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Frieze New York

May 17–May 21, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Installation view: Alexander Gray Associates, Frieze New York, 2023

Harmony Hammond, Bandaged Grid #12 (Big Gold), 2022-2023

Harmony Hammond

Bandaged Grid #12 (Big Gold), 2022-2023

Signed, titled, and dated on verso

Oil and mixed media on canvas

91 1/2 x 108 1/2 x 2 3/4 in (232.4 x 275.6 x 7 cm)

Melvin Edwards, Diallo, 1999

Melvin Edwards

Diallo, 1999

Signed, titled, and dated

Welded steel

25 1/4 x 21 1/2 x 22 in (64.1 x 54.6 x 55.9 cm)

Melvin Edwards, Untitled, c. 1974

Melvin Edwards

Untitled, c. 1974

Watercolor and ink on paper

17 3/4 x 12 in (45.1 x 30.5 cm)
21 x 15 x 1 5/8 in framed (53.3 x 38.1 x 4.1 cm framed)

Joan Semmel, Feet First, 2022

Joan Semmel

Feet First, 2022

Signed and dated on recto

Oil on canvas

48 1/4 x 60 in (122.6 x 152.4 cm)
49 1/2 x 61 1/2 x 2 7/8 in framed (125.7 x 156.2 x 7.3 cm framed)

Jennie C. Jones, Dense Tone, Break, 2023

Jennie C. Jones

Dense Tone, Break, 2023

Signed and dated on verso

Acrylic and architectural felt on canvas board

30 x 30 in (76.2 x 76.2 cm)

Bethany Collins, Antigone: 1998 / 2015, 2023

Bethany Collins

Antigone: 1998 / 2015, 2023

Graphite on Somerset paper in two parts

44 x 30 in each (111.8 x 76.2 cm each)
46 1/2 x 32 3/8 x 1 3/4 in framed each (118.1 x 82.2 x 4.4 cm framed each)

Joan Semmel, On the Easel, 2001

Joan Semmel

On the Easel, 2001

Signed and dated on recto

Oil on canvas

31 5/8 x 24 3/4 x 1 in (80.3 x 62.9 x 2.5 cm)
33 3/8 x 26 1/2 x 2 3/8 in framed (84.8 x 67.3 x 6 cm framed)

Steve Locke, little instigator, 2022

Steve Locke

little instigator, 2022

Signed, titled, and dated on verso

Oil on beveled panel

12 x 12 in (30.5 x 30.5 cm)

Steve Locke, cruisers (stall), 2023

Steve Locke

cruisers (stall), 2023

Signed, titled, and dated on verso

Oil on canvas

30 x 36 in (76.2 x 91.4 cm)
31 1/4 x 37 3/8 x 2 in framed (79.4 x 94.9 x 5.1 cm framed)

Steve Locke, cruisers (vest), 2023

Steve Locke

cruisers (vest), 2023

Signed, titled, and dated on verso

Oil on canvas

30 x 36 in (76.2 x 91.4 cm)
31 1/4 x 37 3/8 x 2 in framed (79.4 x 94.9 x 5.1 cm framed)

Lorraine O'Grady, The Strange Taxi: From Africa to Jamaica to Boston in 200 Years, 1991/2019

Lorraine O'Grady

The Strange Taxi: From Africa to Jamaica to Boston in 200 Years, 1991/2019

Signed, titled, dated, and numbered on verso

Archival pigment print on Hahnemühle Baryta pure cotton photo rag paper

50 x 40 in (127 x 101.6 cm)
51 x 40 7/8 x 1 3/4 in framed (129.5 x 103.8 x 4.4 cm framed)

Edition of 10 plus 3 artist's proofs (#2/10)

Bethany Collins, Untitled (Dialogue of Cruelty, 1967), 2022

Bethany Collins

Untitled (Dialogue of Cruelty, 1967), 2022

Charcoal on found paper

10 x 6 5/8 in (25.4 x 16.8 cm)
11 7/8 x 8 1/4 x 1 1/2 in framed (30.2 x 21 x 3.8 cm framed)

Ronny Quevedo, astro, 2021

Ronny Quevedo

astro, 2021

Signed and dated on verso

Wax on paper on panel

14 x 18 x 1 5/8 in (35.6 x 45.7 x 4.1 cm)
15 1/4 x 19 1/4 x 2 1/4 in framed (38.7 x 48.9 x 5.7 cm framed)

