Showing posts with label exhibitions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label exhibitions. Show all posts

Sunday, July 23, 2017

About "Protect"

Protect, 2016
Hand applique, bead embroidery, sequin embroidery


As with all my work the process involves a number of steps. The first and most important of which is collecting the materials. Almost all my materials are second hand. For the work "Protect" many of the materials are original and handmade. And even the ones that are machine made are specific to a small region, namely Turkey / Central Asia. These are not pop culture images, they are more intimate private images that a single person put their thought and their soul into creating. I have then collected them and reimagined them into yet another handmade work. So it is a process of passing down ones own desires, expressions and realizations of what it is to work with hand made textile tradition.  

Protect, detail

Protect, detail

Protect, detail

Protect, detail


One of the major things I was thinking about while making "PROTECT" was that in almost, if not all cultures, women play a major role in creating textiles. That is certainly true in Turkey and Central Asia. These textiles, when made by hand, are a symbol of the self expression and the self realization of the woman who made the work. At the same time that self expression serves a very practical purpose, if they are making rugs, wall hangings, dresses, tablecloths, etc. it is something that helps in the greater good of the family. It protects. Yet at the same time it is creative, it is a release, a form of private dialogue that helps them to express things that perhaps they can not with words. The work "PROTECT" is meant to create a voice for women who have found their personal expression in textiles. However silent or loud that voice is simply depends on how you look at the work. 

Wednesday, May 24, 2017

The Box Project : Uncommon Threads at Racine Art Museum

I am proud to be a part of this group exhibition at Racine Art Museum in Wisconsin this summer!





                                                                        ramart.org


The Box Project: Uncommon Threads

Opens Sunday, May 21 -  Aug 27

The Box Project: Uncommon Threads kicks off the season of a summer full of fiber art. This exhibition showcases commissioned works by 36 of the world's top fiber artists. These artists, many of whom work on a large scale, were challenged to create an original piece within the confines of a small box. Organized by the Cotsen Foundation for Academic Research (CFAR) with RAM, this traveling exhibition presents works commissioned by Lloyd Cotsen between 2004 and 2013 together with 22 large-scale fiber art pieces on loan by the same artists.

Racine Art Museum – R|A|M, 441 Main Street, Box 187, Racine, WI 53401–0187

http://www.ramart.org/content/box-project-uncommon-threads

Friday, October 28, 2016

COLLECT group exhibition at Micheko Galerie in Munich, Germany

I'll have two new abstract textile collages in the group ehxhibiton at Micheko Galerie in Munich. Please stop by if you are in Munich.



























Duration: 29th October 2016 – 22nd December 2016
Opening: Friday, 28th October 2016 from 6pm till 9pm.


We will be ending this exciting year with our third group exhibition of applied arts from Japan. Micheko will be presenting new artists but also new works from artists of the gallery, made especially for this exhibition. Let yourself be captivated by the timeless elegance of Ryo Sekino’s glassworks, the flamboyance of Kayoko Mizumoto’s most recent ceramic vases, a new, colourful textile collage by Ai Kijima and many more artworks and objects of applied art.



MICHEKO GALERIE
by Michele Vitucci
Theresienstr. 18, D – 80333 Munich
T: +49 89 38 16 93 88
E-mail: contact AT micheko.com
Internet*: www.micheko.com



Saturday, September 17, 2016

THE BOX PROJECT: UNCOMMON THREADS at UCLA

I have two artworks in this group exhibition at the Fowler Museum at UCLA.







THE BOX PROJECT: UNCOMMON THREADS
SEPTEMBER 11, 2016–JANUARY 15, 2017


This dazzling exhibition features commissions by three dozen acclaimed international artists.  It showcases these skilled artists’ ingenious use—and often-expansive definitions—of fiber, while exploring the collector/artist relationship. The commissioned works come from The Cotsen Collection.


