Isca Greenfield-Sanders

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ISCA GREENFIELD-SANDERS

ISCA GREENFIELD-SANDERS

MILES McENERY GALLERY


ISCA GREENFIELD-SANDERS SHADE!MY!EYES

520 West 21st Street New York NY 10011

tel +1 212 445 0051 www.milesmcenery.com

525 West 22nd Street New York NY 10011


OPEN WINDOW: ON ISCA GREENFIELD-SANDERS’S GRIDS By Kris Paulsen

A mountain, a beach, a turbulent sky; canoes sneaking across a lake at night; a helicopter high above treetops, caught just before leaving the frame; bathers spied on from above: These are fragments, images pulled out of context and stilled from the flow of time. Their framing, angles, and depth of field all speak the language of photography and the mathematical discipline and distancing enforced by the lens. The moments they preserve are ripe with reportage, contingency, and—simultaneously—a certain familiarity wrought by amateurism and the automation of capture. Content tethers them securely to the vernacular idioms of the documentation of middleclass family life. One can easily imagine seeing them click into view during a living-room slide show that distills the history of a life to its special moments. Yet, in this act of committing to the archive and official memory, these exceptional instances are sapped of their singularity and subsumed by genre. Something, however, disrupts this slide toward generality: a lattice floating ambiguously—almost invisibly—in the foreground. See the grid, and the illusion is lost. The scene dissolves into impressionistic gestures of paint. The grid opens the image, and all of its claims to memory and realism, to suspicion and analysis. Grids famously appeared in—and then disappeared from—painting during the Renaissance. Fifteenth-century artists, architects, and thinkers, such as Masaccio, Filippo Brunelleschi, and Leon Battista Alberti, devised ways of using gridded veils to transpose realistic images of the world onto the flat surfaces of panels and walls. By similar methods, they could use grids intersected by perspectival rays to illusionistically conjure invented scenes into existence. Once they achieved their purpose, the grids were cleared from view, rendering them invisible but implicit. All that was left, as Alberti described it, was the effect of looking through an “open window.”1 1. Leon Ba!ista Alberti, On Painting, trans. Cecil Grayson (London: Penguin Books, 1991), 54.

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Thus, by means of an ancient device, one that had long organized texts, buildings and cities, a bit of magic occurred: Whole worlds were summoned into existence and, by the gift of the grid, were endowed with a verisimilitude that made them seem real.2 The effect was so convincing that we began to mistake its ordered delineation of space as identical to our natural vision.

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This substitution gained support from another ancient device, the camera obscura, which mirrored perspective’s single-point logic.3 Refined through lenses, the camera obscura became the modern camera, purposefully designed to mimic and reproduce the structures of perspectival painting.4 Instead of recognizing this systematic manipulation, we accepted photographs as images born from nature and credited them with the objectivity of science. In time, the camera would gain the power to automatically capture and preserve images as photographs, which, tethered to an individual’s specific place in space and time, became an analogy for experience or memory itself. We forgot or failed to notice that our vision is not rectangularly bounded and that we cannot see with such perfect focus and across multiple planes and distances. The veil travels with us now, giving shape to what we see, framing the world in front of us and turning it into a picture for future reference, circulation, or use. We live our lives in anticipation of the images that will make our lives seem real. Grids, however, did not stay hidden. At the same time that photography began to reshape our encounters with the surrounding world, modern artists—from Paul Cézanne, Georges Braque, and Piet Mondrian through to Frank Stella, Robert Ryman, and Agnes Martin—found the grid of the picture plane again; but this time, they did not bury it below the image or use it to project artificial depths. Instead, the grid rose to the surface and remained in full view, reminding the viewer of the constructed and artificial identity of images. In Modernist painting, the grid declared its presence as, in Rosalind Krauss’s words, “anti-natural, anti-mimetic, anti-real.”5 Rather than reproducing the dimensions of the real world and projecting them into an imaginary space, the modernist grid forces the viewer’s attention to material, process, and facture. When in view, the grid banishes 2. For more on the long history of grids in human culture, see Hanna Higgins’s remarkable archaeology of their use: Hannah B. Higgins, The Grid Book (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2009). 3. The principle of the pinhole camera had been known since ancient times. Aristotle, for example, described it in Problems. Aristotle, Problems, Book XV, Chapter 11, Robert Mayhew, trans. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2011), 471.

