Pace Gallery is pleased to present an intimate solo exhibition of photographs and works on paper by celebrated artist Saul Steinberg. Held at the gallery’s space in East Hampton, which will be programmed through October 2021, the exhibition brings Steinberg’s work to the Hamptons community where the artist long resided, creating many important works. Following Pace’s presentation of Saul Steinberg: Imagined Interiors, a popular online show that launched the gallery’s first series of thematic online exhibitions, Saul Steinberg will be on view from November 20, 2020 – January 17, 2021.
After emigrating from Europe to the United States in 1942, Steinberg quickly became dear to a broad American public through his numerous drawings and covers for The New Yorker. At the same time, he became part of New York’s avant-garde art circles and earned much critical praise for his sharp-witted and cerebral experiments with drawing, photography, collage, and sculpture. Testaments to his depth as a modernist artist, his works often ingeniously repurpose the stylistic codes of Cubism, Futurism, and Surrealism, among other movements. Aside from mining art and history, his self-aware images often meditate on the paradoxes subtending daily life and societal norms, eliciting a state of critical contemplation from his viewers.
Humorously insightful as well as deeply philosophical, the 21 works presented in this presentation depict everyday life and well-known public locations, as exemplified by Union Square (1982), Chicago (1952), and Paris (1984). As a whole, they convey Steinberg’s unique, worldly perspective, shaped by his experiences as an immigrant, New Yorker, and observant traveler both within and outside of the US. The exhibition also features Steinberg’s Riverhead, Long Island (1985), which conveys the artist’s singular view of Long Island while evincing his ability to reimagine the local landscape through his personal lexicon. In fact, after acquiring a home in Amagansett in 1959, the Hamptons, especially verdant locations such as Louse Point, became a continuous source of inspiration for his work. Beginning in 1966, Steinberg would spend increasingly more time in the area, adding a studio to his Amagansett house in 1973. There, he drew scenes of daily life in “the country” as well as portraits of visitors to his home.