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CAVIN-MORRIS GALLERY

  • Exhibitions
    • Current Exhibitions
    • Upcoming Exhibitions
    • Past Exhibitions
    • Online Exclusive: Mahmoodkhan
    • Online Exclusive: Mizusashi
  • Artists
    • Self-Taught (A-L)
    • Self-Taught (M-Z)
    • Contemporary
    • Ceramicists (A-L)
    • Ceramicists (M-Z)
  • Publications
    • Catalogs
    • Books
  • Fairs
  • Appraisals
  • Fieldnotes
  • Accessibility
  • New Arrivals
  • Contact

The Nature of Things: Contemporary Japanese Woven Sculpture

Chizu Sekiguchi, Brown Line, 2015, Plaited and sewn windmill palm, walnut bark,10.5 x 7 x 7 inches, 26.7 x 17.8 x 17.8 cm, ChS 14

Chizu Sekiguchi, Brown Line, 2015, Plaited and sewn windmill palm, walnut bark,
10.5 x 7 x 7 inches, 26.7 x 17.8 x 17.8 cm, ChS 14

For Immediate Release:

The Nature of Things: Contemporary Japanese Woven Sculpture

June 14 - August 3, 2018

Six years ago Chizu Sekiguchi, contemporary basket maker and teacher, created an exhibit for us called Contained Excitement.  We are thrilled that she has agreed to organize another exhibition for us this summer of contemporary Japanese woven sculpture.  

Sekiguchi-san chose these second, third, and fourth generation artists who are breaking away from traditional bamboo forms, using materials ranging from palm fronds, kudzu fiber, and leaf skeletons, to wire, industrial plastic sheets and paper masking tape.

As in the first exhibition, some of the artists in The Nature of Things were inspired by, or were students of Chizu Sekiguchi.  She was inspired by Hisako Sekijima (not in the show) who came to the United States in the late 70's.  Once here, she was motivated by Ed Rossbach, John McQueen and Kay Sekimachi, some of the artists recognized as bringing the woven basket form into the arena of contemporary art.

This exhibition falls snugly into our program of exploring the alchemical connection between the artist and the natural world, as a vehicle of present day animism.  Even those works made of non-natural materials are commentaries on the rhythms, textures, and the artists’ deep personal responses to place, plants, environments, and the sacred spaces contained within vessels and enclosed forms. They subtly reveal their secrets. The artists have wrestled and changed those natural forms, abstracting them into exquisite small sculptures that reference Nature and yet transform it as well.  Sometimes it seems the hand naturally organizes and weaves materials together as a form of contemplative meditation.  

In this exhibition most of the 'basket' form has moved beyond function. The earliest forms of mankind's weavings were probably containers and textiles. Their forms evolved with culture for thousands of years, ultimately transforming from utilitarian objects to objects made for art's sake. None are as simple as they might seem.  Their complexity comes from the human element in their conceptions, and the human satisfaction in the range of their multiple forms.  

The artists included are: Chiaki Dosho, Michiko Fukai, Shoko Fukuda, Kakuko Ishii, Ritsuko Jinnouchi, Mieko Kawase, Yukari Kikuchi, Peke Kimura, Yohko Kubo, Yoshie Maejima, Hiroko Okuno, Chizu Sekiguchi, Haruko Sugawara, Shizuko Takahashi, Michiko Tamura, Toshiko Uchino, Makiko Wakisaka,  and Amayokasim Yamamoto

For additional information please contact info@cavinmorris.com or call us at 212-226-3768.

Friday 06.08.18
Posted by caroline casey
 

Hyperallergic article about "Duende" exhibition, artists as spiritualist mediums

Click here to view the article
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Saturday 06.02.18
Posted by caroline casey
 

Melanie Ferguson Online Catalog Now Available!

Click here to view the online catalog
Friday 05.11.18
Posted by caroline casey
 

DUENDE

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Thursday 05.03.18
Posted by caroline casey
 

Check out our new online chawan exhibition!

