Doug and Mike Starn | Recent Work

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DOUG AND MIKE STARN

DOUG AND MIKE STARN

EVERTHING IS LIQUID

TAYLOE PIGGOTT GALLERY

17 FEBRUARY — 02 APRIL 2023

EVERYTHING IS LIQUID

Doug and Mike Starn’s most recent body of work explores how all things are flowing, moving, and finding new form, in ways apparent to the human eye or spanning across and beyond lifetimes. Nothing stays the same; all things are in an endless and constant process of becoming something else. The Starns probe this idea through comparing ceaselessly rising and falling seascapes with mountain-scapes, formed by the gradual yet perpetual turbulence of geologic change. The result are works that are neither simply print or painting, nor photography or sculpture, but rather three-dimensional objects of inquiry by their very nature.

“Paintings that are photographs that look like woodcuts and that are painted, in frames, within sculptures of frames, what is real? and further in that direction— what art is real, and what art isn’t? the questions are slippery,they don’t stay still.”

Through this investigation, Doug and Mike Starn have

created works that defy the construct and constraints of medium. The works are made of Ultrachrome K3 Epson ink jets prints on gelatin hand coated Zerkall paper, acrylic paint, Scotch tape, nails and wood, but what are these works? This paradox of materiality is where the Starns’ ontological investigation lies.

Even the “frames” on this new body of work pose questions surrounding materiality and what is included in a work of art. Though made of wood and paint, as are most frames, the outer “frames” of this series are just as much part of the work as the paper, ink and paint. The Starns work the wood by shaving it and changing the surface. Then, they layer the paint on in very thick layers that are molded while drying. Appearing as if they are somehow hastily formed clay sculptures of frames, the paint is sanded and buffed to get a particular surface that is neither matte nor glossy. Yes, these are frames, but they are also more physically

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“We want the viewers’ imagination to take over— less said and defined, the better.”

and ontologically layered objects which imitate frames.

Over the past three decades, the Starns have continued to defy categorization. As twins and lifelong collaborators, they are innately and profoundly aware that nothing stands alone, everything is interdependent. This is evident in all their work: from the sections of photographic paper scotch-taped together in 1985 (miming the humble construction of perception in your mind) to their Big Bambú installation series.

perspective in his mountain scenes in striking detail, Doug and Mike Starn invert Bierstadt’s process by taking the visual clarity of the high-definition digital photographs and zooming into the images until they begin to fall apart. The Starns destroy the photographic detail and three-dimensional illusion while retaining elements of the scene, all the while stripping out tonality and finding something that looks like a woodcut or engraving mask but is neither. The original highdefinition photograph of the mountain or surface of the water was outward-facing and a factual document of objective reality; the resulting work of Everything is Liquid reflects an interior-facing perception of reality.

“Weexplorethenoiseandthendigitallysmooth and discover an interesting

woodcut

Inspired by painter Albert Bierstadt’s (1830-1902) use of stereography to paint accurate three-dimensional

Seascapes have been a point of investigation in the Starns’ work since the brothers began collaborating at age thirteen. They have always been interested

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“For us it is the invisible architecture of life, spontaneous and self-generating, as is culture— perpetually created by random actions intersecting with conditions or other actions, through time and social space.”
pattern within it, we strip out tonality and find something that looks like a
or engraving mask.”
"There is a sense of what is real and what isn't with this work..."

in bodies of water as an entity in constant motion, crashing against itself, ever-changing but always essentially the same, and in capturing the phenomena in a fraction of a second via camera.

“The image is made in your head, vision is not a camera.Your mind pieces together your perceptions from all the senses. Vision is a humble construction, put together with tapeevery minute of your life.”

