Frieze New York

6 - 15 May 2020
  • Frieze New York

    Holly Coulis, Katy Cowan, Kristy Luck and Joanne Petit-Frère
  • At 2020 Frieze New York, Philip Martin Gallery is proud to present works by Holly Coulis, Katy Cowan, Kristy Luck and Joanne Petit-Frère. These four artists work in painting, sculpture, and textiles.

  • Holly Coulis Floating Large Lemon 2020 Oil on linen 50 x 60 in 127 x 152.4 cm

    Holly Coulis
    Floating Large Lemon
    2020
    Oil on linen
    50 x 60 in
    127 x 152.4 cm

  • Floating Large Lemon (detail)

    Floating Large Lemon
    (detail)

  • Works by Holly Coulis

    (click on image to inquire)
  • Katy Cowan the waves (Position) 2020 Oil and enamel paint, graphite on cast aluminum 40 x 32 x 2 in...

    Katy Cowan
    the waves (Position) 
    2020
    Oil and enamel paint, graphite on cast aluminum
    40 x 32 x 2 in
    101.6 x 81.3 x 5.1 cm

  • the waves (Position) (detail)

    the waves (Position) 
    (detail)

  • Works by Katy Cowan

    (click on image to inquire)
  • Kristy Luck Heirloom 2020 Oil on linen 36 x 30 in 91.4 x 76.2 cm

    Kristy Luck
    Heirloom 
    2020
    Oil on linen
    36 x 30 in
    91.4 x 76.2 cm

  • Heirloom (detail)

    Heirloom
    (detail)

  • Works by Kristy Luck

    (click on image to inquire)
  • Joanne Petit-Frère Fanon Mask (during Cova-19) 2020 Synthetic hair, thread, muslin, wire 23 x 20 x 14 in 58.4 x...

    Joanne Petit-Frère
    Fanon Mask (during Cova-19)
    2020
    Synthetic hair, thread, muslin, wire
    23 x 20 x 14 in
    58.4 x 50.8 x 35.6 cm

  • Joanne Petit-Frère's works are activated by performance and realized in the gallery as sculpture. Click on the video below to learn more.
  • Works by Joanne Petit-Frère

    (click on image to inquire)
  • To hear Holly Coulis, Katy Cowan, Kristy Luck and Joanne Petit-Frère discuss their newest works produced specifically for Frieze, click here.
  • Press Release

    Philip Martin Gallery's Frieze New York 2020 on-line viewing room presents works by Holly COULIS, Katy COWAN, Kristy LUCK and Joanne PETIT-FRÈRE. These four artists work in painting, sculpture, and textiles. 

    Holly COULIS (b. 1968, lives Athens, GA) engages with the traditional genres of painting — still life, landscape and portraiture — as a framework for a complex exploration of the language of painting. Holly Coulis's paintings can be abstract, or operate as stages where life scenes unfold. A table, for example, creates an initial structure where simplified, geometric forms are arranged and interact. There is a sense of order in these scenes as though the fruits and dishes had been laid out by some external force. Through layers of paint, linear elements are created, giving the illusion of colorful stripes or energy fields around individual objects. These works feel familiar, but upend our sense of figure/ground, horizon-line, perspective, and scale.

    Katy COWAN (b. 1982, lives Berkeley, CA) makes hand-cast, hand-painted aluminum works of rope constructions. These rope constructions are put together in the studio, and organized with an eye to abstraction, line, shape, color and energy. The rope constructions are burned out in the sand-casting process, leaving an aluminum cast wall frieze on which Cowan paints with oil paint, taking the process a step further. Cowan's body, her studio tools, and the events in her immediate environment serve as generative subject-matter for her artworks. These artworks investigate human experience and the traces left by such experience. They suggest that ideas and objects are both physical and metaphorical, and that an impression can take forms both indexically literal and expressively iconic.

    Kristy LUCK (b. 1985, lives Los Angeles, CA) makes paintings that engage with the medium's tradition of depicting women in melancholic or revelatory states. Luck considers Modernism, its legacy and implications with regard to individual voice and transformation. Luck’s paintings point to mysterious significance and contemplation. The artist has said, “I am trying to find a visual language for personal melancholia and intuition; melancholia not as a pathology, but as an illuminating discourse with oneself, and intuition as subconscious pattern recognition. I’m interested in how these emotional experiences have been dismissed or devalued when associated with the ‘feminine mind.’” 

    Joanne PETIT-FRÈRE (b. 1987, lives New York, NY) addresses the human body as a site of beauty and adornment. Drawing on sources ranging from African Diaspora traditions, Old West movies, the photographs of Cindy Sherman and the history of Haiti, Petit-Frère makes labor intensive tapestries and sculptures that involve weaving by hand eight or more colors of synthetic hair. In the gallery, Petit-Frère’s work is realized as sculpture; however, it is often activated by performance. Petit-Frère enlists performance as a means by which to think about our own bodies, and those around us. In the midst of crisis, human touch and presence in society is increasingly charged, and Petit-Frère responds to this, and the underlying currents in societal dialogue. 
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