50 Years at Pace
32 East 57th Street – 534 West 25th Street – 545 West 22nd Street
September 17, 2010 - October 23, 2010
510 West 25th Street (inaugural exhibition)
September 17 - October 16, 2010
NEW YORK, August 2, 2010—In celebration of its 50th anniversary, The Pace Gallery presents a multivenue
retrospective of the gallery’s history highlighting the many artists, exhibitions, people,
literature and ideals that have influenced its narrative over the past five decades. 50 Years at Pace will
bring together some of the key masterpieces that have passed through Pace’s doors, featuring loans from
important public and private collections worldwide. With works spanning more than a century and a selection
of rare archival materials, 50 Years at Pace will shed light on some of the landmark exhibitions and sales from
the gallery’s extensive history. 50 Years at Pace will be on view at 32 East 57th Street, 534 West 25th
Street, and 545 West 22nd Street from September 17th through October 23rd. The exhibition will also be
on view at The Pace Gallery’s new location at 510 West 25th Street through October 16th. Opening
receptions will be hosted in each gallery from 5:30-9 p.m. on Thursday, September 16, 2010.
Each gallery will explore a different aspect of Pace’s history: mini-reprises of groundbreaking thematic and
historical exhibitions will be on view at 57th Street; the gallery’s enduring relationship with Pop art and
Abstract Expressionism will be highlighted at 25th Street; contributions to Minimalist Art and the Post-
Modernist movement will be featured at 22nd Street; and Pace’s commitment to contemporary art in the 21st
century will be showcased at the gallery’s new location on 510 West 25th Street.
A catalogue with a foreword by Arne Glimcher and more than 250 full color illustrations will accompany the
exhibition. In addition, an iPhone application designed to complement 50 Years at Pace, featuring audio clips
of artists and art historians and a walking tour of public works in Manhattan, will be available to download from
the iTunes store free of charge.
The Pace Gallery extends its deepest gratitude to the numerous private collectors and public institutions who
have made this exhibition possible, including Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo; The Adolph and Esther
Gottlieb Foundation; Brooklyn Museum; Centre Georges Pompidou; Estate of Mark Rothko; Fondation
Beyeler; Guggenheim Museum; The Josef and Anni Albers Foundation, Meadows Museum, Dallas; Museum
of Fine Arts, Boston; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas; National Gallery of
Art, Washington, D.C.; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Tate, London; Whitney Museum of American
Art; and Wildenstein & Co.
Pace’s 32 East 57th Street location will feature focused recreations of some of the gallery’s most
significant historical shows, including Pablo Picasso: The Avignon Paintings, 1981, one of the first
exhibitions devoted to the master’s late works, The Sculpture of Picasso, 1982, and Coenties Slip: Robert
Indiana, Ellsworth Kelly, Agnes Martin, James Rosenquist, Jack Youngerman, 1993. Exhibitions that
illuminated the relationships between artistic sensibilities, such as De Kooning/Dubuffet: The Women, 1991,
Bonnard/Rothko: Color and Light, 1997; and Mondrian/Reinhardt: Influence and Affinity, 1997, will be
represented with rarely seen works on loan from a number of public and private collections. Other highlights
include Giacometti's “The Women of Venice,” reunited in New York five years after The Women of
Giacometti, 2005, and Pablo Picasso’s Portrait of a Woman,1910 (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston), a work
integral to the groundbreaking exhibition Picasso, Braque and Early Film in Cubism, 2007 (made into the
documentary Picasso and Braque Go to the Movies, produced by Martin Scorsese in 2010). Rare
archival materials, such as letters and telegrams between artists, vintage gallery announcements, and
historical installation photography will help bring the gallery’s rich history to life.
The 534 West 25th Street location will focus on The Pace Gallery’s enduring relationship with Pop art
and Abstract Expressionism, including representative works from seminal exhibitions such as Stock up for
the Holidays: A Survey of Pop Art, 1962, First International Girlie Exhibit, 1965, and Beyond Realism,
1965. Highlighted works include Robert Rauschenberg’s Erased de Kooning Drawing, 1953 (SFMoMA);
Andy Warhol’s Marilyn Diptych, 1962 (Tate Modern); Ad Reinhardt’s Abstract Painting, 1960-66
(Guggenheim); Roy Lichtenstein’s Girl With Ball, 1961 (MoMA, New York); Clyfford Still’s 1956, PH-967,
N.Y.C., 1956 (Whitney); and sculptures from the late 50s to early 70s by John Chamberlain, David Smith,
Louise Nevelson, and Claes Oldenburg, including Oldenburg’s Giant BLT (Bacon, Lettuce and Tomato
Sandwich), 1963 (Whitney). Jasper Johns’ Three Flags, 1958, which revolutionized the contemporary art
market when it broke the record for the highest amount ever paid for the work of a living artist (the Whitney
Museum of American Art acquired the work through Pace for $1 million in 1980), will also be on view.