CLICK TO VIEW THE ONLINE EXHIBITION
Tuesday 04.24.18
Posted by caroline casey
 
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Saturday 03.24.18
Posted by caroline casey
 

ONLINE CATALOG: Welcoming The Two Faced Rider: Paintings by Ilija Bosilj Bašičević

CLICK HERE TO VIEW CATALOG
Tuesday 03.13.18
Posted by caroline casey
 

Welcoming The Two Faced Rider: Paintings by Ilija Bosilj Bašičević

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Friday 02.23.18
Posted by caroline casey
 

Welcoming The Two Faced Rider: Paintings by Ilija Bosilj Bašičević

View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    The Dzigura Takes Wing  , 1963 Gouache on paper 19.75 x 29.25 inches 50.2 x 74.3 cm IBo 2
View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    Two Faced Man Walking On Water  , 1961 Gouache on paper 30.75 x 22.5 inches 78.1 x 57.2 cm IBo 3
View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    The Fairies' Circus  , 1962 Gouache on paper 29.125 x 42.125 inches 74 x 107 cm IBo 4
View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    Welcoming The Two Faced Rider  , 1963 Oil on canvas 26.5 x 39.5 inches 67.3 x 100.3 cm IBo 6
View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    From the Apocalypse: Animal with Human Head  , 1965 Oil on board 9.5 x 16.75 inches 24.1 x 42.5 cm IBo 8
View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    The Apocalypse: The Argonauts  , 1962 Watercolor on paper 21 x 29 inches 53.3 x 73.7 cm IBo 9
View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    The Apocalypse: The Eclipse  , 1962 Oil on canvas 25.5 x 45.5 inches 64.8 x 115.6 cm IBo 10
View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    Scene from the Apocalypse  , n.d. Oil on canvas 26 x 38 inches 66 x 96.5 cm IBo 11
View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    The Accursed Queen Jerina  , 1962 Oil on canvas 28.75 x 40.125 inches 73 x 101.9 cm IBo 12
View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    Interplanetary Travelers  , 1962 Gouache on paper 42.125 x 59.125 inches 107 x 150.2 cm IBo 13
View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    Flying People  , n.d. Oil on canvas 18.5 x 25.5 inches 47 x 64.8 cm IBo 14
View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    Bird and Two Butterflies  , 1967 Oil on canvas 27 x 21.5 inches 68.6 x 54.6 cm IBo 15
View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    Apocalyptic Riders  , 1970 Oil on canvas 39 x 27 inches 99.1 x 68.6 cm IBo 16
View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    The Tree from Eden III  , 1966 Oil on canvas 35 x 26.5 inches 88.9 x 67.3 cm IBo 17
View fullsize   Ilija Bosilj Bašičević    Golden Ambassador  , 1970 Oil and metallic paint on board 23.25 x 18.125 inches 59.1 x 46 cm IBo 18

WELCOMING THE TWO-FACED RIDER: PAINTINGS BY ILIJA BOSILJ BAŠIČEVIĆ

February 15 - March 17, 2018

 Ilija Bosilj Bašičević was born in Sid, in what is now Serbia in 1895, and died in 1972 in the same town.  His parents were peasants and he spent most of his life as a farmer, having been forced to drop out of school after four years.  He resisted conscription during World Wars I and II as a protest against totalitarianism.  When he began to paint, he assumed the name Bosilj.  Although there were attempts to link him with some of the generic painters of the “naïve” movement in Yugoslavia, his work was marginal if at all relevant to that limited movement. Certainly there is nothing naïve about it.  Like many non-western artists he used his own traditional folklore as a jumping off point and visionary bedrock for his own imagery.

His work's themes touched upon what Jane Kallir describes as:  “Biblical stories, scenes from the Apocalypse, episodes from myth and history, depictions of local animals, birds, and the Dzigura (Sid's main street), and most idiosyncratically, images of winged people and an idyllic parallel universe called Ilijada.  These subject groupings are not discreet categories but rather are interrelated.  The flying people are on their ways to Ilijada. The Dzigura exists both on earth and in Ilijada.  Overall, Ilijada is a paradise that balances and opposes the horrors of the Apocalypse.  Given the evil that Ilija had witnessed in his own life, it is understandable that he was obsessed with such dichotomies.  His paintings are full of double-headed and two-faced creatures, which represent dualisms, not just of good and evil, but of truth and lies, kindness and aggression, the conscious and the unconscious, the outer and the inner”. 

He used a golden background for a special series of paintings he called the Iliad Cycle, based not upon Homer but his own journey through life.  A selection of these paintings will be included in this exhibition.

