Self-portrait As Kong

Self-portrait As Kong

Schmiedehof 17 Berlin, 10965, Germany Thursday, April 28, 2022–Saturday, June 11, 2022 Opening Reception: Thursday, April 28, 2022, 7 p.m.–10 p.m.


irrepressible beast #19 by howard sherman

Howard Sherman

Irrepressible Beast #19, 2021

Price on Request

places that feel alien by howard sherman

Howard Sherman

Places That Feel Alien

Price on Request

self-portrait as kong by howard sherman

Howard Sherman

Self-portrait as Kong, 2019

Price on Request

 Howard Sherman was born in Houston, Texas in 1970 and lives and works in Houston and New York. Since receiving his Masters of Fine Arts in painting and drawing from the University of North Texas in 2006, Howard Sherman has led a new generation of contemporary painters in the Texas art world. Sherman's typically human-sized canvases bear traces of his background as a cartoonist, balancing the loud, raw power of his aggressive strokes of color with a playful sense of humor. His smaller works on paper show an intuitive handling of materials and, with the simplest of means, allow complex types or states we can recognize immediately in a fascinating way - they hit the nail on the head. After numerous exhibitions in galleries and museums in Texas and New York, he ventured across the Atlantic for his first European solo exhibition at GALERIE KREMERS in Berlin. 

 “Howard Sherman’s work draws us in with the immediacy of gesture that is perfectly balanced with vibrant color. What keeps us engaged is his potent combination of contradictions. In a single work, drips, splatters, and passages of energetic brushwork exist alongside hard-edged forms, figuration, and an occasional insertion of text. This all-inclusive method calls into question the boundaries of abstraction, and how far they can be pushed to create a successful work— something Sherman has built a career on doing… Like Philip Guston, Sherman appreciates the honesty and directness of the cartoon aesthetic. Guston’s early ambition was to be a cartoonist. Sherman was one before becoming a painter, and we see the impact it had in terms of figurative humor, as well as in his non-traditional color choices." - Andrea Karnes, Head curator at the Museum of Modern Art Fort Worth  

 In addition to two larger works on canvas, we are showing several works on paper in different formats, the smallest from the "Document Shredder" series.