One of the many pleasures of Mexico City: Visiting the studio of painter Ricardo Mazal @ricardomazal
New paintings by Mazal are currently on view @zonamaco
Sundaram Tagore Gallery
Booth E105
Click link in bio ⬆️ to see more.
#artfair #artiststudio #zonamaco #sundaramtagoregallery #tagore #ricardomazal @ricardomazal #contemporaryart #painting #
Sundaram Tagore Gallery
Booth E105
Please join Miya Ando @studiomiyaando in our Art SG booth for conversation and drinks.
Friday, January 17, 5 to 6 pm
Booth BA07
Ando will talk about Moon Ensō (Engessō 円月相), her immersive installation created especially for Art SG’s curated Platform section, which features site-specific work across the fair. @art.sg
Moon Ensō depicts a complete lunar cycle of twenty-nine days in silk chiffon, beginning and ending with the new moon.
#artsg #miyaando #sundaramtagoregallery #tagore #artfair #singapore
Sending thanks to everyone who joined us in Singapore recently, especially Sebastião Salgado and Léila Wanick Salgado. We are so grateful to have had them with us.
Powerful images from Salgado’s most iconic series are currently on view at Sundaram Tagore Singapore.
Click link in ⬆️ bio to learn more.
Sebastião Salgado: Artist / Activist
Sundaram Tagore Gallery
5 Lock Road 01 – 05
Gillman Barracks
Singapore
#sebastiaosalgado #sundaramtagoregallery #tagore #singapore
Sundaram Tagore Gallery is pleased to announce our first solo exhibition of work by New York-based Nigerian artist Osi Aud @osiaudu
Osi Audu: Currents
Opening 6 – 8 pm Thursday, Sept. 19
Sundaram Tagore London
4 Comwell Place
Audu (b. 1956, Abraka, Nigeria), whose work is in the collections of the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art in Washington, DC, and The British Museum in London, has exhibited widely in the U.K. since the 1980s. Previously based in London, Audu has participated in several noted shows in the capital at institutions including the Africa Centre, Science Museum, The British Museum, and Horniman Museum and Gardens.
Audu has spent years investigating ideas surrounding human consciousness in Yoruba traditions of Nigeria as well as Western science and philosophy. The new series of sculptural works he created for Sundaram Tagore London are composed of vibrant strands of yarn piercing canvas. The richly textured surfaces are inspired by the phenomenon of goosebumps.
Audu has long been fascinated by textured surfaces in the natural world and within the human body such as the papillae (tiny nodules) that carpet the surface of our tongues or the minuscule hairs that line the cochlea in our ears. Most recently he became interested in how emotions or experiences trigger a reflexive response of the sympathetic nervous system resulting in the bristling of hairs. “When people are deeply moved, gripped by fear or overwhelmed by beauty, these intangible emotions generate a very physical, tangible expression. My work has always been about what you can’t see, effecting and creating what you can,” Audu says.
Click link in bio ⬆️ to learn more.
#osiaudu #sundaramtagoregallery
Karen Knorr: Intersections
Opening Thursday, Sept. 12, 6 pm
Sundaram Tagore Gallery
542 West 26th Street
New York, NY
Click link in bio ⬆️ to learn more.
#sundaramtagoregallery #tagore #fineartphotography #karenknorr @karen1knorr