The 36 artists whose work appears in this exhibition are Masae Bamba, James Bassler, Mary Bero, Zane Berzina, N. Dash, Virginia Davis, Carson Fox, Shigeki Fukumoto, John Garrett, Ana Lisa Hedstrom, Helena Hernmarck, Agneta Hobin, Pat Hodson, Kiyomi Iwata, Gere Kavanaugh, Ai Kijima, Hideaki Kizaki, Lewis Knauss, Nancy Koenigsberg, Gerhardt Knodel, Naomi Kobayashi, Gyöngy Laky, Paola Moreno, Jun Mitsuhashi, Kyoko Nitta, Hisako Sekijima, Barbara Murak, Cynthia Schira, Heidrun Schimmel, Carol Shinn, Sherri Smith, Hadi Tabatabai, Koji Takaki, Aune Taamal, Richard Tuttle, and Peter Weber.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

NEW LOVE PLAN at Micheko Galerie in Munich, Germany

I am happy to announce that I will be having a solo exhibition at Micheko Galerie in Munich, it opens this Thursday. It titled "NEW LOVE PLAN" and is all new work from an intense 6 months working in Rotterdam and Istanbul. 
November 21, 2013 - February 1, 2014.
http://www.micheko.com
























NEW LOVE PLAN
Please join us for the opening on Thursday, 21st November 2013 from 7pm till 9pm.

The artist's works are "chaotic collages: amalgamations of found material painstakingly stitched into evocative cross-cultural patchworks." Exclusively for her first solo exhibition in Germany, Ai Kijima has dedicated her new series of works to Japanese manga and anime motifs and processed these to global messengers of popular culture.


about the artist

Born in Tokyo and now a New York resident, Ai Kijima graduated from the Art Institute of Chicago in 2005. She collects fabrics with motifs of popular cartoon, comic, TV-series and movie characters, then fuses them into colorful cartoonscapes that are too sexy and subtly violent to be within our individual emotional comfort zones. Kijima claims to express a universal viewpoint with her quilted textile collages. She does not explicitly show her Japaneseness and would rather remain anonymous.

Monday, June 24, 2013

Summer in Rotterdam, Netherlands

I am staying in Rotterdam, working on my new pieces until the end of August. Here are the images of my fantastic studio!



Saturday, May 4, 2013

Cash, Cans & Candy group exhibition this summer


P r e s s  R e l e a s e 
(Vienna, 03 May, 2013)
BEGINNING 1 JUNE 2013, GALLERIST ERNST HILGER WILL BE PRESENTING AN AMBITIOUS STREET ART EXHIBITION PROJECT WITH FESTIVAL FLAVOUR TITLED CASH, CANS & CANDY, FEATURING OVER 40 ARTISTS AT THE HILGERBROTKUNSTHALLE WIEN 10 AND AT THE GALERIE HILGER NEXT WIEN 10


“A wall has always been the best place to publish your work” (Banksy)


Curated by Katrin-Sophie Dworczak, the street art exhibition Cash, Cans & Candy is presented by Ernst Hilger simultaneously at both his exhibition venues, HilgerBROTKunsthalle Wien 10 andGALERIE HILGER NEXT Wien 10 at Absberggasse 27, 1100 Vienna. This way, he once again puts the former Anker bread factory in the public spotlight as a new art and cultural complex.
From 1 June until 14 September 2013 the exhibition Cash, Cans & Candy is showing works by over 40 Austrian and international artists from all five continents on 800 square metres of exhibition space. Both pioneers like Robbie Conal as well as established street artists such as Retna andShepard Fairey from Los Angeles, Faile from New York City, or Roa from Belgium are taking part in this large-scale exhibition venture. At the same time, the exhibition features artists who until now have only been known within certain subcultures and just now are beginning to introduce their works to a larger audience.


In addition, before and throughout the duration of the exhibition Cash, Cans & Candy events and performances will take place at various locations in Vienna. Ushering in this ambitious, festival-like street art project is artist Stinkfish from Colombia with a mural at the Naschmarkt in cooperation with NENI ART Collective. Stinkfish’s mural live painting performance takes place on Tuesday, 7 May 2013 at 10am at Neni am Naschmarkt, 510 Naschmarkt, 1060 Vienna. The exhibition opening is at the HilgerBROTKunsthalle Wien 10 and the GALERIE HILGER NEXT Wien 10 onFriday, 31 May 2013 at 7pm.