The 22nd Street gallery will be a celebration of the Minimalist Art and the post-Modernist movements,
featuring works by Chamberlain, Flavin, Hockney, Irwin, Judd, LeWitt, Mangold, Marden, Murray,
Riley, Ryman, Samaras, Schnabel, Shapiro, Turrell, and Tuttle, among others. Texts and archival
material from previous exhibitions related to these themes, such as the seminal 1979 exhibition Grids, will
also be included. Lucas Samaras’ Mirrored Room, 1966, last seen in New York City in the artist’s 1973
Whitney retrospective, will be reconstructed at 22nd Street, on loan from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery.
During the month of August, a team of Sol LeWitt’s draftsmen will install Wall Drawing #741,
previously on view (for the first and last time) in LeWitt’s 1994 exhibition at Pace. Other important loans
include Kiki Smith’s Lilith, 1994 (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston); Chuck Close’s Fanny/Fingerpainting,
1985 (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.); and Richard Tuttle’s Walking on Air, B-8, 2008 (MoMA,
New York).
The inaugural exhibition at Pace’s 510 West 25th Street location will explore the gallery’s commitment
to contemporary art today, highlighting artists as they articulate new ways of defining, navigating,
and interpreting their world in the increasingly global context of the 21st century. Featured works
include Chuck Close’s Zhang Huan I, 2008; Michal Rovner’s Data Zone, Cultures Table #1, 2003,
featured in her solo exhibition at the Israeli Pavilion at the 2003 Venice Biennale; Fred Wilson’s Iago’s
Mirror, 2009; Antoni Tàpies’ Particules I Ones, 2007, created by the Catalan master in his early 80s;
Robert Whitman’s laser projection Straight Red Line, 1967, from the artist’s first solo exhibition at Pace in
1967; Zhang Xiaogang’s emotionally stirring Comrades, 2006, which grapples with the individual and
collective memories of the Cultural Revolution; Hiroshi Sugimoto’s Henry VIII, 1999, and his six wives; and
Tim Hawkinson’s Sherpa, 2008, a life-sized single cylinder two-stroke engine motorcycle constructed out of
eight varieties of feathers. Important works by Tara Donovan, Tim Eitel, Tony Feher, Tim Hawkinson, Alex
Katz, Maya Lin, Carsten Nicolai, Thomas Nozkowski, Fiona Rae, Michal Rovner, Sterling Ruby, Richard
Serra, James Siena, Keith Sonnier, Keith Tyson, and Corban Walker, among others, will also be included.
Since its origins in Boston in 1960, The Pace Gallery has been a vital force in the art world and the locus
through which many artists’ work has reached the public. In five decades, the gallery has produced nearly
700 exhibitions and has published nearly 350 exhibition catalogues with contributions by some of the most
renowned historians and critics of the 20th and 21st centuries. The gallery’s dedication to historical and
scholarly exhibitions is accompanied by a strong commitment to the art of the 21st century and beyond.
Today, The Pace Gallery encompasses four locations in New York, as well as Pace Beijing, a 25,000 square
foot gallery in the heart of Beijing’s 798 Art District. The Pace family also includes Pace/MacGill, specializing
in photography; Pace Prints & Pace Master Prints, focusing on limited edition works on paper from the 15th to
21st centuries; and Pace Primitive, dedicated to African, Himalayan, Oceanic, and Native American tribal art.
To coincide with its 50th anniversary this year, Pace has launched thepacegallery.com, an encyclopedic
search-based site culled from the gallery’s extensive archives which allows visitors to peruse a living archive
of 50 years (and counting) of The Pace Gallery.
Concurrent with 50 Years at Pace, Pace Prints and Pace Primitive will present the joint exhibition
Louise Nevelson Prints and Multiples 1953-1983, featuring etchings, lithographs, cast paper pulp pieces,
and lead intaglio pieces. Pace/MacGill will highlight a selection of the finest photographers and works
that have exhibited in the gallery, including seminal photographs by Alfred Stieglitz, Paul Strand,
Charles Sheeler, and Edward Weston. Opening receptions will be held on Thursday, September 16th
from 5:30-9 p.m. to coincide with the opening of 50 Years at Pace.
For more information about 50 Years at Pace, please contact Jennifer Joy, Sarah Goulet, or Lauren
Staub in the press office at The Pace Gallery at 212.421.3292. For general inquiries, please email
[email protected]; for press requests, email [email protected].