Announcement of Representation

Mirror 12, 2017

Mirror 12, 2017

Robert Mann Gallery is pleased to announce the representation of Murray Fredericks.

Murray Fredericks is an internationally recognized and multi-award winning artist and filmmaker. Graduating with a Bachelor of Politics from the University of Sydney in 1992, Fredericks subsequently spent extended periods traveling alone in the Himalaya and Middle Eastern deserts. During this time he became aware of the profound effect that time spent in isolation – particularly in powerful landscapes – can have on the mind and one’s sense of self.

In the almost 20 years since, Fredericks has taken prolonged solo journeys to isolated and extreme locations, to produce large-scale photographs that capture the overwhelming emptiness and powerful emotional resonance of remote land and sky. His highly-acclaimedSalt series commenced in 2003 and has seen the artist complete more than 20 trips to Lake Eyre–Kati Thanda in South Australia, living alone for up to five weeks at a time. A conceptual exploration into the emotional qualities of ‘space’, the original Salt series has been exhibited and acquired by major institutions and galleries worldwide.

Blouin Artinfo: Top 15 Shows to See in New York This Week

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Herman Leonard at Robert Mann, New York

By Blouin Artinfo

Robert Mann gallery is hosting the exhibition “Herman Leonard: The Rhythm of Old New York” at the gallery’s New York location.

The exhibition presents a collection of images by American photographer Herman Leonard (1923-2010), known for his iconic works on the New York jazz scene. Born in a Romanian immigrant family in Allentown, Pennsylvania, Leonard found his fascination toward photography upon witnessing an image being developed in his brother's darkroom when he was only nine years old. He then went on to pursue Bachelor of Fine Arts in photography from Ohio University in 1947. From there, he worked as an apprentice under the mentorship of esteemed Canadian portrait photographer Yousuf Karsh for one year, and later in the 1950s, he worked as a personal photographer for Marlon Brando in East Asia and as a correspondent for Playboy and Time magazines in Paris. Part of many major public collections including Smithsonian Institute, Lincoln Center, and George Eastman House, as well as the private collections of Sir Elton John, Bruce Bernard, and President Bill Clinton, the most quintessential motif of Leonard’s works has been the jazz scene of New York.

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Robert Mann Gallery in Photofairs Shanghai 2017

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PHOTOFAIRS Shanghai 2017 is Most International Fair to Date

By Nicholas Forrest

PHOTOFAIRS Shanghai returns for its fourth edition in 2017 from September 8-10 at the Shanghai Exhibition Center with a lineup of 50 galleries and institutions from 16 countries and 28 cities. Widely recognized as Asia Pacific’s most authoritative platform on contemporary photography, PHOTOFAIRS Shanghai is a key driver of China’s maturing photography market.

This year’s edition of PHOTOFAIRS Shanghai welcomes a number of new galleries, including Tasveer (Bangalore), who will present Karen Knorr, Longmen Projects (Taipei, Hong Kong & Shanghai) showing Daniel Lee Postaer, as well as Robert Mann Gallery (New York), showcasing artists including Richard Misrach, Jeff Brouws, and Paulette Tavormina.

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I Scream, You Scream in New York Magazine's The Cut

This New Exhibition Will Satisfy Your Summer Sweet Tooth

By Sarah Nechamkin

As the sweaty days of mid-summer approach, the allure of an ice-cream cone becomes ever more tempting. The bells that signal the Mister Softee truck parked on the curb instantly evoke nostalgia for those longing to escape the air-conditioned office and enjoy the simple pleasure of a cold cone. If you can’t, though, at least escape to Robert Mann Gallery, where the newly opened exhibition “I Scream You Scream” promises to satisfy at least some of your cravings.

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NY Times Features Swale by Mary Mattingly

A Forest Floats on the Bronx River, With Free Produce

By Alexandra S. Levine

In a South Bronx forest, the ground sways as visitors collect blueberries, onions and wild carrots. The plants bob up and down as guests gather oregano or basil to add to their next meal. The floating forest on the Bronx River has one main purpose: to engage New Yorkers in a conversation about the benefits of shared, public food by offering crops to pick and eat.

“Not everyone has a garden, or access to earth, and it’s expensive. So how do we work together to get around that?” said Marisa Prefer, who manages the public programs for Swale, the floating forest project by the artist Mary Mattingly that started a year ago.

The artist transformed a 130-foot barge, once used for hauling sand to construction sites, into a public food forest with free edible and medicinal treasures. Last week, the floating green space moved from Pier 6 in Brooklyn Bridge Park to Concrete Plant Park in the South Bronx, one of the largest food deserts in the country, where healthy, fresh options are hard to come by, and on Friday afternoon it opened to the public.

