Sit on it, wait for it, smell it, touch it, let it wash over you. Lifes, the bravely radical and experimental exhibition at The Hammer Museum, is a choose-your-own-adventure-style viewing experience, an astral projection of interdisciplinarity, that challenges what it means to see, feel, and hear an art exhibition. Writing about Lifes is like explaining a chasing dream to a paranoid schizophrenic, or a Chia Pet to a ficus, or a controlled burn to a fire. Conceived as a durational sequence that unfolds over time, artists and collaborators will respond to a series of commissioned philosophical and theoretical texts that question the rights of agency, the incompatibility between physical bodies, and how the aesthetic experience triggers our senses. Upon entering the exhibition, a set of “aura burners” by Jules Gimbrone and Micah Silver [(Energy Character (Micah) and Energy Character (Jules)] are metallic and metaphysical neuralizers that cleanse your chi. Further inside, Charles Gaines’ Falling Rock (2000) drops a 65-pound piece of granite every ten minutes onto a fresh pane of glass, a clash between the mechanics of time and the abstractness of violence. And ominously wrapping around the galleries is Morag Keil’s Vomit Vortex, a mysterious pneumatic tube system that traverses a canister of fake vomit, a statement on the banality of the nausea of our contemporary existence. Perhaps the most visually obvious work in the space is Nina Beier and Bob Kil’s All Fours, a suite of nine statuesque lions—typically seen at the entryways of buildings—which come to life in the form of a performance where dancers ride the carnivores’ muscular bodies for ten minutes each hour, a response to a series of scripts by Asher Hartman. There is also Cooper Jacoby’s How do I survive? (a mouthful of old firsthand), a bench outfitted with an AI-scripted thermostat—like a Magic 8-Ball, it answers the age-old question: “how do I survive.” The answers change based on fluctuations in heat and humidity, a polygraph for the existentially curious. The bench is also treated with heat-sensitive, liquid crystal pigment paint that registers the thermal impression of the sitter. Another poignant work is Fahim Amir, Elke Auer, and Nima Nourizadeh’s AFGHANISTAN MON AMOUR (ENQUELAB ULTRAMARINE), a video work starring Aubrey Plaza that is dedicated to the people of Afghanistan who have resisted imperialist expansion for centuries. And there is legendary German conceptual artist Rosemarie Trockel’s Parade (1993), where a corps of silkworms parade and dance to a composition of music by Kurt Hoffmann, creating an abstracted pattern that is analogous to the exhibition as a whole and it’s ability to let its individual parts speak for the brilliant and beautiful “curatorial assemblage” that is Lifes. Click here to find out more about the exhibition and find a full map/list of artists and works. photos :Lifes, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, February 16–May 8, 2022. Photo: Joshua White / JWPictures.com.
Embodied Resonance: Read Our Interview Of Pop Sensation Mandy Harris Williams →
Mandy Harris Williams is a renaissance woman working across more media than one could reasonably hyphenate. On social media, in her monthly #brownupyourfeed radio hour on NTS, and with her myriad published essays, she challenges us to consider critical theories on race, gender, sexuality, and above all, privilege. She dares us to meet the most divisive aspects of our charged political culture with a caring ethic that prioritizes those most deprived of our love and compassion. Offline, her DJ sets are like a blast of Naloxone to the automatic nervous system with the power to reanimate the rhythm in even the shyest of wallflowers. After studying the history of the African diaspora at Harvard and receiving a masters of urban education at Loyola Marymount, Harris spent seven years as an educator in low-income communities. From there, she expanded her educational modalities to include a conceptual art practice, musical production informed by years of vocal training, and a lecture format of her own dialectic design. These “edutainment” experiences are one part college seminar, one part church sermon, and one part late-night talk show with a heavy dose of consensual roasting. It’s a Friar’s Club for an intellectual, intersectional, and internet-savvy generation. These performances draw us in with their vibey bass lines and hooks before they throw us under the quietly segregated bus that we’re still struggling to rectify. Mandy and I sat by the fire one lovely winter night in Los Angeles to talk about the contours of fascism, algorithmic injustice, her latest film for the Centre d’Art Contemporain Genève, and her upcoming residency at MoMa PS1.Read more.
Preorder Our Spring Summer 2022 Body Issue Featuring Three Covers →
Click here to purchase.
