Paul Kasmin Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition
of drawings by Roxy Paine from September 15 through
October 22. Paine's substantial body of work as a
sculptor spans the monumental and the microscopic, but
this exhibition will be the first that focuses solely on his
works on paper. The exhibition will show Paine’s drawings
to be a significant and distinct aspect of his extensive and
varied oeuvre.
This exhibition is curated by Judith Goldman, a writer and
curator based in New York City. A catalogue with an essay
and an interview between Goldman and Paine will be
published on occasion of the show.
Perceptible in virtually all of the drawings is a layering of imagery, ranging from the diagrammatic, to the
topographic, to the pixelated. Botanical forms, organic matter, and architectural plans are juxtaposed with
portraits, real and imagined cartography, and industrial signs. Paine’s perspective is trans-temporal, it shoots
across centuries’ branches of knowledge, gathering motifs from eclectic sources, high and low, ancient and
modern. Yet the drawings gradually reveal specific themes – of containment, regulation, boundaries, mapping.
By extension, for Paine, the mapping serves as a metaphor for thought experiments working to understand
complex structures, places, patterns and systems.
Paine has long been driven to grapple with the relationship between the organic and mechanical systems in
our everyday life. He is fascinated with the natural versus the industrial worlds and how these two continually
coalesce and collide, and the grey areas in between which oscillate from cacophony to clarity and back again.
Through his work, he tries to anticipate unknowable outcomes.
Paine’s drawings are a vital component of his ceaseless investigation of knowledge in how information is
discussed, transferred, posted and received. The drawings are an experimental way to trace, catalogue, and
visualize a mindset. When looking at them collectively, it becomes apparent that his approach to the paper is
an extension of his sculptural process, as if it’s an initial encounter with a puzzle that may later be realized in
three dimensions. Finally, and crucially, the drawings provide evidence of the artist’s hand. The verisimilitude
of his finished sculptures is laborious and engaged, as virtually all of his sculptures are made carefully by hand
but appear to be machine-made. In the drawings, Paine’s dexterity as a draftsman is tangible and compelling
in equal measure.
Exhibited internationally since the early 1990s, Paine is the recipient of numerous awards, including the John
Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship, and the Trustees Award for an Emerging Artist by the
Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum. His work has been installed in prominent venues including the Whitney
Museum of American Art, New York’s Central Park, Madison Square Park, and, in 2009, a site specific
installation for the rooftop garden of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. His work is included in various
collections including the Museum of Modern Art New York, Museum of Modern Art San Francisco, and the
Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles.
This fall, Paine’s Dioramas will be on view at the Beeler Gallery at the Columbus College of Art and Design,
Ohio. A second exhibition at the Paul Kasmin Gallery is planned for Spring 2017, featuring his most recent
sculpture.