Ilija Bosilj’s paintings are in the permanent collection of the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; MNU Ilijanum, Sid, Serbia; Collection de l’art brut, Lausanne; Museum of Everything, London; Museum of Contemporary Art of Vojvodina, Novi Sad; Museum of Contemporary Art, Belgrade; Museum of Naive Art, Zagreb, the Rockefeller Collection and the Carlo Ponti collection. His paintings are currently featured in an exhibition at Halle St. Pierre, Paris, titled Turbulences dans les Balkans (Turbulence in the Balkans) with a catalog of the same name, until July 31st of this year.  Cavin-Morris Gallery is pleased to be working with Galerie St. Etienne and the Ilija & Mangelos Foundation, which represents Bašičević Estate, to honor this important and truly visionary work.

There will be an online catalog to document the exhibition and work in the gallery. 

For further information please contact us at info@cavinmorris.com or call 212-226-3768.

Friday 02.16.18
Posted by caroline casey
 

Visit us at the Outsider Art Fair this weekend at Booth #43

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Saturday 01.20.18
Posted by caroline casey
 

The 2018 Outsider Art Fair, a Preview

https://hyperallergic.com/420667/the-2018-outsider-art-fair-a-preview/

Saturday 01.13.18
Posted by caroline casey
 

RINGS AROUND THE MOON

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RINGS AROUND THE MOON

(January 4 - February 10, 2018)

 

Cavin-Morris Gallery is honored to present Rings Around The Moon, a group exhibition featuring Caroline Demangel, Monika Maurer-Morgenstern, Christine Sefolosha, Sandra Sheehy and Henriette Zéphir. These five artists are emblematic of the gallery's devotion to exhibiting visionary work that transcends the mainstream.

Caroline Demangel is a French artist whose strong gestural painting style and bold use of color express a raw and volatile inner world. Her work conveys a range of emotions in each depiction, allowing the viewer to access a glimpse into her complex inner landscape.

Working out of Germany, Monika Maurer-Morgenstern's intimate, highly detailed, mixed-media works are both playful and enigmatic. She uses a combination of drawing, collage and text techniques to convey visions of earthly and spiritual realms.

Christine Sefolosha's paintings create a rich dreamlike world that are simultaneously dark, hopeful and mysterious. Her motifs give a sense of timelessness working to create a space of mythical intrigue. Her work is informed by her time spent in Switzerland and by her many years of living in South Africa during the system of Apartheid.

Sandra Sheehy is a British artist who creates sculptures from found materials. She uses thread, fabric, shells, beads, sequins and a multitude of other materials to make dense and fantastic objects. The intense meticulousness coupled with the magical nature of these amuletic sculptures seem to come from an inexplicable urge to find cathartic release through physical manifestation.  

Henriette Zéphir (1920-2012) is a French artist whose abstract drawings were hailed by Jean Dubuffet. She began drawing on May 3, 1961 when she first felt the influence of a guiding hand. She subjected herself to repeated encounters with this spiritual force, who not only instructed her in proper breathing techniques to practice while drawing, but also which pen and which inks to use in her drawings.  She described herself as a channel through which certain spirits travel, and not a medium. The work is both ideologically intricate and formally enthralling.

This group of five artists use the poetry of their visual language to unearth hidden interiors and intangible realms. Through the integrity of their work and the sacredness of their visions we can briefly glimpse the universality of their interior worlds. 

For further information please contact us at info@cavinmorris.com or call 212-226-3768.

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Tuesday 01.02.18
Posted by caroline casey
 

THE WOLF RETURNS: GREGORY VAN MAANEN

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Friday 12.08.17
Posted by caroline casey
 

THE WOLF RETURNS: GREGORY VAN MAANEN

View fullsize   Gregory Van Maanen    Untitled  , n.d. Acrylic, spray paint on fence 89 x 29.5 x 3 inches 226.1 x 74.9 x 7.6 cm GVM 2546
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Gregory Van Maanen, Untitled, 8/29/2015, Acrylic on canvas, 47 x 35 inches, GVM 2577

Gregory Van Maanen, Untitled, 8/29/2015, Acrylic on canvas, 47 x 35 inches, GVM 2577

THE WOLF RETURNS: GREGORY VAN MAANEN

(November 30 - December 23, 2017)

Gregory Van Maanen has been reborn many times in this lifetime.  Each time presented itself as a transition into another kind of life.  Each time pushed him into his unique art more deeply.

