EDITIONS
APRIL - AUGUST 21, 2020 Page Bond Gallery is pleased to present
EDITIONS a group exhibition featuring prints and works on paper by
Cover Image: Pat Steir, Sunlight (Color), 2000, Silkscreen, 70 x 35 3/4 inches
Donald Baechler Amy Chan Mark Fox Enrique Figueredo Isa Gagarin Kenneth Noland Kat Richards William Steiger Pat Steir Donald Sultan Sue Williams
Donald Baechler Chocolate Cone, 2007 Silkscreen in 33 colors Edition 68/69 57 3/4 x 40 1/2 inches $9,500 framed
Amy Chan Desmids 4, 2017 Gouache on paper 9 x 12 inches $450 unframed
Mark Fox Tomorrow, 2017 Two-plate die cut and chine collĂŠ engraving on Thai mulberry 41 1/2 x 28 1/2 inches $3,500 framed
Enrique Figueredo AmĂŠrica, 1986, 2019 Color reduction wood cut Edition 3/5 27 x 35 inches $3,800 framed
Isa Gagarin Montespertoli (2), 2018 Egg tempera and watersoluble crayon on Arches watercolor paper 10 x 14 inches $600 unframed Isa Gagarin Montespertoli (6), 2018 Egg tempera and watersoluble crayon on Arches watercolor paper 10 x 14 inches $600 unframed Isa Gagarin Montespertoli (5), 2018 Egg tempera and watersoluble crayon on Arches watercolor paper 10 x 14 inches $600 unframed
Kenneth Noland Days and Nights, 2008 Stenciled handmade paper Edition 31/50 42 1/2 x 39 1/2 inches $26,700 framed
Kat Richards The Party, 2018 Monoprint 48 x 36 inches $4,200 framed
William Steiger Blue Wonderwheel, 2009 Softground and aquatint etching Edition 24/30 21 1/2 x 28 3/4 inches $2,400 framed
Pat Steir Sunlight (Color), 2008 Silkscreen Edition 36/40 70 x 35 3/4 inches $20,200 framed
Donald Sultan Button, March 1, 1996, 1996 Lithograph, woodcut, etching, foil stamping printed on light tan TGL handmade paper Edition 14/30 43 x 30 inches $6,000 unframed
Sue Williams The Wiggliness, 2004 Silkscreen on paper Edition 19/35 35 x 45 1/2 inches $3,500 framed
Donald Baechler
is a second-generation Pop artist. His paintings and prints are a reflection of a passion for collecting pop images and objects. Combining these images with his own uninhibited style of painting, Baechler creates what he calls an “illusion of history.” Baechler studied at the Maryland Institute, College of Art, Cooper Union, and the Staatliche Hochschule für bildende Künste, “Staedelschule” in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. His work is in the collections of The Museum of Modern Art, The Whitney Museum of American Art, The Guggenheim Museum, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and The Centre George Pompidou, Musée National d’Art Moderne, Paris among other institutions worldwide.
Amy Chan was
born in 1978 in Danbury, CT. She earned her BFA from Rhode Island School of Design and her MFA from Virginia Commonwealth University. Her paintings draw inspiration from the ecosystems of the East Coast where she lives, and the places she discovers through travel. She has been an Artist-in-Residence at Onoma Fiskars in Finland and the Jentel Foundation in Wyoming. Chan lives and works in Richmond, VA, and has recently received grants from the Pollock Krasner Foundation and the Virginia Commission for the Arts. Chan’s abstract paintings are views of the natural world multiplied into the bizarre. The richly layered surfaces combine gouache, acrylic, airbrush and screen print, while taking cues from microscpic imagery, decorative pattern, coral reefs and outer space.
Mark Fox was born in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1963. He received his Bachelor of Fine Art from
Washington University in St. Louis and his Master of Fine Art from Stanford University. Fox has received numerous accolades and residencies, notably from the Versailles Foundation, Munn Artist Fellowship, Giverny, France; Foundation and Center for Contemporary Art, Prague, Czech Republic; Working Space, Awarded by Kultureferat, Munich, Germany; Headlands Center for the Arts, Sausalito; and Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit. His work is featured in numerous public and private collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo; the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia; and the Anderson Collection, Stanford University. Fox lives and works in New York City.