illusion, representation, and narrative. Those versions of reality that are enabled by perspective and photography are gone, and a new fact emerges: the realization that surface is all we ever had. It is hard to imagine two more different modes of organizing the canvas or of representing space than those of the Renaissance and those of Modernism; yet, it is the grid that sustains them both. It is the grid that enables representation and insists on abstraction; it gives us illusions of deep space and bars our entry; it reproduces the real and exposes all such representations as inventions. Isca Greenfield-Sanders’s mixed-media paintings strain the far edges of the grid’s domain, and pull all of its inherent contradictions and oppositions into taut tension. Look at Pink Mountain (2019). A vista spreads out before the viewer: a great expanse of open plain—slick and reflective with slushy swaths of ice—recedes into dense forest and brush. A mountain rises in the distance, glowing pink to match an uncanny sky. The craggy peak, dashed with snow, hides among the low-slung clouds at its shoulders. The scene is both remarkable and familiar: It speaks of all the times that we encounter moments of majesty and the sublime, seek to capture them with a camera, and fail. What we see is still remarkable and impressive, but we are also held at a distance, disembodied, and pushed back by the wide-angle displacement performed by a camera as it seeks to inhabit our place in the world. Perspectival lines recede to the deep center of the painting, centering the viewer in turn. The image orients us and is oriented for us. Just as Alberti said, it is as if we are looking through a window, only now we can see its panes. Greenfield-Sanders’s grid haunts the picture, although it is sometimes noticeable only as a slight shadow or by glints of light catching layered paper. The grid’s subtle reappearance undermines any easy entry into the image or reverie in its content, by forcing attention back to the picture plane and its anti-representational, anti-realist implications. The grid, here, is an artifact of Greenfield-Sanders’s process. Beginning with found photographic slides, she scans, crops, and digitally manipulates the image. Figures appear and disappear, 4. Ancient observers of the pinhole camera, Joel Snyder explains, ignored its “potential pictorial implications,” confining “their interest rather to the shape of the outer boundary of the image.” Snyder argues that the pinhole image “did not suggest a pictorial use” until the conventions of perspective had fully taken root, at which point the device was carefully adjusted to reproduce the form of vision created in perspectival paintings. Joel Snyder, “Picturing Vision,” Critical Inquiry 6, no. 3 (Spring 1980): 511-12.

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colors change, or optical phenomena (such as light leaks or lens flares) may enter the frame. The new, altered image reappears in the physical world as a small rice paper print, on which the artist makes a pencil and watercolor study. She scans the result; painting and photograph flatten to one. The study’s paint, pixels, and grain are then enlarged and mapped across a grid of paper tiles, which Greenfield-Sanders affixes to the canvas before she begins work again. The effect of the photographic image survives this remediated process, but only at a distance. What one sees behind the top layer of paint is, instead, an inscrutable accretion of handmade gestures, digital interventions, and photographic traces, all flattened in space and time through repeated scanning and printing. Painted layers rest atop scanned brushstrokes and pixelated enlargements of photographic grain. It is impossible to confidently distinguish between her marks and those that might have been born with the photograph or simulated on the computer. In this shallow space, history collapses, and representation recedes. Look closer, and even those remaining bits of recognizable image flicker with instability. The vibrant pink of the mountain sits atop the aureolin yellow of the fronting trees, and a thick outline forms where they meet. Foreground and background struggle and reverse. The illusionistic scene is not revealed through the grid but is in it. The image, with all of its apparent ties to representation and reality, is a fantasy. The content of the original photographs, which had seemed so secure and identifiable when seen from across the room, becomes strange under the influence of the grid. A moment before, the images appeared to be so quintessentially “American” that one might be tempted to call them iconic or “nostalgic.”6 Through photographic images that are also paintings, Greenfield-Sanders shows us what nostalgia really is: the longing for a past that never really was.7 The scenes they depict display the hallmarks of a bygone era and derive from a narrow strata of society, clearly marked by class and race. On Greenfield-Sanders’s canvases, these American myths seduce at the same time as they unmask themselves as fictions. Even if taken at face value, the original found photographs are fantasies themselves—images captured as much to document as to create selective memories for the future. Through repetition and exclusion, extraordinary moments have 5. Rosalind Krauss, “Grids,” The Originality of the Avant Garde and Other Modernist Myths (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1999), 10. 6. Chuck Close, “A Conversation with Chuck Close and Isca Greenfield-Sanders” (San Francisco: John Berggruen Gallery, 2007), 9.

