Leo Villareal

Leo Villareal

340 Royal Poinciana Way Suite M333Palm Beach, FL 33480, USA Thursday, March 17, 2022–Sunday, April 3, 2022


Pace is pleased to present an exhibition of work by Leo Villareal, whose striking installations and sculptures investigate light’s immersive, experiential, and sensorial potential.

The show, which includes five new sculptures and a selection of generative NFTs, will mark the artist’s first exhibition of his diffused color works with the gallery.

Incorporating LED lights, electronics, and custom coding, the new sculptures exemplify Villareal’s latest inquiries into natural and synthetic systems. They reflect the artist’s intense interest in the formal, abstracted qualities of his technologically minded experimentations focused on perception and subjectivity.

Villareal’s use of color in these sculptures can be understood in dialogue with his vibrant, long-term Illuminated River installation, which spans nine Thames bridges in London. With that expansive project, Villareal engages with the rich history of studies of the Thames by artists including Claude Monet and André Derain. For this project, the artist created subtly moving sequences of LED light that reveal the beauty of the existing architectures and their relationships to the river flowing beneath them. 

Among the artist’s other recent projects was the debut of his first series of NFTs, titled Cosmic Reef, on the Art Blocks platform in January. Created using a combination of human control and computational chance, the works in this series feature mesmeric, evolving geometries. A group of these unique, generative works, which are informed by beauty and randomness in nature, will figure in Pace’s Palm Beach exhibition.

Villareal’s presence in Florida can be traced to the permanent display of his light installation Sky (Tampa) (2010) on the south façade of the Tampa Museum of Art and his inclusion in a 2011 group exhibition at the Norton Museum of Art in Palm Beach. His work is also part of the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas; the Long Museum, Shanghai; and other international institutions.