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Art Basel

June 15–18, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Art Basel, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Art Basel, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Art Basel, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Art Basel, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Art Basel, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Art Basel, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Art Basel, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Art Basel, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Art Basel, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Art Basel, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Art Basel, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Art Basel, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Art Basel, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Art Basel, 2023

Frank Bowling, Herbert Spencer Revisited, 1974

Frank Bowling

Herbert Spencer Revisited, 1974

Acrylic on canvas

76 x 46 in (193 x 116.8 cm)
78 x 48 x 2 1/4 in framed (198.1 x 121.9 x 5.7 cm framed)

Melvin Edwards, Untitled, c. 1974

Melvin Edwards

Untitled, c. 1974

Watercolor and ink on orange construction paper

19 x 12 1/2 in (48.3 x 31.8 cm)
26 3/8 x 19 7/8 x 1 1/2 in framed (67 x 50.5 x 3.8 cm framed)

Melvin Edwards, Eastern Angle, 1993

Melvin Edwards

Eastern Angle, 1993

Welded steel

11 x 9 x 9 in (27.9 x 22.9 x 22.9 cm)

Joan Semmel, Cornered Nipple, 1976

Joan Semmel

Cornered Nipple, 1976

Oil on canvas

22 x 44 1/8 in (55.9 x 112.1 cm)
23 1/2 x 45 1/2 x 2 in framed (59.7 x 115.6 x 5.1 cm framed)

Joan Semmel, Shameless, 2022

Joan Semmel

Shameless, 2022

Oil on canvas

60 x 48 x 2 in (152.4 x 121.9 x 5.1 cm)
61 1/2 x 49 1/2 x 2 7/8 in framed (156.2 x 125.7 x 7.3 cm framed)

Luis Camnitzer, John and Lillian, 1974

Luis Camnitzer

John and Lillian, 1974

Mixed media

15 x 9 7/8 x 2 in (38.1 x 25.1 x 5.1 cm)

Betty Parsons, Cousins, 1967

Betty Parsons

Cousins, 1967

Acrylic on canvas

43 1/2 x 36 5/8 in (110.49 x 93.34 cm)
44 5/8 x 37 5/8 x 2 1/2 in framed (113.3 x 95.6 x 6.3 cm framed)

Jennie C. Jones, Fluid Red Tone, Bass Clef, 2023

Jennie C. Jones

Fluid Red Tone, Bass Clef, 2023

Acrylic, acoustic panel, and architectural felt on canvas

48 1/2 x 48 x 2 3/4 in (123.2 x 121.9 x 7 cm)

Ricardo Brey, Ambrosie, 2022

Ricardo Brey

Ambrosie, 2022

Mixed media on Arches paper

47 5/8 x 63 in (121 x 160 cm)
53 1/8 x 68 7/8 x 2 in framed (135 x 175 x 5 cm framed)

Ricardo Brey, Yemaya, 2022-2023

Ricardo Brey

Yemaya, 2022-2023

Mixed media

31 7/8 x 11 5/8 x 11 5/8 in (81 x 29.5 x 29.5 cm)

Steve Locke, The Anxiety of Influence #9, 2023

Steve Locke

The Anxiety of Influence #9, 2023

Oil on panel

20 x 16 in (50.8 x 40.6 cm)
22 1/4 x 17 1/4 x 2 3/8 in framed (56.5 x 43.8 x 6 cm framed)

Hugh Steers, High-Heeled Embrace, 1989

Hugh Steers

High-Heeled Embrace, 1989

Oil on canvas

50 x 40 in (127 x 101.6 cm)
52 x 42 x 3 1/4 in framed (132.1 x 106.7 x 8.3 cm framed)

Hugh Steers, Futon Couch, 1991

Hugh Steers

Futon Couch, 1991

Oil on canvas

56 x 60 in (142.24 x 152.4 cm)
57 1/2 x 61 5/8 x 3 1/8 in (146.1 x 156.5 x 7.9 cm)

Hugh Steers, Red & White Sheet, 1988

Hugh Steers

Red & White Sheet, 1988

Oil on gessoed paper

13 1/4 x 11 in (33.7 x 27.9 cm)
20 1/8 x 17 3/4 x 1 1/2 in framed (51.1 x 45.1 x 3.8 cm framed)

Hugh Steers, Untitled, c. 1987

Hugh Steers

Untitled, c. 1987

Oil and charcoal on paper

30 x 22 1/4 in (76.2 x 56.5 cm)
33 7/8 x 29 1/4 x 1 5/8 in framed (86 x 74.3 x 4.1 cm framed)

Press Release

Art Basel 2023

Galleries Sector | Booth P14 | Messeplatz 10, 4058 Basel, Switzerland | June 13–18, 2023

Preview (invitation-only): June 13–14, 2023
Public Days: June 15–18, 2023

Alexander Gray Associates presents recent and historical works by Frank BowlingRicardo BreyLuis Camnitzer, Melvin Edwards, Jennie C. JonesSteve Locke, Betty Parsons, Joan Semmel, and Hugh Steers. Featuring abstract and figurative paintings, sculptures, and works on paper, the Gallery’s presentations highlight these nine artists’ innovative approaches to materiality, abstraction, and representation.