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Review: Julie Blackmon

Art Review: Photographer Julie Blackmon's Memories of Home 

By Meg Brazill
June 28, 2017

A mother's back is turned to her three small children while she searches deep in a car trunk for something out of view. Behind her, one of her children spins around a loading zone sign, while her baby brother picks at cracks in the sidewalk outside a boarded-up building, and their toddler sister clutches a purse as she crosses the street alone. The scene is ominous yet strangely carefree — if trouble is on the horizon, it hasn't happened yet.

Julie Blackmon's photographs, including "Loading Zone," suggest a delicate balance between freedom and responsibility, chaos and order. They provide a glimpse into the artist's world and, sometimes, right into her backyard.

Ten of Blackmon's large-scale color photographs from her most recent series, "Homegrown," are on exhibit in "Julie Blackmon: The Everyday Fantastic" at the Hood Downtown gallery in Hanover, N.H.

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Photo District News Photographer Interviews: Cig Harvey

Cig Harvey: Through Mother's Eyes

By Brienne Walsh

Cig Harvey didn’t know that her new series was about the serious car crash she survived in August 2015 until she showed the photographs to a friend. “He said, ‘The accident is literally all over these,” she recalls. Harvey was psychologically scarred, but rarely ever talked about it. “We’re often the last ones to know what our work is about,” she muses. The fact that the series was born of trauma was no surprise to Harvey, however. “Whenever something massive happens in my life, I make pictures as a way to respond to it,” she says. “I’m the most productive when something derails me, or I don’t understand, or [something] floors me. It could be an amazing thing or it could be a terrible thing. I use art as a way to slow the world down and better understand it.”

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Susan Rankaitis Reviewed in Photograph Magazine

Susan Rankaitis: Grey Matters at Robert Mann Gallery, New York

By Lyle Rexer

When I first saw Susan Rankaitis’s work almost 20 years ago, I felt like I was entering the Cave of Altamira. I had never seen anything so chemical, so metallic, and the shimmering surfaces of those giant prints were like looking into the material origin of photography.  But if Rankaitis was obsessed with origins, she was also channeling the future, the brave new world of technological imagining that gave birth to photography in one era and to brain scans and gene sequencing in another – but also equally to weapons of mass destruction. For a 1990s installation, she even wrapped her abstractions around a recycled missile nosecone. Conceptual ambitions aside, her surface investigations were also a form of painting by other means, well in advance of today’s Mariah Robertson and Matthew Brandt.  She was exploring the textures, colors, translucency, and transcription of light made possible by analogue photographic materials.

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Mike Mandel in Collector Daily

 

Mike Mandel: Good 70s @Robert Mann

By Loring Knoblauch / In Galleries / June 14, 2017

JTF (just the facts): A total of 84 black and white and color photographs, variously framed and matted, and hung against white walls in the main gallery space and the smaller side room. (Installation shots below.)

The show incudes works from the following series/projects, with the number of works on view, their processes, dates, and editions (as appropriate) as background:

  • Evidence (made with Larry Sultan): 13 gelatin silver prints, each 8×10, 1977
  • People in Cars: 20 vintage gelatin silver prints mounted to a 30×40 board, 1970-1973
  • Boardwalk Minus Forty: 23 gelatin silver prints, each 8×10, and 4 archival pigment prints, each 9×11 (in editions of 6), 1974
  • Myself: Timed Exposures: 21 vintage gelatin silver prints, each roughly 6×8, 1971
  • Motels: 3 archival pigment prints, each 16×24, in editions of 6, 1974
  • Baseball – Photographer Trading Cards: compete set of 135 cards (in vitrine), 1975
  • Don Drowty The Famous: 13:54 min. video, in edition of 6, 1971

A retrospective exhibition of the artist’s work is currently (5/20/17-8/20/17) on view at SFMOMA (here). A boxed set monograph of these bodies of work was published in 2015 by J&L Books (here).

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Jennifer Williams Hosts Open Studios

QCA ArtHotel @ Z Hotel

OPEN STUDIOS:
Friday, June 16th 4-8PM
Sat. June 17th 1-5PM
Friday, June 23rd 4-8PM (Artist talk at7PM)
Sat. June 24th 1-5PM
Sun. June 25th 1-5PM (exhibition open)

Z Hotel:
11-01 43rd Ave
Long Island City

Check out her work at NYFA:

NYFA’s newest exhibition, Informality, will be on view in NYFA Gallery starting Thursday, May 4, through September 1, that showcase works by 2016 NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship Finalists. 
Click here for more information.

NYFA Gallery: 
20 Jay Street
DUMBO