The street art aesthetic has long been a defining feature of the cityscapes of Berlin, New York, Paris and London. With Cash, Cans & Candy it is Vienna’s turn, where for some time street artists have been provided with free wall space in public areas, to become the focus of interest for a summer and so to continue to establish itself as a vibrant hub for this art form. For South African artist Faith47, Vienna constitutes an ideal place for her street art works: “What comes to mind, when thinking about Vienna, is its impressive cultural history. Classic opera houses, balls, Sigmund Freud, Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele, and many other artists that influenced art history at large, cast a big shadow. A shadow in which a flourishing urban art scene had the chance to develop, invisible to the untrained eye.” Together with the American contemporary artist, graphic designer and illustrator Shepard Fairey and Brooklyn-based artist duo Faile (Patrick McNeil and Patrick Miller) she is working on three outside walls of the silo at the Anker bread factory at Absberggasse 35, 1100 Vienna while taking into account the social infrastructures and microcosms of Vienna’s 10th district. With this action, taking place in cooperation with ANKERBROT, the three newly designed faces of the building will contribute to prospectively enhance this neighbourhood.
Throughout the festival, DALEast and further artists are working on sections of the Theresianum’s expansive wall. Vasilena Gankovska invites you to a tattoo performance and a bike tour to street art hot spots around Vienna which is jointly organized with the INOPERAbLE Gallery. An experts’ conference with Robbie Conal and other scene legends and participants is hosted in cooperation with Step Forward Events, and Christine Finley is set to surprise with a dance performance. Another highlight is the block party featuring, amongst others, Bumblebee on 30 June 2013 at 510 Naschmarkt 1060 Vienna, in cooperation with NENI ART Collective.

THE BIRTH OF STREET ART
In a world in which urban space is dominated by global(ized) advertising slogans, art that eschews straightforward utilization has taken on great importance: on an aesthetic level as an enhancement of the face of a city and also as a junction between the public and the private. These days, street art is found in galleries and museums, at art fairs and auctions, and of course still at the original place of the movement – the street, the interactive intersection between artist and public. Street art is considered to have originated in the sixties of the past century. Its place of birth: Brooklyn and the Bronx, both New York boroughs that have always been characterised by their multi-ethnic diversity. Even though stencils had already been used in cave paintings, the central interest of street art was the inception of an expressive idiom which had its origin in a subcultural environment. The term “street art” refers to the post-graffiti era and distances itself from vandalism – territorial graffiti associated with gang culture – as well as “corporate art.” In the beginning, anonymity, spontaneity and provocativeness were the most important aspects. Criticism of the establishment was the driving force behind the movement, which in a creative way served as a voice for the socially disadvantaged whose concerns were rarely heard. It was precisely this underground and guerrilla attitude which kept many street artists from following traditional routes. They avoided the “white cube” vibe characteristic of galleries; after all, the street was the best gallery and reached a wide audience.



Mimmo Rotella, a representative of Noveau Réalisme, initially made few friends with his décollage works in public areas in Southern Italy. Roy Liechtenstein, one of Pop Art’s most famous representatives, used stencils in his painting technique. Keith Haring was one of the first to be drawn to the street and underground scene of the New York City Subway. He developed a unique writing language, never made sketches and worked on various surfaces, including walls – all in the true spirit of street art. Jean-Michel Basquiat was drawn from the outside into the galleries. His works retained their street art aesthetic, yet the artist satirized the signature’s function by signing his paintings with the tag “SAMO” (same old shit).

STREET ART TODAY
These days the works of street artists have long since found their way into museums and galleries, and thus have become part of the art market. Street artists are facing the challenges of the White Cube and in doing so are exploding the scope of art from within. Using a different support medium they take their aesthetics and expressiveness to a new, exciting level which also appeals to artists and collectors who do not associated themselves with this subculture. Meanwhile, auction houses like Sotheby’s, Christie’s and Phillips are offering separate auctions for this particular art form and integrate it into their Contemporary Art auctions. Artists like Retna, who lives in Los Angeles, have prominently been featured at this year’s Armory Show in New York. Street art has conquered the established art world.


In places like New York, Los Angeles, Miami, London, Paris, Barcelona and Berlin street art has become an integral and essential part of the face of the city. In London’s East End, metre-high works by British scene legend Banksy are eye catchers. In 2008 Shepard Fairey became world famous with his Obama election campaign. Up until now, Vienna has only been emitting a weak signal on this movement’s radar. Further building up awareness is still required for street art to be regarded not as vandalism but accepted as an art form. Collaborations with fine arts and the performing arts are no longer rare events. Thus, in May 2013, briefly before the opening of Cash, Cans & Candy, Faile will be collaborating with the New York City Ballet for the second time and by doing so are stepping into the footsteps of Andy Warhol, Keith Haring and Roy Liechtenstein. Renowned art institutions like the MoCA (The Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles, 2011) and the Kunsthalle Wien (2010) have dedicated extensive exhibitions to this subject.
It is exactly at this point that the exhibition Cash, Cans & Candy sets in: as an intersection between art that takes place in the street and is dedicated to draw attention to social injustices, as well as the marketing and commercial aspects that constitute the art market. A subversive, independent art form, which in actual fact refrains from being subjected to the regulations of the art market, can still be a part of this system aiming at commercial success without losing credibility.