The first and most significant rebirth was his war experience in Vietnam in which he was seriously wounded. Essentially, he rose above the tragic and bloody tunnels and battlefield.   In his own words he was sent back to earth, having been told by a Voice that it was not his time yet, and to continue with his life.  He was still a teenager.

This near death experience became his muse.  He arrived back in the United States, became a pacifist, and began making art.  He took advantage of the free GI Bill program, which landed him in Mexico for a while.  Through his art-making he struggled to avoid the terrible post-war traumas so many of his fellow vets were going through.  His work became a journal of his forgiveness of war’s demonic violence and energies.

War takes one beneath the veneer of civilizations’ shallow politesse.  Van Maanen was opened to universal worlds of spirits, raw emotions and the harsh realities of the Natural world.

He moved to Paterson, New Jersey where he lived hermetically, filling his studio with hundreds of fierce and beautiful sculptures and paintings.  His studio became a cave in the concrete jungle.

In the mid-1980’s Cavin-Morris Gallery began to represent Gregory Van Maanen.  For us he broke the existing canon of what was then known as 20th Century Folk Art.  He was no folk artist nor was he part of the art world’s mainstream.  His work took us further into the idea of Art Brut, and the use of art as a pure unfettered vehicle of transcendence.  It was feral.

In 2007 Kohler Foundation purchased his entire studio as an urban indoor environmental site.  The studio was then gifted to John Michael Kohler Arts Center, in Sheboygan, WI, which is known for its focus on artist-built environments.  Van Maanen moved to Rochester with his partner, June Avignone, and tried to get his bearings in an entirely new physical situation and community.  The basement of his house became his new studio.  After a year or so it began to feel like his cave again and he continued to freely push those visions forward.

This exhibition, the first since his move to Rochester, is yet another rebirth.  His paintings pursue an alternative plane of existence.  He is an artist for whom everything has meaning and portent, a true animist.  With his art he holds the darker side at bay, and feeds his amuletic stories to the process of light and life.  The variety of imagery he is able to invoke in his tight personal vocabulary speak to every world culture.

For further information info@cavinmorris.com or call 212-226-3768.

Tuesday 11.28.17
Posted by caroline casey
 

Rebel Clay catalog available online now!

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Click to view the Rebel Clay catalog
Saturday 11.04.17
Posted by caroline casey
 

Woven World: Selections from Cavin-Morris Gallery

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Woven World: Selections from Cavin-Morris Gallery
October 19 - November 19, 2017

Works using weaving, wrapping, knotting, and assembling methods by twenty mainstream, self-taught, and indigenous artists.

Reception: Thursday, October 19, 2017, 5 – 7 PM

Panel Talk with Shari Cavin and Randall Morris of Cavin-Morris Gallery: Wednesday, November 15, 5:30 PM, Filene Recital Hall

 

The Schick Art Gallery’s newest exhibition, Woven World: Selections from Cavin-Morris Gallery, blends ancient traditions with contemporary purpose, showcasing the work of twenty mainstream, self-taught, and indigenous artists.  Works range from figurative to abstract, and materials include, but are not limited to: cloth, clay, twigs, thread, reeds, wire, vinyl, paper, and found objects.  All the art on view demonstrates processes of weaving, wrapping, knotting, and assembling.  While diverse in origin and purpose, there is a potency, poise, and attention to detail evident throughout these works. 

Woven World: Selections from Cavin-Morris Gallery is simultaneously intended to showcase the passion of gallery owners Shari Cavin and Randall Morris as collectors, scholars, art lovers, and citizens of the world. Cavin and Morris have been collecting and exhibiting self-taught, tribal, and contemporary art from around the world for over thirty years. The Cavin-Morris Gallery roster also includes an eclectic selection of contemporary weavers and ceramists who push the envelope in their expression of traditional forms.  

The gallery is pleased to host Shari Cavin and Randall Morris in a dialogue about the art on view in Woven World and about their work as gallery-owners on Wednesday, November 15th, from 5:30 – 6:30 p.m. in the Filene Recital Hall.