Goodbye Playboy: Finnish Photographer Iiu Susiraja Talks About Bullying Herself With The Camera →
Iiu Susiraja isn’t simply challenging the modus operandi of how we understand and perceive beauty. The photographer, born near Turku, Finland, is a private performance artist, a secret exhibitionist using her body as a versatile dress form to experiment with everyday props, like ladles, vases, plungers and other flotsam of the mundane. In one image, Susiraja lays in bed with a whole raw chicken resting on a silver platter, creating a sort of quotidian surreality. Ghebaly Gallery presented the artist’s first solo exhibition in Los Angeles, which included her strange autoerotic still lifes and video work. The following interview was published in our Fall Winter 2018 issue, featuring a selection of the artist’s diffident self-portraits. Read more
Watch Abraham Cruzvillegas Recite Tres Sonetos By Concha Urquiza @ Regen Projects In Los Angeles
Over the past decade, Abraham Cruzvillegas has explored the myriad ways to represent his life experiences in physical form. His humorous but incisive takes on identity often employ animal avatars to draw out similarities between humans and other species, particularly primates.
At the opening reception for Cruzvillegas’s third solo presentation at Regen Projects, the artist gave a rhythmic reading of three poems by Mexican poet Concha Urquiza. Standing upon sculptural elements from the show that function as performance platform and gallery seating, Cruzvillegas introduced a new series of drawings and paintings produced on-site during the installation of the exhibition.
In this new series of drawings, the artist’s own photographic likeness serves as the basis for such investigations. Thin textiles printed with images of his face act as canvases that the artist embellishes with designs rendered in bold colors. Employing a similar formal language, the artist presents a group of large-scale calligraphic paintings. Composed flat on the gallery floor, he uses a mop or broom to apply paint, tools chosen as a gentle nod to the workers who employ them, in loose, expressive gestures that serve as records of their performative nature. They translate the rhythms and tones of the Urquiza’s poems with precision and grace.
Abraham Cruzvillegas: Tres Sonetos is on view through April 23 @ Regen Projects 6750 Santa Monica Blvd. Los Angeles
Read Exile On Main Street: An Interview Of Ai Weiwei From Our F/W 2018 Issue →
One week before this interview, Ai Weiwei’s studio in Beijing was bulldozed by Chinese authorities without any warning. Known for his brazen acts of dissent, Ai has not only challenged authoritarianism in China – the revolutionary polymath has also been extremely vocal about the worldwide refugee crisis. In a constant limbo state of exile, Ai has been living and working in Germany since getting his passport back in 2015. This fall, he will be taking over Los Angeles with three major exhibitions that he sees as one singular expression. At UTA Artist Space—which is housed in a 4,000-square-foot former diamond-tooling facility conceived and designed by Ai—the artist will be showing a series of sculptural works made from marble, including his iconic CCTV camera on a plinth, a Damoclean symbol of our post-capitalist era of state-sponsored surveillance. Central to the exhibition will be Humanity, a performative work and social media campaign that encourages visitors to the gallery to read a passage from Ai’s recent book on the refugee crisis—the footage will be compiled in a 30-minute video. On view until March 2019 at Marciano Art Foundation, Life Cycle will also explore the crisis of global displaced persons by drawing on the artist’s personal experiences and Chinese mythology. The show will include his famous work, Sunflower Seeds, which is comprised of over 49 tons of porcelain sunflower seeds carved and crafted by 1,600 artisans in Jingdezhen, in China’s Jiangxi province. Finally, at Jeffrey Deitch’s new Hollywood Gallery, Ai will present his installation of over 6,000 salvaged wooden stools from the Ming and Qing dynasties, which were gathered from villages across Northern China, thus serving as quotidian ciphers of cultural erasure and human existence. Read more.
“Any government, not only the Chinese government, is afraid of true individuality. True individuality is at odds with collective thinking.”
Watch The Premiere Of "Suffer" By Patriarchy With Photographs By Torbjørn Rødland
Los Angeles’s most prolific vamp is at it again with a new music video from her band Patriarchy’s track “Suffer” starring the band’s front-middle-and-back woman Actually Huizenga, AJ English, and Shane McKenzie, with cinematography by Michael Romero-de Leon. “Suffer” is the second single from the upcoming album The Unself, slated for release in June through the label Dero Arcade. You can stream and download the track on Bandcamp. Norwegian photographer Torbjørn Rødland photographed Huizenga and English in dialogue with the video. The result is published here exclusively. See his forthcoming solo exhibition, Pain in the Shell, opening March 26 @ David Kordansky Gallery.