In this series, the seascapes act as both a foil and a point of comparison to mountain-scapes; the indescribably slow-motion of tectonic plates colliding creates similar dynamic and dramatic forms to that of seascapes. Seemingly eternal, our human timeframe not even a blip in geological time, mountains are a living photograph. Mountains appear static, but nonetheless are changing each second, as the tectonic plates on earth move at a rate from three-fifths of an inch to two inches per year. Imperceptible movement yields and alters mountains through the perpetuity of change.

The Starns' postulation that "everything is liquid" holds true in more than just a figurative notion of summing up the way in which all things are changing, moving and flowing. Scientifically, everything has the potential to be in a liquid form. All known materials have determinate viscosity, which is the measure of resistance to deformation. Though the earth’s mantle is about ten sextillion times more viscous than water, its viscosity is still determinate, meaning it can be forced to flow under high enough stress. The only manner in which a material would not have a determinate viscosity is if it were at absolute zero, which is thermodynamically impossible. Absolute zero, an impossible state technically known as zero kelvins, equals −273.15 degrees Celsius (-459.67 Fahrenheit) and marks the spot on the thermometer of the lowest possible energy, or thermal motion. The other scenario in which a material lacks determinate viscosity and the potential for liquid form is if it were perfectly and fully insulated (from everything, surrounded by absolutely nothing, so that no forces could act upon it), which is also impossible. Here, the idea of interconnection and

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interdependence, prevalent in the Starns’ past work, comes back into play. Because everything is affected by external forces, and nothing is fully insulated, all things are flowing, moving, and finding new form.

the U.S. Embassy in Moscow (installed in September 2017), preceded by the permanent installation of monumental glass and metal sculpture on the plaza of the Princeton University Art Museum (fall 2016).

American artists Doug and Mike Starn, born in 1961, are identical twins. The Starn brothers work in Beacon, New York in a 40,000 square foot studio, the former home of the Tallix Foundry. First having received international attention at the 1987 Whitney Biennial, the Starn brothers are largely concerned with interconnection and interdependence. Although primarily known for working conceptually with photography, they have continued to cross over and between disciplines throughtout their career, effectively combining photography, sculpture, and architecture, most notably their series Big Bambú .

The Starns have received many honors including two National Endowment for the Arts Grants in 1987 and 1995; The Bruce Museum Icon Award 2017; The Brendan Gill Prize 2009; The International Center for Photography’s Infinity Award for Fine Art Photography in 1992; and artists in residency at NASA in the midnineties. Major artworks by the Starns are represented in collections including: The Museum of Modern Art (NYC); San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SF); Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, (NYC); The Jewish Museum, (NYC); The Israel Museum in Jerusalem; The Metropolitan Museum of Art (NYC); Moderna Museet (Stockholm); The National Gallery of Victoria (Melbourne); Whitney Museum of American Art (NYC);

Doug and Mike Starn’s immersive Big Bambú architecture/sculptures have been experienced by over two million visitors internationally. Their work in glass includes the 90 foot long glass wall façade for

Yokohama Museum of Art (Japan); La Bibliothèque Nationale (Paris); La Maison Européenne de la Photographie (Paris); and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, amongst many others.

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“We explore the noise and then digitally smooth and discover an interesting pattern within it, we strip out tonality and find something that looks like a woodcut or engraving mask.”

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“The image is made in your head, vision is not a camera. Your mind pieces together your perceptions from all the senses. Vision is a humbleconstruction,puttogetherwithtape-everyminuteofyourlife.”