Enrique Figueredo
is a Venezuelan-American artist who immigrated from South America at an early age. Figueredo’s work looks closely at the forces and issues affecting today’s world—economy, religion, immigration, power—and relates those incidents to the visual history of ancient civilizations, the colonization of the Americas, and mythology. Figueredo is the 2019 Fountainhead Fellow at VCU. Recent awards include The Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts, Robert Blackburn Printmaking Award (2019), and the Nadine Goldsmith Fellowship. He was a resident at Vermont Studio Center in 2019. Figueredo studied at Purchase College (SUNY) earning a BFA in 2004 and earned his MFA from Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University in 2019. Figueredo currently lives and works in Richmond, Virginia.
Isa Gagarin is an interdisciplinary artist whose work explores subjects including color,
natural phenomena, and autobiography. Using painting, drawing, installation, performance, and video, Gagarin explores color relationships with an emphasis on working responsively to site. The transient qualities of natural phenomena such as solar eclipses, tides, and rainbows prompt Gagarin to draw connections between her work and personal-political experiences of place in Hawai’i and Guam. Gagarin holds an MFA in Painting and Printmaking from Virginia Commonwealth University and a BFA in Painting from Minneapolis College of Art and Design. Gagarin lives and works in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Kenneth Noland
was born in Asheville, NC. He was a veteran of World War II and studied at the Black Mountain College, where he learned color theory from Josef Albers. A leading American Color Field painter, his interest in working with flat colors developed into a fixation with simple shapes like chevrons, stripes, and bullseyes. Noland helped start the Washington Color School, and represented the United States in the 1964 Venice Biennale. His work can be found in the permanent collections of the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, the Tate Gallery in London, and the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.
Kat Richards
is a Philadelphia based artist that works in printmaking, drawing and sculpture. Currently, they are the resident at Vermont Studio Center. Their work is about queering the body, investigating new possibilities, and different realities. Through a monoprint stencil technique, the body is reimagined by conceptualizing it in parts, using an index of abstract, fragmented shapes.
William Steiger
makes work that focuses on the relationship between the past and present, and the tension between the flatness of the picture plane and the expanse of the American landscape. Steiger received his M.F.A. from Yale University in 1989. His work has been shown in over 30 solo exhibitions internationally and a 200 page monograph of the artist was published in 2011 by Hudson Hills Press.
Pat Steir is an American painter and printmaker. Her early work was loosely associated
with conceptual art and minimalism, however, she is best known for her abstract dripped, splashed and poured “Waterfall” paintings, which she started in the 1980s, and for her later site-specific wall drawings. With a career that has spanned over half a century, Pat Steir is a leading force in the development of Postmodern abstraction. Born in 1938 in Newark, NJ, she received her BFA from the Pratt Institute in New York in 1962 and befriended and studied with many influential Conceptual and Minimalist artists of the day, including Sol Lewitt and Agnes Martin. Steir is represented in the collections of The Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, among others.
Donald Sultan is a contemporary painter best known for his use of industrial materials
to depict everyday subjects. Sultan uses recurring imagery—such as flowers, playing cards, and lemons—to create colorful still lifes framed by tar-black backgrounds. Born in 1952 in Asheville, NC, he received his BFA from the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill and later his MFA from the School of the Art Institute Chicago before moving to New York in 1975.
In the city, he became a part of the New Image movement along with fellow painters Susan Rothenberg and Julian Schnabel. His work is included in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, the Tate Modern, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo, among many others.
Sue Williams is a contemporary American artist who explores issues of gender and the
body. Born in 1954 in Chicago, IL, Williams studied at Cooper Union before transferring to California Institute of the Arts where she received her BFA in 1976. Williams’ playful works are filled with abstractions of body parts. Her extraordinary lines upon close viewing display an arena of intermingling shapes of body forms merging into one another. Sue Williams uses the human body as a tool to discuss complex issues of gender roles and relations. In 1993, she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship, and was included in the 1993, 1995, and 1997 Whitney Biennials. Her work is included in many public and private collections including the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, The Museum of Modern Art and the Centre d’Art Contemporain in Geneva.
PAGE BOND GALLERY WWW.PAGEBONDGALLERY.COM