Jeans by HardeMan
Watch Celine Homme's "BOY DOLL" From Their Winter 2022 Presentation
Shot and directed by Hedi Slimane, Celine Homme’s Winter 2022 presentation takes place in one of Paris’s most emblematic venues. L’Olympia, known internationally for staging some of the world’s finest operas, plays, and concerts was established in 1893 in the 9th arrondissement and is the city’s oldest music hall. It was converted into a cinema in the 1920s after the market for theatrical performance experienced a sorrowfully steep decline. However, in 1954, the Olympia hosted a grand venue reopening under the executive direction of French Producer Bruno Coquatrix, and since then has hosted countless legendary concerts from the world’s greatest musical artists, both domestic and abroad.
An original soundtrack titled “FAVORITE THING” was composed by the Swedish band SHITKID
Casting, Styling and Set Design by Hedi Slimane
Hair Styling by Esther Langham
Makeup by Aaron De Mey
Read Our Interview Of Photographer and Filmmaker Lewis Khan → →
British Photographer and filmmaker, Lewis Khan, uses London as one of his many creative resources. The city has great sentimental importance to the native South Londoner, who has lived on Bonnington Square for most of his life. Tucked away behind the traffic of Vauxhall, the square is one of 300+ housing cooperatives in London, owned and run by its tenants. It has a unique and fascinating history that owes much to the squatters who moved in during the 80s as a preventative measure to avoid demolition of the residential buildings. The community set up a wholefoods shop and vegetarian café, which is still there to this day. Read more.
Watch Faith Wilding's Performance Of "Waiting" From Her 1974 Film Womanhouse
To celebrate the 50th anniversary of Faith Wilding’s vanguard art installation and performance space, Womanhouse, Anat Ebgi in partnership with LAND (Los Angleles Nomadic Division), is presenting an eponymous solo exhibition with the artist. Seen here is a performance of “Waiting” from the documentary film Womanhouse produced by Johanna Demetrakas (1974). Below is an excerpt from Hans Ulrich Obrist’s interview with Wilding in our forthcoming BODY issue.
“HANS ULRICH OBRIST: You did two very legendary works at Womanhouse. You did the “Waiting” performance—an almost Beckettian performance about waiting, but very different from Beckett. And then, you also did an installation called “Womb Room.” Can you tell me about these two works? What kind of reaction did they get?
FAITH WILDING: Yeah, well we had a performance group that Judy Chicago led. Because that was our plan from the beginning—that we would do some performances as part of the house. I was at dinner with Arlene [Raven] and Judy one night, and suddenly I was like, I wanna do something about waiting—about what we've waited for, what I've waited for all my life. And so, we started making a list. I still have that list. Out of that, I crafted the “Waiting” monologue, which we worked on as a group; other people tried out how they would perform the piece. But you know, I have given permission to anybody who wants to perform it, and lots of people have performed it all over the world in all different kinds of ways, which I think is really cool…”
Womanhouse is on view through April 16 @ Anat Ebgi 4859 Fountain Avenue, Los Angeles
Watch The Music Video For "Don't Look" By Benny Sings Out Now Via Stonesthrow
“Don’t Look” is produced by Kenny Beats and Cory Henry, from Benny Sings’ latest album, Beat Tape II. Made in collaboration with the historic Bob Baker Marionette Theater, the puppets and props were made entirely from scratch to bring Ryu Okubo's cover art illustration to life. You can find Beat Tape II on vinyl, Apple music, Spotify, and Bandcamp.
Alex Evans - Director and Editor
Kevin Beltz - Lead Puppet Builder, Puppeteer
Thom Fountain - Puppeteer Consultant
Ilana Marks - Puppeteer, Puppet Fabrication
Jamin Orrall - Puppeteer, Puppet Fabrication
Karina De La Cruz - Puppeteer
Julian Small Calvillo - Puppet Fabrication
Paula Higgins - Puppet Fabrication
Caden Healander - Best Run Boy
Anomalous Beauty by Christian Ferretti & Donovan McClenton
face mask MR. S LEATHER, dress DRIES VAN NOTEN, necklace ALEXANDER MCQUEEN,
bracelet ISABEL MARANT, boots vintage DR. MARTENS
photography by Christian Ferretti
styling by Donovan McClenton
talent by Nell Rebowe (Next Models Agency)
dress MOSCHINO, jewelry VALENTINO
full look and jewelry ISABEL MARANT
full look ISABEL MARANT,
jewelry ALEXANDER MCQUEEN
full look and jewelry ALEXANDER MCQUEEN
full look VERSACE, jewelry ALEXANDER MCQUEEN
Read Our Interview Of Rave Review: The Vanguard Label That Is Diversifying The Metaverse With Upcycled Digital Cryptopanties →
In 2017, Beckmans College of Design graduates Josephine Bergqvist and Livia Schück realized that they shared the same interest in sustainable fashion and thus was born their Stockholm-based label, Rave Review. After qualifying as a semifinalist for the LVMH Prize at Paris Fashion Week, receiving the Rising Star Prize by the Swedish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Stockholm Prize by Nöjesguiden, the Bernadotte Art Award, and participating in the Gucci Film Festival, the label has established itself as a tour de force among a new crop of designers perfecting the art of transforming home textiles into desirable garments. Autre spoke with the vanguard design duo about their innovative design process, the role of digital fashion, and promoting sustainability on the blockchain. Read more.