come to seem ordinary, average, quotidian, and shared. The word nostalgia carries within itself similar traces of an invented past. Though deriving from Greek roots (nóstos [νόστος] meaning “return home” and álgos [ἄλγος] for “longing”), the word had no history in the Greek language. It was the invention of a seventeenth century Swiss doctor, Johannes Hofer, who coined it to describe the homesickness experienced by soldiers when they were displaced from their native lands. The malady produced what Hofer called “erroneous representations,” which caused the afflicted to confuse, in the words of Svetlana Boym, the great theorist of nostalgia, “past and the present, real and imaginary events.”8 Boym also described nostalgia as “a romance with one’s own fantasy” that produces a kind of “double exposure or superimposition of two images,” combining past with present, or dream with everyday life. “The moment we try to force it into a single image,” she writes, “it breaks the frame or burns the surface.”9 Greenfield-Sanders’s paintings do just this. If they are nostalgic, it is because they conjure and expose fictionalized histories, rose-tinted and held outside of time. Looking to the surfaces of her windows, to the panes as well the vistas beyond, we see, simultaneously, a version of the past and all of the obvious marks of manipulation and artistic intervention introduced by the remediated processes of memory, mythmaking, and recall.

Kris Paulsen is an Associate Professor in the Department of History of Art and in the program in Film Studies at Ohio State University. She is the author of Here/There: Telepresence, Touch, and Art at the Interface (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2017), as well as of numerous articles and book chapters on new media art and digital culture.

7. Svetlana Boym, The Future of Nostalgia (New York: Basic Books, 2001), xiii. 8. Boym, 3. 9. Boym, xiii.

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Desert Walk, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Aerial Beach, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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Boy Beach, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Palm Tree Sky, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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Striped Bather, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Turquoise Beach, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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Striped Umbrella, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Cli Beach, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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No Name (Beach), 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Paddlers, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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Canoes (Fall), 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Blueberries, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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No Name (Landscape), 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Hillside, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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No Name (Hill), 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Boy Fishing, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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Three Paddlers, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Three Paddlers, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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Sailboats, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Aerial Beach, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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No Name (Beach), 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Purple Beach, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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No Name (Beach), 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

No Name (Landscape), 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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Pink Mountain, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Night Clouds, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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Old Faithful, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Lake at Night, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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No Name (Beach), 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Canoes (Winter), 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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Island, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm

Detail, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 14 x 14 inches 35.6 x 35.6 cm


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Cliff Beach, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 28 x 28 inches 71.1 x 71.1 cm


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Three Trees, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 28 x 28 inches 71.1 x 71.1 cm


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Blueberries, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 35 x 35 inches 88.9 x 88.9 cm


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Aerial Beach, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 35 x 35 inches 88.9 x 88.9 cm


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No Name (Beach), 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 35 x 35 inches 88.9 x 88.9 cm


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Striped Umbrella, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 35 x 35 inches 88.9 x 88.9 cm


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Desert Walk, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 35 x 35 inches 88.9 x 88.9 cm


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Palm Tree Sky, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 35 x 35 inches 88.9 x 88.9 cm


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Canoes (Winter), 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 42 x 42 inches 106.7 x 106.7 cm


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Sailboats, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 42 x 42 inches 106.7 x 106.7 cm


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Seaside, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 42 x 42 inches 106.7 x 106.7 cm


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Turquoise, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 63 x 63 inches 160 x 160 cm


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Aerial Beach, 2020 Mixed media oil on canvas 63 x 63 inches 160 x 160 cm


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Aerial Beach, 2020 Mixed media oil on canvas 63 x 63 inches 160 x 160 cm


