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Born in Venezuela in 1959, Arturo Herrera is celebrated for his cartoonish collages, felt sculptures and wall paintings that fuse popular cultural imagery, historical source material and elements of abstraction. ‘I am attracted to juxtaposing invented images and readymade images without establishing explicit relations between elements,’ he once said.

This brilliant show, his fourth at Thomas Dane Gallery, brings together new works, immersive wall painting and bookmaking shaped by the lived constraints of isolation. Central to the exhibition is the fine line mural that spans the gallery walls, echoing elements from Herrera’s 2020 hand-made book From this day Forward. It also includes several of his distinctive collages composed of photographic fragments, vibrant figurative strokes, animation and cultural and historical references that chart his continued investigations into modernist legacies and layering.

What strikes is his desire to distort meaning: ‘Can I make something so clear ambiguous? Can I uproot it?’, he asks. His work, particularly his collage, straddles that fluid border between legibility and abstraction — and is all the more entrancing for it.

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Dates
16 March 2021 — 06 June 2021
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Viewing Spencer Sweeney, Queue at Gagosian Davies Street

For more than 20 years, the New York-based artist, musician and DJ Spencer Sweeney has explored the physical and psychological spaces occupied by the body. His depictions of the human figure, ranging from semiabstract reclining nudes to surreal self-portraits, are characterised by his bright palette and distinctive impasto. Described as a ‘Downtown Renaissance’ man, Sweeney is inspired by everything from surrealism to Russian expressionism and jazz.

In 2019, Sweeney had his first solo show at Gagosian in Paris. Now he returns to Gagosian, but this time in London, with an exhibition of new paintings made in his Manhattan studio over the past year. Taking centre stage is the human face, which he has enlarged beyond-life size and reduced, in most cases, to a set of geometric forms and free-flowing lines.

Take a tour and you’ll come face to face with Abraham the Poet, an abstracted visage in blue, and a theatrical mask-like face painted in high contrast with stark crimson shadows. Look closely and you’ll notice certain shapes — such as a triangular nose in vivid red and pink— appear again and again. For this series, Sweeney has pushed the limits of figuration, challenging notions of social identity and individuality. It’ll make you stop and stare.

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Dates
22 February 2021 — 01 May 2021
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Founded in London in 2002, Simon Lee Gallery has made its name championing artists who share a broad interest in the conceptual. In April works by the New-York based conceptual artist, Mika Tajima will be installed in its London space.

For her debut solo exhibition in the UK, Tajima presents new paintings, textile works and sculptures that explore the mental and physical transformations of the human body as a result of technocapitalism.

It includes new works from her ongoing ‘Negative Entropy’ series — woven acoustic portraits — and her ‘Art d’Ameublement’ series, which comprises a group of paintings made up of large vivid spectrums of atomized particles encased in transparent shells of thermoformed PETG.

Among the standout exhibits is a large-scale rose quartz sculpture that has been punctured by bronze nozzles cast from Jacuzzi jest. Tajima chose the material for its ability ‘to transform bodily energy, generate electricity, and regulate time keeping.’

Tajima’s art is complex, but it’s thought-provoking — and extraordinarily beautiful.

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Dates
12 April 2021 — 08 May 2021
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