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MTN 123 CROP2 , 2021-2022

Acrylic paint in Ultrachrome K3 Epson ink jets prints on gelatin

hand-coated Zerkall paper, scotch tape

Editions and sizing variable

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14

MTN 621 , 2021-2022

Acrylic paint in Ultrachrome K3 Epson ink jets prints on gelatin

hand-coated Zerkall paper, scotch tape

Editions and sizing variable

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MTN 648 CROP 1 , 2021-2022

Acrylic paint in Ultrachrome K3 Epson ink jets prints on gelatin

hand-coated Zerkall paper, scotch tape

Editions and sizing variable

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MTN 301 , 2021-2022

Acrylic paint in Ultrachrome K3 Epson ink jets prints on gelatin

hand-coated Zerkall paper, scotch tape

Editions and sizing variable

26

MTN 648 CROP 2 , 2021-2022

Acrylic paint in Ultrachrome K3 Epson ink jets prints on gelatin

hand-coated Zerkall paper, scotch tape

Editions and sizing variable

30

SCPMTN1 , 2021-2022

Acrylic paint in Ultrachrome K3 Epson ink jets prints on gelatin

hand-coated Zerkall paper, scotch tape

Editions and sizing variable

34
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Acrylic paint in Ultrachrome K3 Epson ink jets prints on gelatin

hand-coated Zerkall paper, scotch tape

Editions and sizing variable

38
SCP 634 , 2021-2022

Acrylic paint in Ultrachrome K3 Epson ink jets prints on gelatin

hand-coated Zerkall paper, scotch tape

Editions and sizing variable

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SCP 2228A , 2021 - 2022

Acrylic paint in Ultrachrome K3 Epson ink jets prints on gelatin

hand-coated Zerkall paper, scotch tape

Editions and sizing variable

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SCP 2228B , 2021-2022

SCP 22293B , 2021-2022

Acrylic paint in Ultrachrome K3 Epson ink jets prints on gelatin

hand-coated Zerkall paper, scotch tape

Editions and sizing variable

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Acrylic paint in Ultrachrome K3 Epson ink jets prints on gelatin

hand-coated Zerkall paper, scotch tape

Editions and sizing variable

50
SCP 2229 CROP 2 , 2021-2022

Please note that artwork sizes are approximate due to the handcrafted nature of these works and their frames.

54 EDITIONS 19 x 32 inches | 24 1/2 x 36 1/2 inches framed | edition of 9 33 1/2 x 57 1/2 inches | 41 x 65 inches framed | edition of 3 62 1/2 x 103 inches | 73 1/2 x 114 inches framed | edition of 3

DOUG AND MIKE STARN

American artists, born in 1961

Live and work in Beacon, NY

EDUCATION

School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

SOLO MUSEUM EXHIBITIONS

2018 – This thing called life MFA H: The Museum of Fine

Arts, Houston, June 10th through September 3rd. 2018

The Geometry of Innocence (permanent installation)

Ordrupgaard, Charlottenlund, Denmark. Inaugurated in May.

2014-15 – Big Bambú: 5,000 Arms to Hold You, The Israel Museum Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel. 2013 – Doug + Mike Starn: Big Bambú #8, Naoshima Museum, Setouchi Triennial, Teshima, Japan. 2012-15 – Doug + Mike Starn: Big Bambú, Minotaur Horn Head, MACRO Testaccio Museum, Rome, Italy.

2012–Gravity of Light, The Cincinnati Art Museum at the Holly Cross-Immaculata Church, Cincinnati, OH (traveling exhibition). 2011– Big Bambú, official collateral exhibition to the 54th Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy 2010 – Doug + Mike Starn on the Roof, Big Bambú: “You Can’t, You Don’t, and You Won’t Stop”, The Metropolitan Museumof Art, New York, NY. 2009 – Gravity of Light, Wood Street Galleries at the

Pipe Building, Pittsburgh, PA (traveling exhibition). 2008 –Attracted to Light, Steele Gallery at Rocky Mountain College of Art & Design, Denver, CO. 2007 – Doug and Mike Starn: Black Pulse 2000-2007, The Print Center, Philadelphia, PA.