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No Name (Beach), 2020 Mixed media oil on canvas 63 x 63 inches 160 x 160 cm


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Three Bathers, 2018

Mixed media oil on canvas 63 x 63 inches 160 x 160 cm


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Sand Dune, 2019 Mixed media oil on canvas 63 x 63 inches 160 x 160 cm


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Pink Mountain, 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 63 x 63 inches 160 x 160 cm


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Canoes (Fall), 2019

Mixed media oil on canvas 63 x 63 inches 160 x 160 cm


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Island, 2020 Mixed media oil on canvas 63 x 63 inches 160 x 160 cm


ISCA GREENFIELD-SANDERS Born in 1978 in New York, NY Lives and works in New York, NY

EDUCATION 2000 BA, Fine Arts and Mathematics, Brown University, Providence, RI

SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2020 “Shade my Eyes,” Miles McEnery Gallery, New York, NY 2019 “Today and Everyday,” Galerie Klüser, Munich, Germany

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2018 “Inherited Landscape,” Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco, CA 2017 “Keep Them Still,” Ameringer | McEnery | Yohe, New York, NY 2016 “Balance Point,” Reynolds Gallery, Richmond, VA “All Roads in My Mind,” We!erling Gallery, Stockholm, Sweden 2015 “Those Few Hours,” Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, CO “I’ll Be Your Mirror,” Dubner Moderne Galerie d’Art, Lausanne, Switzerland 2014 “Somewhere Else, Somewhere Good,” John Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco, CA

2013 “Marines,” Galerie Klüser, Munich, Germany 2012 “Second State,” Haunch of Venison, London, United Kingdom 2011 “The Ocean Between,” Haunch of Venison, New York, NY “Film Edges,” We!erling Gallery, Stockholm, Sweden 2010 “Field at Hollow Road,” John Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco, CA “Light Leaks,” Museum of Contemporary Art Denver, Denver, CO 2009 “A Beautiful Place to Get Lost,” Galerie Klüser, Munich, Germany “Light Leak,” Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, CO 2008 “Against the Fall,” Goff & Rosenthal, New York, NY 2007 “Red Boat Beaches,” John Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco, CA 2006 “Isca Greenfield-Sanders,” Museum Morsbroich, Leverkusen, Germany “Viridian Isle,” Galerie Klüser, Munich, Germany “Pinelawn Pools,” Goff & Rosenthal, New York, NY “Swimming Pool Paintings,” We!erling Gallery, Stockholm, Sweden 2005 Sky of Blue, Sea of Green,” John Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco, CA “Paintings for Harley,” Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, CO 2004 “Silver Cove,” Galerie Klüser, Munich, Germany

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2003 “Rose Point,” MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY “Windswept Fields,” Galerie Klüser, Munich, Germany 2002 “Beachwood Park,” Lombard-Freid Fine Arts, New York, NY “New Work,” Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, CO 2001 “Three Project Rooms,” Galleria In Arco, Turin, Italy 2000 “Memories,” Galleria In Arco, Turin, Italy

GROUP EXHIBITIONS

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2019 “RealitätsCHECK,” Art’Us Collector’s Collective and Kunstraum Potsdam c/o Waschhaus, Potsdam, Germany “Striking Gold: Fuller at Fi#y,” Fuller Cra# Museum, Brockton, MA “Oceans Edge,” Bra!leboro Museum and Art Center, Bra!leboro, VT

2013 “Missed Connection,” Reynolds Gallery, Richmond, VA “Ten Years,” Wallspace Gallery, New York, NY “Playing with Process: Explorations in Experimental Printmaking,” Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Houston, TX “The Distaff Side,” The Granary, Sharon, CT “1XX” (curated by Sam Trioli), Launch F18, New York, NY 2012 “Radical Terrain,” Rubin Museum of Art, New York, NY “Beached,” Gallery Valentine, East Hampton, NY “Boundaries Obscured,” Haunch of Venison, New York, NY 2011 “U.S. Department of State,” Art in Embassies Program, Tel Aviv, Israel “Out of Focus, A#er Gerhard Richter,” Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg, Germany “The Art of Giving,” John Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco, CA 2010 “Nothing Gold Can Stay,” Robert Goff Gallery, New York, NY

