Everything Must Go!

Everything Must Go!

21 Conduit Street London, W1S 2XP, United Kingdom Monday, May 23, 2022–Friday, August 26, 2022

We are pleased to announce our summer group show, Everything Must Go!

concentrica nebula by alexander calder

Alexander Calder

Concentrica Nebula, 1967

190,000–210,000 USD

vision de l'age atomique by salvador dalí

Salvador Dalí

Vision de l'age atomique, 1948

570,000–630,000 USD

increment in the spring by yayoi kusama

Yayoi Kusama

Increment in The Spring, 1986

1,000,000–1,200,000 USD

grâces vagabondes by georges mathieu

Georges Mathieu

Grâces Vagabondes, 1991

540,000–560,000 USD

sans titre ⅶ by joan miró

Joan Miró

Sans Titre Ⅶ, 1967

210,000–230,000 USD

pixcell: cactus by kohei nawa

Kohei Nawa

Pixcell: Cactus, 2008

90,000–110,000 USD

composition abstraite by serge poliakoff

Serge Poliakoff

Composition Abstraite, 1954

500,000–550,000 EUR

president by ed ruscha

Ed Ruscha

President, 1968–1972

2,800,000–3,200,000 USD

two forms in a terraced landscape by graham sutherland

Graham Sutherland

Two Forms in a Terraced Landscape, 1951

190,000–210,000 GBP

optik by victor vasarely

Victor Vasarely

Optik, 1988

140,000–150,000 USD

Omer Tiroche Gallery is pleased to present a summer group show, Everything Must Go!, featuring works by Jean-Michel Basquiat, Alexander Calder, David Hockney, Georges Mathieu, and Victor Vasarely among other Modern and contemporary masters.   

Everything Must Go! will be a chance to view exceptional works by artists who have featured in the gallery’s programme over the years, and showcases 80 years of art history, by pioneers of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.  

One of the highlights is Surrealist giant Salvador Dalí’s Vision de l'age atomique, created in 1948, which illustrates not only his incredible draughtsmanship but also the profound effect that the dropping of the atomic bombs had on the artist. The work presents a post-nuclear landscape swarming with floating fountains and rock formations that morph into graceful classical figures, but never touch, mirroring the fact that atomic particles never touch one another.    

Another key work included is an iconic example of Ed Ruscha’s word paintings, President, 1968-72, which evokes politics, power and controversy, intensified by Ruscha’s signature aesthetic, to epitomise the artist’s fusion of semiotics and image, conveying words as stimulating visual objects.   

The exhibition also features one of Yayoi Kusama’s most celebrated series, her phallic soft sculptures. Increment in The Spring, 1986 draws on her Sex Obsession Objects of the 1960s but also reflects the influence of Joseph Cornell on her work.   

Taken together, these works will provide a vibrant survey of the major artistic movements in modern and contemporary art.     

Featured artists: Frank Auerbach | Jean-Michel Basquiat | Alexander Calder | Marc Chagall | Chun Kwang Young | Salvador Dalí | David Hockney | Yayoi Kusama | Georges Mathieu | Joan Miró | Kohei Nawa | Serge Poliakoff | Ed Ruscha | Graham Sutherland | Victor Vasarely | Andy Warhol