2006 – Absorption + Transmission, Stedelijk Museum de Lakenhal, Leiden, the Netherlands. FotoFest 2006, Houston TX, and the Wood Street Galleries, Pittsburgh, PA. 2005

– Absorption + Transmission, The National Academy of Sciences, Washington, D.C. (traveling exhibition). 2004 –

Gravity of Light, Färgfabriken Kunsthalle, Stockholm, Sweden (traveling exhibition). Behind Your Eye, The Neuberger Museum of Art at Purchase College, Purchase, New York (traveling exhibition). 1997 – Size of Earth, The Friends of Photography / The Ansel Adams Center, San Francisco, California. 1996 – Doug and Mike Starn: Retrospective, Overgaden Ministry of Culture, Copenhagen, Denmark.

1994 – Doug and Mike Starn: Sphere of Influence, Portland Museum of Art, Portland, Oregon. 1993 – Doug and Mike Starn; Naoshima Contemporary Art Museum, Kagawa, Japan. Marking Time; Doug and Mike Starn Photographs, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia. 1990-91

– Doug and Mike Starn (catalogue published by Harry N. Abrams with text by Andy Grundberg and introductory essay by Robert Rosenblum; exhibit curated by Sarah Rogers Lafferty), traveled to: Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore,

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Maryland. Center for the Fine Arts, Miami, Florida. Blaffer Gallery, The University of Houston, Texas. The Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, Ohio. The Akron Museum of Art, Akron, Ohio. 1988 – Mike and Doug Starn: Selected Works

1985-87, traveled to: Honolulu Academy of Art, Honolulu, Hawaii. University Art Museum, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, California. Wadsworth Athenaeum, Hartford, Connecticut. Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Illinois. 1987-88 – The Christ Series, traveled to: Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, California. The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, Sarasota, Florida.

SOLO GALLERY EXHIBITIONS

2019 – Iggy and Franz, Wetterling Gallery, June - August.

2014 – Doug and Mike Starn, “No Mind Not Thinks No Things things”, HackelBury Fine Art, London, UK. – Mike + Doug Starn, “No Mind Not Thinks No Things Juju”, Wetterling Gallery, Stockholm, Sweden. 2009 – Big Bambú, Wetterling Gallery, Stockholm, Sweden; Doug and Mike Starn, Recent Works”, Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, CO. 2008 –alleverythingthatisyou, David Weinberg Gallery, Chicago, IL. 2007 – alleverythingthatisyou, Wetterling Gallery, Stockholm, Sweden; New Works (working title) Weinstein Gallery, Minneapolis, Minnesota. 2006 – Opposition of Coincidents, Torch Gallery, Amsterdam, The Netherlands;

alleverythingthatisyou, Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, Colorado; Mike and Doug Starn, Galeria Metta, Madrid, Spain. 2005 – Impermanence, Leo Castelli Gallery, New York, New York.

2004 – I’m a negative falling down to the light a silhouette veins flowing with black visible to these useless blind eyes, Björn Wetterling Gallery, Stockholm, Sweden. Toshodaiji, Akira Ikeda Gallery, Taura, Japan. Attracted to Light, Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, Colorado. 2003 – Attracted to Light, Stephen Wirtz Gallery, San Francisco, California. Absorption of Light – Lisa Sette Gallery, Scottsdale, Arizona; Galerie

Bhak, Seoul, South Korea; Torch Gallery, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Galerie Hans Mayer, Düsseldorf, Germany.

2001-02 – Absorption of Light, Stephen Wirtz Gallery, San Francisco, California. 2001 – New Work, Weinstein Gallery, Minneapolis, Minnesota. 2000 – Black Pulse, Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, Colorado. Doug and Mike Starn, Grossman Gallery / School of the Museum of Fine Arts. Permanent Collection, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts.

1999 – Fay Gold Gallery, Atlanta, Georgia. 1998 – Blot Out the Sun, Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, Colorado. Black Sun

Burned, Leo Castelli Gallery, New York, New York. 1996 – Helio Libri, Fay Gold Gallery, Atlanta, Georgia. 1995 –Galerie Bhak, Seoul, South Korea. Helio Libri, Pace / MacGill Gallery, New York, New York. 1994 – Spectroheliographs, Leo Castelli Gallery, New York, New York. 1993 – Akira

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Ikeda Gallery, Tokyo, Japan. Akira Ikeda Gallery, Taura, Japan.