PARTICIPATING ARTISTS: Michael Anderson (USA), Beran/Henz (A),Broken Fingaz (IL), Bumblebee (USA), Robbie Conal (USA), DALEast (ZA), Etam Cru (PL), Alessandra Exposito (MX), Faile (USA), Faith47 (ZA), Shepard Fairey (USA), Amir H. Fallah (USA), Christine Finley (USA), Ben Frost (AU), Vasilena Gankovska (BG), Gola (IT), H101 (ES), Lia Halloran (USA), David Istvan (H), Jaz (AR), Kenor (ES),  Ai Kijima (USA/JP), Kryot (A), Lies Maculan (A), Brian McKee (USA), Meapi (A), Moneyless (IT), Mark Mulroney (USA), NeSpoon, (PL), Markus Oberndorfer (A), Brandon Opalka (USA), La Pandilla (PR), El Pez (ES), PERFEKT WORLD (A), Pure Evil (GB), Retna (USA), ROA (BE), Michelle Rogers (USA), Sonke (GR), The Stencil Network (PR/USA), Stinkfish (CO), Lisa Marie Thalhammer (USA), Stephen Tompkins (USA), Laura Ortiz Vega (MX), Vinz Feel Free (ES), Dan Witz (USA), YOTTO (A) und Zosen y Mina (ES).

WITH THANKS FOR THE KIND SUPPORT
SPONSORS 
ANKERBROT AG, All I need – 100% organic green tea, Gewista, ÖBB, Hochriegel, Montana, Plakativ and Prangl. PARTNER Berlin City Gallery, Berlin; The Fountainhead Residency, Miami; INOPERAbLE Gallery, Vienna; Mixed Greens Gallery, New York; NENI ART Collective, Vienna; Site 109, New York; Step Forward Events, Vienna; Trailer Park Proyects, Puerto Rico; Morisson Club, Vienna and URBANAUTS & Kohlmayr Lutter Knapp, Vienna. MEDIA PARTNER Die Insiderei, Superfly.fm and The Gap.


GALERIE HILGER NEXT Wien 10 and
HilgerBROTKunsthalle Wien 10
Absberggasse 27, 1100 Vienna
+43-1-512 53 15
+43-1-513 91 26
brot@brotkunsthalle.com
www.hilger.at
Opening times
Wed – Sat, 12pm – 6pm
and by arrangement T +43-1-512 53 15
Directions
U1 to Reumannplatz
U3 to Enkplatz
tram line 6 to Absberggasse


EXHIBITION

GALERIE HILGER NEXT Wien 10 and
HilgerBROTKunsthalle Wien 10


CASH, CANS & CANDY
01. 06. – 15. 09. 2013
Opening: Friday 31. 05. 2013, 7pm
Closed (summer break): 31. 07. – 15. 08. 2013
Free entry




PROGRAMM FOR CASH, CANS & CANDY

PRE-OPENING: Tuesday, 07. 05. 2013, 10am – 11am 
Stinkfish: MURAL LIVE PAINTING, Neni am Nachmarkt, 510 Naschmarkt, 1060 Vienna


MAY 2013
Tuesday, 21. 05. 2013, 3pm – 6pm

Shepard Fairey: MURAL LIVE PAINTING, silo at the Ankerbrotfabrik grounds, Absberggasse 35, 1100 Vienna; Directions: U1 to Reumannplatz, tram line 6 – 2 stations until “Absberggasse”

Saturday, 01. 06. 2013, 3pm – 6pm
Faith47: MURAL LIVE PAINTING, silo at the Ankerbrotfabrik grounds, Absberggasse 35, 1100 Vienna; Directions: U1 to Reumannplatz, tram line 6 – 2 stations until “Absberggasse”