All events at the Schick Gallery are free and open to the public.

Gallery hours:
M – Th 10 – 6, F 10 – 4, Sa / Su 12 - 4
Visit our website: www.skidmore.edu/schick or call 518-580-5049 / 518-580-5027       

Thursday 10.26.17
Posted by caroline casey
 

Edgewalkers & Worldbuilders (October 12 - November 25, 2017)

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Wednesday 10.18.17
Posted by caroline casey
 

Woven World: Selections from Cavin-Morris Gallery October 19 - November 19, 2017

Dawn Walden

Dawn Walden

Works using weaving, wrapping, knotting, and assembling methods by twenty mainstream, self-taught, and indigenous artists.

Reception: Thursday, October 19, 2017, 5 – 7 PM

Panel Talk with Shari Cavin and Randall Morris of Cavin-Morris Gallery: Wednesday, November 15, 5:30 PM, Filene Recital Hall

The Schick Art Gallery’s newest exhibition, Woven World: Selections from Cavin-Morris Gallery, blends ancient traditions with contemporary purpose, showcasing the work of twenty mainstream, self-taught, and indigenous artists.  Works range from figurative to abstract, and materials include, but are not limited to: cloth, clay, twigs, thread, reeds, wire, vinyl, paper, and found objects.  All the art on view demonstrates processes of weaving, wrapping, knotting, and assembling.  While diverse in origin and purpose, there is a potency, poise, and attention to detail evident throughout these works. 

Woven World: Selections from Cavin-Morris Gallery is simultaneously intended to showcase the passion of gallery owners Shari Cavin and Randall Morris as collectors, scholars, art lovers, and citizens of the world. Cavin and Morris have been collecting and exhibiting self-taught, tribal, and contemporary art from around the world for over thirty years. The Cavin-Morris Gallery roster also includes an eclectic selection of contemporary weavers and ceramists who push the envelope in their expression of traditional forms.  

The gallery is pleased to host Shari Cavin and Randall Morris in a dialogue about the art on view in Woven World and about their work as gallery-owners on Wednesday, November 15th, from 5:30 – 6:30 p.m. in the Filene Recital Hall.

All events at the Schick Gallery are free and open to the public.

Gallery hours:
M – Th 10 – 6, F 10 – 4, Sa / Su 12 - 4
http://www.skidmore.edu/schick/

Saturday 10.14.17
Posted by caroline casey
 

EDGEWALKERS & WORLDBUILDERS

Edgewalkers and Worldbuilders: New Artists at Cavin-Morris Gallery

October 12 - November 25, 2017

The last two years have been rich and rewarding in our gallery’s collaborations with art brut and non-mainstream artists from around the world.  We designed this exhibition to introduce and showcase some of those artists and estates we’ve begun working with recently.

We are pleased to be working with Gallery St. Etienne and the family of Serbian old master Ilija Bosilj, in presenting his paintings in this exhibition, and at the Paris and New York Outsider Art Fairs.

Along with Bosilij, our exhibition will include works by Herman Bossert from the Netherlands, Kashinath Chawan from India, Caroline Demangel and Izabella Ortiz from France, Éric Derkenne and Éric Derochette from Belgium, John Devlin from Canada, Frantisek Dymáček and Ota Prouza from the Czech Republic, Davood Koochaki from Iran, and Ryuhei Shibata, Katsuo Tokunaga and Kyoko Arita from Japan.

These artists align with our gallery because each has created a personal universe in their art.  The work is not made for an art world agenda, but rather created by private motivations.  These artists represent a compelling international presence of creators content to work out of the spotlight. The excellence of their oeuvre insists that they come forward.

For further information info@cavinmorris.com or call 212-226-3768.

Ryuhei ShibataTitle deleted, 2015Gel pen, acrylic on Japanese paper44.41 x 57.72 inches112.8 x 146.6 cmRtSh 3

Ryuhei Shibata
Title deleted, 2015
Gel pen, acrylic on Japanese paper
44.41 x 57.72 inches
112.8 x 146.6 cm
RtSh 3

Tuesday 10.10.17
Posted by caroline casey
 

Tony Pedemonte in the studio

Wednesday 09.20.17
Posted by caroline casey
 
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