1992 – Yellow and Blue Louvre Floor – A Project, Galerie

Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris, France; Leo Castelli Gallery, New York, New York. 1991 – Multiples, Pace / MacGill Gallery (in cooperation with Leo Castelli), New York, New York. 1990

Fred Hoffman Gallery, Santa Monica, California. Mario Diacono Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts. Stux Gallery, New York, New York. Galerie Antoine Candau, Paris, France. 1989

Akira Ikeda Gallery, Tokyo, Japan. Anne Frank Group, Leo Castelli Gallery & Stux Gallery, New York, New York. 1988 –

Stux Gallery, New York, New York. Leo Castelli Gallery, New York, New York. 1987 – Stux Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts.

1986 – Stux Gallery, New York, New York. 1985 – Stux Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts.

SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS

Mike and Doug Starn and Keith Sonnier, Castelli Gallery, New York, NY. 2012-13 – MCA Chicago, Walker Art Center Minneapolis and ICA Boston, This Will Have Been: Art, Love & Politics in the 1980s. 2010 –Big Bambú, Castelli Gallery, New York, NY.; Deep Woods: Emi Fukuzawa, Diana Kingsley, Mike and Doug Starn, Castelli Gallery, New York, NY. 2009 – Signs of the Apocalypse/Rapture, Hyde Park Art Center, Chicago, IL; NASA/ART: 50 Years of Exploration, Art League of Bonita Springs, Bonita Springs, Florida (traveling exhibition). 2008 – Teleport Färgfabriken, Färgfabriken Norr, Östersund, Sweden; Metamorphosis, Abington Art Center, Jenkintown, PA. 2006 –The Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England; Eretica: L’arte contemporanea dalla trascedenza al profano, Palazzo di Sant’Anna, Palermo, Italy; Out of Line: Drawings from the Collection of Sherry and Joel Mallin, Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Ithaca, New York; New York, New York, Grimaldi Forum, Principality of Monaco, Monte Carlo; The Missing Peace: Artists Consider the Dalai Lama, UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History, Los Angeles, CA (traveling exhibition); Family Affairs, Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, Belgium; Picturing Eden, Eastman House, Rochester, NY. 2005 – Künstlerbrüder, Haus der Kunst, Munich, Germany. IMPAKT, Melbourne, Australia. 2004 – Pieced Together: Photomontage from the Collection, The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL; Recent Acquisitions,

2016 – Narrative/Collaborative, Galerie Lelong, New York, NY; Takashi Murakami’s Superflat Collection —From Shōhaku and Rosanjin to Anselm Kiefer, Yokohama Art Museum, Japan; Photography and Film Constructs, The Galleries of Ringling College of Art and Design, Sarasota, FL. 2015 – Mike + Doug Starn: Structure of Thought, Wetterling Gallery, Stockholm, Sweden; Recent Acquisitions, Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA. 2013 – Recent Works by Diana Kingsley, Robert Morris, Richard Pettibone, 58

Wadsworth Athenaeum Museum of Art, Hartford, CT. Open House: Working in Brooklyn, Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, NY. 2003 – Both Sides of the Street: Celebrating the Corcoran’s Photography Collection, The Corcoran Museum of Art, Washington, D.C. How Human, Life in the Post Genome Era, International Center of Photography, New York, NY. 2002-03 – PhotoGENEsis: Opus 2, Santa Barbara Museum of Art. Within Reach: Hope for the Global AIDS Epidemic, International Tour. 2002 – Portraits of the Art World: 100 Years of ARTnews, National Portrait Gallery of the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.; Visions from America, The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY. 2001 – Ramparts Café, The Jewish Museum, New York, NY. GANJIN, Photo Museum, Ebisu, Tokyo, Japan. 2000 –Permanent Collection, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA. 1999 – Musique en Scène, Musée Art Contemporain, Lyon, France. 1998-00 – Inner Eye: Contemporary Art from the Marc and Livia Strauss Collection (traveling exhibition). 1996 – Eternal Dialogue, Tower of David Museum, Jerusalem, Israel. 1995-96 – Biennale d’Art Contemporain, Musée Art Contemporain, Lyon, France. 1994 – 30 Years - Art in the Present Tense: The Aldrich’s Curatorial History 1964-94, The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, Ridgefield, CT. Lessons in Life - Photographic Work from the Boardroom Collection, The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL. Myths

