Schema: World as Diagram
The Directors of Marlborough New York are pleased to present Schema: World as Diagram, an exhibition born out of a project proposed by Raphael Rubinstein and Heather Bause Rubinstein in early 2022. Occupying two floors of the gallery, the exhibition brings together over 50 artists whose works engage in diagrammatic ways of thinking.
Diagrams have permeated human civilization, providing indispensable visual tools for every conceivable endeavor. But while diagrammatic designs have been central to many artistic traditions around the globe, it was not until the beginning of the twentieth century that diagrams began to proliferate in Western Art, catalyzed by artists such as Marcel Duchamp, Francis Picabia, and Hilma af Klint. Since then, countless artists have turned to the diagrammatic, which has played a significant role in Conceptual Art, theoretically oriented abstraction, and spiritual investigation. For many artists in this exhibition, the diagram allows for a synthetization of highly structured and codified visual information and offers a solution to the abstraction/figuration binary.
Contemporary paintings, among them new works by Chris Martin, Yulia Pinkusevich, Amy Sillman, and the collective Hilma鈥檚 Ghost will be contextualized by historical works by artists such as Forrest Bess and Alfred Jensen. The role of diagrammatic drawing in experimental music and writing will be seen in work by poet Renee Gladman and composer Wadada Leo Smith alongside systemic experiments from the 1970s by Jennifer Bartlett, Joseph Beuys, and Charles Gaines. Acknowledging a more global history of diagrammatic art, Schema also features a dot painting by Jimmy and Angie Tchooga, a group of anonymous tantric paintings, a 19th-century Jain Cosmological Diagram, and a rug from the nomadic cultures of Central Asia. While focusing on painting and drawing, Schema will include a neon sculpture by Tavares Strachan and a large-scale collage by Thomas Hirschhorn. The exhibition also offers a rare opportunity to view works by important Post-war European artists such as Gianfranco Baruchello, Alan Davie, and Antoni Muntadas, as well as major works by Latin American artists, including Le贸n Ferrari, Guillermo Kuitca, and Miguel Angel R铆os.
Recommended for you
The Directors of Marlborough New York are pleased to present Schema: World as Diagram, an exhibition born out of a project proposed by Raphael Rubinstein and Heather Bause Rubinstein in early 2022. Occupying two floors of the gallery, the exhibition brings together over 50 artists whose works engage in diagrammatic ways of thinking.
Diagrams have permeated human civilization, providing indispensable visual tools for every conceivable endeavor. But while diagrammatic designs have been central to many artistic traditions around the globe, it was not until the beginning of the twentieth century that diagrams began to proliferate in Western Art, catalyzed by artists such as Marcel Duchamp, Francis Picabia, and Hilma af Klint. Since then, countless artists have turned to the diagrammatic, which has played a significant role in Conceptual Art, theoretically oriented abstraction, and spiritual investigation. For many artists in this exhibition, the diagram allows for a synthetization of highly structured and codified visual information and offers a solution to the abstraction/figuration binary.
Contemporary paintings, among them new works by Chris Martin, Yulia Pinkusevich, Amy Sillman, and the collective Hilma鈥檚 Ghost will be contextualized by historical works by artists such as Forrest Bess and Alfred Jensen. The role of diagrammatic drawing in experimental music and writing will be seen in work by poet Renee Gladman and composer Wadada Leo Smith alongside systemic experiments from the 1970s by Jennifer Bartlett, Joseph Beuys, and Charles Gaines. Acknowledging a more global history of diagrammatic art, Schema also features a dot painting by Jimmy and Angie Tchooga, a group of anonymous tantric paintings, a 19th-century Jain Cosmological Diagram, and a rug from the nomadic cultures of Central Asia. While focusing on painting and drawing, Schema will include a neon sculpture by Tavares Strachan and a large-scale collage by Thomas Hirschhorn. The exhibition also offers a rare opportunity to view works by important Post-war European artists such as Gianfranco Baruchello, Alan Davie, and Antoni Muntadas, as well as major works by Latin American artists, including Le贸n Ferrari, Guillermo Kuitca, and Miguel Angel R铆os.
Artists on show
- Agnes Denes
- Alan Davie
- Amy Sillman
- Angie Tchooga
- Antonio Muntadas
- Barry Le Va
- Bernar Venet
- Charles Gaines
- Christine Sun Kim
- Dannielle Tegeder
- David Diao
- Forrest Bess
- Gael Stack
- Gianfranco Baruchello
- Guillermo Kuitca
- Guy de Cointet
- Heather Bause Rubinstein
- Jane Hammond
- Jennifer Bartlett
- Jimmy Tchooga
- Joanne Greenbaum
- Joseph Beuys
- Julian Schnabel
- Karla Knight
- Lane Hagood
- León Ferrari
- Leslie Roberts
- Loren Munk
- Lydia Dona
- Mark Lombardi
- Matt Mullican
- Melvin Way
- Miguel Angel Rios
- Mike Cloud
- Minjeong An
- Ouattara Watts
- Paul Laffoley
- Paul Pagk
- Renee Gladman
- Shusaku Arakawa
- Stephen Mueller
- Tavares Strachan
- Thomas Chimes
- Thomas Hirschhorn
- Trevor Winkfield
- Wadada Leo Smith
- Yulia Pinkusevich
Related articles
Lydia Dona creates a painterly feminist parable of Plato鈥檚 Cave: across a visceral wonderland of blooming and seething colors in the background, a spider鈥檚 web of fragmentary imagery creeps along the foreground.
Raphael Rubinstein, who co-curated 鈥淪chema: World as Diagram鈥 at Marlborough with Heather Bause Rubinstein.
This exhibition of diagrammatic works juggles some of the most contested categories in contemporary art鈥攁nd manages to keep all its curatorial balls in the air.
This exhibition of diagrammatic works juggles some of the most contested categories in contemporary art鈥攁nd manages to keep all its curatorial balls in the air.