScape Park.

About Film
Organized in association with David Gryn, Director of London's Artprojx, Film sector presents works across two venues: inside the Miami Beach Convention Center, and in the outdoor setting of SoundScape Park where works are shown on the 7,000-square-foot outdoor projection wall of the Frank Gehry-designed New World Center. Selections include works by some of today’s most exciting artists from Latin America, the United States, Europe, Asia, and beyond.

Press Inquiries
press@alexandergray.com, and Dan Tanzilli, Third Eye: +1 646 593 8713