2018 “Belief In Giants,” Miles McEnery Gallery, New York, NY “Always Greener: Seeing and Seeking Suburbia – Selections from the Museum’s Collection,” The Museum of Fine Arts Houston, Houston, TX

2009 “Extended Family: Contemporary Connections” (curated by Eugenie Tsai), Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY “One Size Fits All, On Stellar Rays,” New York, NY “In Their Own Right: Contemporary Women Printmakers,” McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, TX

2017 “Isca Greenfield-Sanders in Conversation with Julian Opie,” Galerie Fluegel-Roncak, Nuremberg, Germany

2006 “Summer Group Show,” Carl Hammer Gallery, Chicago, IL

2016 “Paulson Bo! Press: Celebrating Twenty Years,” de Young Museum, San Francisco, CA “WATER|BODIES,” Southampton Arts Center, Southampton, NY 2014 “Sargent’s Daughters,” Sargent’s Daughters, New York, NY “Domesticity,” Jason McCoy Gallery, New York, NY

2005 “Carla Ma!ii, Isca Greenfield-Sanders, Silvia Zo!i,” UnoSuNove, Rome, Italy “Convertible Fabric Pyramid” (curated by Demetrio Paparoni), Benevento, Italy “The Dreamland Artist Club 2005,” Creative Time, Brooklyn, NY “The General’s Jamboree: Second Annual Watercolor Show,” Guild & Greyshkul Gallery, New York, NY

2004 “River Arts,” Cassola Gallery, Peekskill, NY

SELECT COLLECTIONS Brooklyn Museum, New York, NY

2003 “Frans von Lenbach and Art Today,” Museum Morsbroich, Leverkusen, Germany “Prague Biennale: Peripheries Become the Center,” Veletrzni Palac, Prague, Czech Republic “Photography as Model,” Wallspace Gallery, New York, NY “A#er Matisse & Picasso,” MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY “All About Me,” Spike Gallery, New York, NY “Sanders & Greenfield-Sanders,” Fredric Snitzer Gallery, Miami, FL “25th Anniversary Show,” We!erling Gallery, Stockholm, Sweden

Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, San Francisco, CA Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, TX Museum of Fine Arts Houston, Houston, TX

2002 “Painting as Paradox,” Artists Space, New York, NY “Gothic Mood,” Palazzo Delle Stelline, Milan, Italy “Friends and Family,” Lombard-Freid Fine Arts, New York, NY “27 Emerging Artists,” Spike Gallery, New York, NY

Museum Morsbroich, Leverkusen, Germany

2001 “Vice Versa,” Rare Gallery, New York, NY “Addition | Subtraction,” Carlin Space, New York, NY “Collectors Choice,” Exit Art, New York, NY “Nostalgia,” Ubanetc., Brooklyn, NY

Victoria and Albert Museum, London, United Kingdom

2000 “Biblioteca Comunale,” Torre del Castello, Turin, Italy “School of Visual Arts Digital Salon,” Palacio de Santa Cruz, Valladolid, Spain 1999 “School of Visual Arts Digital Salon,” Visual Arts Museum, New York, NY

Palm Springs Museum, Palm Springs, CA Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY

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Published on the occasion of the exhibition

ISCA!GREENFIELD-SANDERS SHADE!MY!EYES

21 May – 11 July 2020 Miles McEnery Gallery 525 West 22nd Street New York NY 10011 tel +1 212 445 0051 www.milesmcenery.com Publication © 2020 Miles McEnery Gallery All rights reserved Essay © 2020 Kris Paulsen Director of Publications Anastasija Jevtovic, New York, NY Photography by Jeffrey Sturges, New York, NY Christopher Burke Studio, New York, NY Color separations by Echelon, Santa Monica, CA Catalogue layout by McCall Associates, New York, NY ISBN: 978-1-949327-28-1 Cover: Island, (detail), 2020 Page 80: Studio Portrait of Isca Greenfield-Sanders by Timothy Greenfield-Sanders, (detail), 2020


ISCA GREENFIELD-SANDERS

ISCA GREENFIELD-SANDERS

MILES McENERY GALLERY


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