JUNE 2013
Friday, 21. 06. 2013, 7pm – 9.30pm

Vasilena Gankovska: tattoo performance, HilgerBROTKunsthalle Wien 10, Absberggasse 27, 1100 Vienna; Directions: U1 to Reumannplatz, tram line 6 – 2 stations until to “Absberggasse”

Sunday, 30. 06. 2013, 12pm – 8pm
Block party with Bumblebee und other guests, in cooperation with INOPERAbLE GALLERY & NENI ART COLLECTIVE, Neni am Nachmarkt, 510 Naschmarkt, 1060 Vienna

JULY 2013
Friday, 12. 07. 2013

Christine Finely: dance performance
Date and location to be announced at www.facebook.com/cashcanscandynext

Vasilena Gankovska: Walk in the City
Date and location to be announced at www.facebook.com/cashcanscandynext
Meeting point: GALERIE HILGER NEXT Wien 10, Absberggasse 27, stair III, 2nd floor, 1100 Vienna

INOPERAbLE GALLERY: Bike in the City Tour
Date and location to be announced at www.facebook.com/cashcanscandynext
Meeting point: GALERIE HILGER NEXT Wien 10, Absberggasse 27, stair III, 2nd floor, 1100 Vienna


SEPTEMBER 2013
Saturday, 07. 09. 2013, 3pm – 5pm

EXPERTS’ TALK in cooperation with STEP FORWARD EVENTS
starting at 10pm
CLOSING PARTY @ CAFÉ LEOPOLD, 
in cooperation with STEP FORWARD EVENTS, Museumsplatz 1, 1070 Vienna

CURATOR / Cash, Cans & Candy
Mag. Katrin-Sophie Dworczak
GALERIE ERNST HILGER Wien 1
GALERIE HILGER NEXT Wien 10
+ 43 1 512 53 15 –15, F + 43 1-513 91 26
katrin.dworczak@hilger.at

PRESS
Mag. Christina Werner
w.hoch.2wei. Kulturelles Projektmanagement
+ 43 1 524 96 46 – 22, F + 43 1 524 96 32
werner@kunstnet.at

PRESS DOWNLOAD
http://www.hilger.at/839_EN
FURTHER INFORMATION
www.facebook.com/cashcanscandynext
cashcanscandy


Image caption: Mark Mulroney, The Antique Corpses, 2010, acrylic on canvas, 98 x 141 cm, Courtesy: MIXED GREENS GALLERY & the artist, Copyright: the artist

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

The Columns Gallery at KIAF 2012

I have a new piece at The Columns Gallery at KIAF (Korea International Art Fair).  Please stop by if you are in Seoul. September 12 - 17, 2012. COEX Hall A&B, Seoul, Korea.









Thursday, July 26, 2012

One Thousand Dreams at Galerie Ernst Hilger, Vienna

ONE THOUSAND DREAMS is the title of Ai Kijima’s new, large-format work and solo exhibition of the same name. Created using traditional quilting techniques, the work being shown is a collage made from found fabrics like bed sheets, kimonos, T-shirts, curtains, tablecloths, boxer shorts and clothing items. After meticulously choosing the motifs, Kijima sewed the fabric pieces together into a patchwork of images that unfold like a movie: One collage (or scene) abruptly follows another, with the different protagonists either merging together or dissolving into the background. The result is a sense of non-stop action, as well as a narrative that invites the viewer to explore the multiple threads of meaning. Visible throughout the work, the stitching is more than simply a means to an end, as it dynamically impacts the visual composition and ultimately harmonizes the overall piece. Kijima describes her technique as “fused and quilted fabric.” 


June 21 - July 28, 2012
http://www.hilger.at


Info reg. the show: 
michael.kaufmann@hilger.at 
T +43 (1) 512 53 15 18 

Kronen Zeitung review


















Austira's largest news paper!

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Open studio in Long Island City this weekend










I am going to have an open studio this weekend, May 19th and 20th, from 12 to 6pm at my studio. Look forward to meet you if you are near Long Island City, Queens.

Ai Kijima Studio
43-01 22nd Street #262
Long Island City, NY 11101

Hundreds of artists opening their studios and art to the public in LIC this weekend.

http://www.licartsopen.org/


Sunday, April 29, 2012

PULSE NYC with Hilger Contemporary








I'm very excited that I'll be showing my pieces at the Pulse Art Fair in NYC with Hilger Contemporary. Please stop by if you are in the city.