Ronny Quevedo, all star, 2022

Ronny Quevedo

all star, 2022

Wax on paper on panel

14 x 18 x 1 5/8 in (35.6 x 45.7 x 4.1 cm)
15 1/4 x 19 1/4 x 2 1/4 in framed (38.7 x 48.9 x 5.7 cm framed)

Ricardo Brey, I hear the light, 2021

Ricardo Brey

I hear the light, 2021

Mixed media on paper

47 1/4 x 63 1/2 in (120 x 161.3 cm)
51 7/8 x 67 1/4 x 2 3/4 in framed (131.8 x 170.8 x 7 cm framed)

Press Release

Frieze New York

The Shed | 545 West 30th St | New York | Booth B14

Preview (invitation only): May 17, 2023

Preview: May 18–19, 2023

Public Days: May 20–21, 2023

Alexander Gray Associates presents works by Ricardo Brey, Bethany Collins, Melvin Edwards, Harmony Hammond, Jennie C. Jones, Steve Locke, Lorraine O’Grady, Ronny Quevedo, and Joan Semmel. Featuring a range of abstract and figurative paintings, sculptures, and drawings, the Gallery’s presentation celebrates artistic approaches that challenge conceptual and formal conventions.

In recent work, Harmony Hammond focuses on materiality and the indexical, suggesting topographies of the body. Paintings like Bandaged Grid #12 (Big Gold) (2022–23) and other related canvases currently on view in the artist’s one-person exhibition at the Gallery’s Chelsea location feature patches of fabric layered over grids of grommets. For Hammond, this approach evokes the bandaging of a body. Similarly, Melvin Edwards’s sculptures capitalize on what the curator Catherine Craft calls “the multivalent practical possibilities of . . . material.” Constructed from salvaged industrial elements, the artist’s freestanding sculpture Diallo (1999) is at once scrap, tool, and weapon. The work pays tribute to Amadou Diallo, an African immigrant who was wrongfully shot and killed by police officers in the Bronx in 1999. 

Since the 1970s, Joan Semmel has centered her practice around representations of the body from the female perspective. While her previous use of the camera was to document herself from her own viewpoint, works like On the Easel (2001) mark the first time Semmel purposefully posed in front of the mirror with a camera to challenge the objectification and fetishization of the female form. While Semmel’s canvases are distinguished by the artist’s “experience of femaleness,” Steve Locke’s paintings examine themes of male desire, vulnerability, and sexuality. cruisers (cinema) and cruisers (vest) (both 2022) capture intensely intimate—and potentially dangerous—moments shared between anonymous men, who are connected by the act of “looking.”

Eschewing figuration, Ronny Quevedo’s practice meditates on themes related to identity by reenvisioning sports iconographies. In intimately scaled abstractions like astro (2021) and el crack (2022), Quevedo constructs compositions that recall gameplay strategy diagrams to examine the connection between play, movement, and migration. Like Quevedo, Ricardo Brey incorporates historical and cultural legacies related to his autobiography into his visual vocabulary. Works on paper like Middle Branches and I hear the light (both 2021) range in hue from cerulean to lapis lazuli; their shimmering azure grounds evoking the freedom and limitless expansiveness of the ocean. Also exploring issues surrounding identity, Lorraine O’Grady’s The Strange Taxi, From Africa to Jamaica to Boston in 200 Years (1991/2019) presents the Black body as the literal ground on which history acts and is unexpectedly modified.

Making her debut with the Gallery, Bethany Collins’s nuanced works on paper examine the complicated relationship between race and language. In Antigone: 1998 / 2015 (2023), Collins presents hand-written passages taken from Sophocles’s play blown up to a monumental scale. As in her ongoing Odyssey and Aeneid series, Collins invests the modernist act of erasure with a charged physicality by using her spit to erase all the text except for select passages of the Athenian tragedy. Meanwhile, in new Acoustic Paintings like Dense Tone, Break (2023), Jennie C. Jones continues to explore the perception of sound within the visual arts. Encouraging viewers to anticipate the presence of sound, Jones states that paintings like Dense Tone are always “active.”

Reflecting the Gallery’s engagement with artists working across cultural, social, and political spheres, these nine artists advocate for an expanded understanding of material and process through thoughtful, open-ended works that Hammond argues “participate in multiple narratives.”