For several of these artists, the early 1970s denoted a major turning point in their respective practices. Centering a process-driven approach to abstraction, Herbert Spencer Revisited (1974) and other Poured Paintings (1973–78) marked Frank Bowling’s artistic evolution as he moved away from the expressionist gesture of his Map Paintings (1967–71) to investigate the materiality of paint, itself. Works like Herbert Spencer Revisited positioned Bowling at the forefront of contemporary art while articulating the connection between Black identity and abstraction. The fluidity of Bowling’s Poured Paintings is echoed in Melvin Edwards’s works on paper like Texas Blues (1974) whose seemingly spontaneous layered washes of watercolor evoke the same sense of immediacy. Referencing the multiplicity of meaning found in everyday items, Edwards’s 1970s drawings depict the same components—chains and barbed wire—that define his sculptural practice, alluding to both racial oppression and industry.

During the same decade Bowling and Edwards were rearticulating the relationship between identity and abstraction, Joan Semmel also radically reinvented her practice. In 1974, she turned to her own body as the focus of her paintings. With this shift, she transformed her point of view from that of an observer—a viewer outside of the canvas—to that of both an observer and subject. Rendered in a near photorealist style, portraits like Cornered Nipple (1976) from the artist’s Self-Images series (1974–79) capture “the feeling of self, and the experience of oneself.” This experience is amplified in recent works, which directly confront viewers with Semmel’s aging form. In Shameless (2022), the artist presents herself in a frontal seated position to challenge the objectification and fetishization of the female figure, reclaiming her own body as a site of creative autonomy.

Additionally, the 1970s marked a pivotal moment in Luis Camnitzer’s artistic development as he progressed from printmaking to focus on three-dimensional works. In 1973, he began to construct Object Boxes (1973–80) like John and Lillian (1974). Presenting the viewer with an ambiguous relationship between image and text, in this and other related works Camnitzer unpacks the connection between the two, suggesting that the correlation is a spontaneous construct—a changeable narrative meant to be formed by the viewer.

In contrast to this conceptual decoupling of object and language, Betty Parsons championed an emotive, painterly approach to interpret her surroundings. Influenced by the spontaneity and verve of the New York School and the expressive brushwork of Color Field Painting, in abstract canvases like Cousins (1967) she captured what she called the “sheer energy” and “the new spirit” of the natural world. Departing from Parson’s gestural method, Jennie C. Jones’s minimalist compositions employ noise-absorbing materials to explore the perception of sound within the visual arts. Composed of layered felt and acoustic panels, Fluid Red Tone, Bass Clef (2023) encourages viewers to anticipate the presence of sound—as the artist observes, this and other similar paintings are always “active.”

Just as Jones joins multiple components in her practice to reference different discourses and modes of perception, so too does Ricardo Brey. Juxtaposing a myriad of various materials and figurative and abstract imagery, his works on paper and sculptures like Yemaya (2022–23) interrogate the natural world while reflecting his own experience as an Afro-Cuban immigrant to Ghent, Belgium. Similarly personal, Steve Locke’s paintings speak to themes of male desire, vulnerability, and sexuality. Capturing intimate moments between men, Break (2007) and other cruisers paintings emerge as meditations on the gaze, mapping the relationship between identity and desire.

Further conveying the connection between identity and desire, the Gallery’s Kabinett presentation features a selection of works by Hugh Steers painted between 1988–92. These deeply intimate vignettes are connected by their shared imagery of men caring for one another. This care reflects, in part, Steers’s own longing for compassion and love. “It’s as if painting it will make it become real,” Steers once explained. “That painting of a man holding another man is conjuring that tenderness, that hope that someone will still care about you and will be there.” Imbuing soft glances and gestures with elegiac yearning, Steers’s men navigate a world indelibly marked by the isolation, desire, fear, and hope of the AIDS crisis.

Ultimately, the Gallery’s presentations chart an evolving global and political landscape. Responding to inequality and discrimination in contemporary society, these artists’ vibrant compositions articulate and champion new understandings and perspectives, portraying what Steers once characterized as “the humanity of a moment.”