No Gallery is pleased to present Diagrams for Living, an exhibition of paintings, collages, and video work from Marc Horowitz. The first room of the gallery is occupied by new paintings completed in Los Angeles during quarantine. The second room hosts collage works on paper and collage-like video culled from the artistβs vast archive of personal footage gathered throughout pre-pandemic travels. Marc Horowitz - "Diagrams For Living" will be on view until December 13 at No Gallery, 961 Chung King Rd Los Angeles, CA 90012.
Petra Cortright Presents CAM WORLS @ UTA Artist Space In Los Angeles
CAM WORLS features fifty of the artistβs videos, made between 2007 and 2017, including eighteen never-before-exhibited artworks. Take a walk around the gallery to trace the evolution of Petra's online presence and take a seat on one of the many beanbags to view the works simultaneously from a distance, then make your way to the back gallery to view her 2015 piece, mind_candy_pfaffs, a collection of life-sized sexy girls in motion pulled from VirtuaGirl, one of the many technologies that the artist has employed in her work, its broader purpose is to give its users the impression that the sexy woman of their choice is trapped and living right within their own computer screens. CAM WORLS will be on view through April 7 at UTA Artist Space 670 S. Anderson Street Los Angeles. photographs by Oliver Kupper and Lani Trock
Marc Horowitz "The Hall. Studio" Vernissage @ Mannerheim Gallery In Paris
The Hall.The Studio is a testament to the vibrant haphazardness of mundane reality, uniting Marc Horowitzβs background in cinematic and interactive projects with the lingering presence of classical art. Marc Horowitz "The Hall. Studio" will be open until November 26, 2016 @ Mannerheim Gallery in Paris. photographs by Mazzy-Mae Green
Private Opening Of The "Human Condition" Group Show Curated by John Wolf At A Former Hospital in Los Angeles
Human Condition is an immersive, site-specific exhibition that features the work of sixty emerging and established artists in a uniquely challenging space: a former hospital in West Adams, previously known as the Los Angeles Metropolitan Medical Center. Curated and produced by the Los Angeles-based art advisor John Wolf, Human Condition invites artists to re-contextualize the hospitalβs functional historyβover 40,000 square feet of itβas a venue to explore what it means to be human. Human Condition is a unique opportunity to experience artwork outside the confines of a typical art space. In using the skeletal remains of the hospital and its discarded medical supplies, artists and viewers are encouraged to explore the notion of what we leave behindβfrom objects to human history. Human Condition opens to the public on October 1, 2016 and runs through November 30, 2016. Address: 2231 S Western Ave. Los Angeles, CA. photographs by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
Marc Horowitz "(Complaining): It's Surprisingly Beautiful In Here" @ Johannes Vogt Gallery In New York
photographs by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
Marc Horowitz Book Signing and Launch @ A McDonalds In Los Angeles
photographs by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
Opening Night Of Marc Horowitz's "Interior, Day (A Door Opens)" at Depart Foundation In Los Angeles
The Depart Foundation in Los Angeles is hosting Marc Horowitz's first ever solo show. The exhibition includes sculptures and paintings that reimagine the old as new. In his own words, "the thesis of the show is conflating personal history with art history." Click here to read our interview with the artist. "Interior, Day (A Door Opens)" will be on view until December 19th at Depart Foundation, 9105 West Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles.
Read Our Convo With The Devilishly Brilliant Marc Horowitz On Being The Weirdest Kid In School, Scatalogical Antics and His First Solo Art Show →
Marc Horowitz is a genius, but he may also be the devil. His work is satanically brilliant. Over the last ten years, Horowitz has performed riotous pranks that have taken on the form of conceptual art and mad marketing schemes that seem at times Bernaysian, but always dementedly creative. He has taken a mule to run errands in San Francisco, he started a semi-nudist colony, he has tried to convince the board of the Golden Gate Bridge to build giant fans to blow away the fog so tourists could take pictures and he spent an entire year of his life trying to have dinner with 30,000 people after he wrote his name and number on a whiteboard in a Crate & Barrel catalogue. And that is only a sliver of his antics. When the stock market crashed, he tried to bail out the banks with his artwork. Today, Horowitz will see the official opening of his first solo show at the Depart Foundation in Los Angeles. Click here to read the full interview.