and Mysticism, Gotlands Konst Museum, Visby, Sweden. 1993 – Recent Acquisitions, The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Image Makers, Nassau County Museum.

SELECTED MUSEUM COLLECTIONS

The Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, NY. Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris, France. The Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, OH. The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, IL. The Corcoran Gallery of Washington D.C. Fondación Sorigue, Lleida, Spain. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY. The High Museum of Art, Atlanta, GA. The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel. The Jewish Museum, New York, NY. The Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA. La Maison Européenne de la Photographie, Paris, France. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY. The Minneapolis Institute of Art, Minneapolis, MN. The Mito Arts Center, Mito, Japan. Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, CA. Museum of Contemporary Photography, Columbia College, Chicago, IL. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA. Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX. Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY. National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia. National Museum of Contemporary Art, Seoul, South Korea. The Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, PA. The John and Mable Ringling Museum, Sarasota, FL. Naoshima Contemporary Art Museum, Japan. Obihiro

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Museum of Art, Obihiro, Japan. The Portland Museum of Art, Portland, OR. Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA. The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA. The Tokushima Modern Art Museum, Tokushima, Japan. The UCLA Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA. The Wadsworth Athenaeum, Hartford, CT. The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY. Yokohama Museum of Art, Yokohama, Japan.

AWARDS AND PUBLIC COMISSIONS

Permanent Big Bambú installation, Ordrupgaard sculpture park, Charlottenlund, Denmark (installation due 2018). Permanent installation for the façade of the Embassy of the United States, Moscow (a monumental glass installation due summer 2017). The Strange Loop You Are: permanent Big Bambú installation, The Israel Museum Jerusalem, Israel (2015); (any) Body Oddly Propped, an overall 18’ tall x 45’ across x 15’ deep glass and metal permanent installation, The Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, NJ (2015); 2009 Brendan Gill Prize recipient, See it split, see it change: permanent installation commissioned by the Arts for Transit program of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (New York City) for the South Ferry Subway Terminal, anapproximately 9 feet high x 300 feet long glass, stonemosaic and metal installation. The Medal Award, School

of the Museum of Fine Arts (2000). National Endowment for the Arts, Grants (1987, and 1995). International Center for Photography’s Infinity Award for Fine Art Photography (1992). Massachusetts Council on the Arts, Fellowship in Photography (1986). Fifth Year Traveling Scholarship (1985).

MONOLITHIC BIBLIOGRAPHY

Gravity of Light, texts by James Crump, Jan Åman and Doug and Mike Starn, Rizzoli, 2012; To Find God Not The Devil’s Insides, essay by Martin Barnes, The Print Center Philadelphia, 2007; alleverythingthatisyou, poem by Vincent Katz, Baldwin Gallery, 2006; Attracted to Light, Texts by Victor Pelevin, Demetrio Paparoni, Vladimir Nabokov and Doug & Mike Starn, a Blind Spot book published by powerHouse, 2003; Doug and Mike Starn, Introduction by Robert Rosenblum and essay by Andy Grundberg— Abrams, 1990.

17 FEB - 02 APRIL 2023 | Tayloe Piggott Gallery | © 2023 All Rights Reserved
This catalog complements Doug and Mike Starn's Exhibition RECENT WORK

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