HILGER MODERN/CONTEMPORARY @ PULSE NYC, MAY 3 - 6, 2012
Booth: D3
LOCATION:
PULSE New York
The Metropolitan Pavilion
125 West 18th Street Chelsea,
New York, NY 10011

FAIR HOURS :
Thursday May 3 9am-12pm
Press and VIP Private Preview
hosted by artnet Auctions
Thursday May 3 12pm- 8pm
Friday May 4 9am-10am
Private VIP Hour
Friday May 4 10am-8pm
Saturday May 5 12pm-8pm
Sunday May 6 12pm-5pm


KünstlerInnen/artists:

Gunter Damisch
Oliver Dorfer
Ai Kijima
Ángel Marcos
Andrew Mezvinsky
Brian McKee
Cameron Platter
Sara Rahbar
Mel Ramos
Massimo Vitali

Nähere Information/Further info:
michael.kaufmann@hilger.at
+43 (1) 512 53 15 18
+43 650 273 96 50
www.hilger.at 

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Ai Kijima / Press Release

AI KIJIMA at 548 west 22 street
April 5-28, 2012
reception: Thursday April 5, 6-8p

Hallucinatory Technicolor textile amalgamations of everything from bits of picnic blankets to kimonos, Ai Kijima’s quilts are so visually tightly packed as to make the concept of horror vacui superfluous. With compositional complexity, various values are recombined into a dizzying harmonious whole, using “old” technology (a sewing machine) to test and prod in a very new and contemporary manner the boundaries and borders of appropriation and (im)proprietary borrowing. Compulsively cutting, stitching, and transforming, she shrewdly expands on the inherent nature of quilting as a traditional craft already depending on the reuse of previously owned materials, conjuring up a recycled visionary fantasia that in its cacophonous overabundance paradoxically achieves a certain level of pictorial calm. The discarded and thrown away commercially-printed cloth is adapted by this self-professed “fabric and sewing addict” to a bizarre composite realm full of crowds of cavorting reconstituted characters. Folkloric archetypes and their offspring, corporate and entertainment characters and logos, are the found objects that range from unicorns and cats to a vintage revolver to Lucy’s psychiatric booth from “Peanuts,” a purple Teletubbie, Little Orphan Annie, Tony the Tiger, Winnie the Pooh, Bob Marley, Homer and Marge Simpsons, Sponge Bob Square Pants – and that’s just in one work – all promiscuously mingling in warm and fuzzy but also unsettling and twisted fabric-scapes of mindboggling intricacy.

“I consider myself an artist with craftsmanship. Although my materials are very domestic and my techniques come from quilting, I believe I can incarnate them into something else.” And she does, taking “craft” to another place, entering new dimensions, and building up possible narratives, all from the discarded remnants of people’s personal lives. In an act of transformative re-contextualization, the two large works on display appear to be paintings from afar but on closer inspection are quilts, though the distinction is immaterial in the face of such off-the-charts skill and execution. Sleight of hand is at play, trickery, in an exalted sense, with things, and parts of things lurking ambiguously in the background, and what could be seen as overwhelming is the fascinating sum of the parts that is greater than the whole. The wild conglomeration (to cite the second piece on view) of football players, basketball stars, feathers, Scooby Doo, Superman, pirates, Chief Joseph, Teenage Ninja Turtles, and Garfield combine to be that “something else” Kijima alludes and aspires to, and achieves. Personal interpretations and visions of the world are converted into expressive collages of mass production that double as abstract “paintings,” the detritus of pop culture is subdued and wrestled with, re-combined and blended, bringing forth an imaginative zone of excess handled with remarkable finesse.

Franklin Parrasch Gallery will be holding a reception for the artist on Thursday April 5, 2012 from 6-8p at 548 WEST 22 STREET.

This exhibition takes place at 548 West 22 Street; hours are 11a-5p Tuesday-Friday, 10a-6p Saturday. For images, biography, and further information, please contact the gallery at info@franklinparrasch.com or 212-246-5360, Tuesday-Saturday 10a-6p.


franklin parrasch gallery
20 w 57 st and 548 w 22 st
t 212-246-5360 f 212-246-5391
info@franklinparrasch.com
www.franklinparrasch.com