“The Tenth Muse” Group Show @ Case Gallery Celebrates Womanhood and Female Power
CASE presents “The Tenth Muse” curated by Ludovica Capobianco. Featuring Miriam Cahn, Barbara Kruger, Louise Lawler, Nicolette Mishkan, Alexis Myre, Olga Ozerskaya, Cait Porter, Fawn Rogers, Samantha Rosenwald, Sydney Vernon and Valentina Von Klencke, “The Tenth Muse” is a celebration of womanhood, showing the innate female power through delicacy, sensuality, and the intricacies that bestow the strength of femininity. The Tenth Muse refers to the poetess Sappho, the first known female artist and an epitome of how intellectual women have striven to have a voice of their own over the centuries. Despite arduously achieved freedom and independency, women still find themselves confined within social and cultural stereotypes. Women tend to be defined based on dichotomized characters and are expected to walk around wearing multiple hats and high heels. Bringing together a group of strong female artists with various practices and aesthetics, this exhibition aims at showing the beautiful and unique complexity of the female being. The Tenth Muse will be on view until March 27, at CASE Gallery, 154 S Robertson Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90048.
Watch The Premiere Of "Lazy Bones" By Yoshi Sherma Out Now Via BabyRace Records
Yoshi Sherma is an enigma. Born in a tube yet spends most of his time in the Valve. His debut record Live From the Valve is a visceral mix of lumpy, chunky dance tracks, created in his rat infested, flood prone basement. It’s simply a gift whether you like it or not. Live From The Valve is available on cassette and across the streaming universe via Babyrace Records. Eat it up here.
Boozed Things: A Story Of Intoxicating Folly By Enrico Caputo & Valerio Nico
photography Valerio Nico
creative direction and styling by Enrico Caputo
makeup by Greta Giannone
set design by Nour Choukeir
AI by Chiara Kristler
shirt: stylist’s own
sweater: VITELLI
skirts: GIANMARCO MUSSI
shoes: MARSELL
sweater: VITELLI
LEFT
hoodie: GIANMARCO MUSSI
jacket: NEITH NYER
pants: GIOVANNI PORTA
shoes: ÇANAKU
sweater: MONELLA VAGABONDA
skirt: GIANMARCO MUSSI
jacket: GIOVANNI PORTA
top: VITELLI
skirt: GIANMARCO MUSSI
top: MOTOGUO
skirt: VITELLI
pants: GIOVANNI PORTA
shoes: MARSELL
kneeler: STUDIO CROMATO
sweater: VITELLI
skirts: GIANMARCO MUSSI
shoes: MARSELL
top: MOTOGUO
skirt: VITELLI
pants: GIOVANNI PORTA
kneeler: STUDIO CROMATO
hoodie: GIANMARCO MUSSI
top: DANIEL SANSAVINI
pants: GIOVANNI PORTA
shoes: MARSELL
Intersect Art and Design Presents Intersect Palm Springs
Intersect Palm Springs, which ran from February 10-13, 2022, brought together a dynamic mix of more than 50 established and emerging contemporary and modern art and design galleries.
The Fair featured two Curated Spaces:
Good Vibrations, organized by Shana Nys Dambrot (Arts Editor, LA Weekly) and Hunter Drohojowska-Philp (Author, Rebels in Paradise: The Los Angeles Art Scene and the 1960s), offered an expanded view of geometric abstraction as it has evolved in Southern California from the 1950s to include the properties of light and the emotional and transcendent uses of color. Lorser Feitelson, Karl Benjamin, John Miller, Peter Lodato, Jim Isermann, Patrick Wilson, Dani Tull, Yunhee Min, Knowledge Bennett, and Jen Stark are among the artists to be included in this multi-generational show.
ZZyzx Redux, curated by Bernard Leibov (Director, BoxoPROJECTS), and presented with support from The Art Collective Fine Art Services, was inspired by that remote corner of the Mojave Desert which demonstrates the full cycle of modern Southern Californian desert history: from Indigenous trade route; to gold rush era federal fort; to railroad outpost; to a much hyped health resort; and finally an environmental research station. These cycles have spurred optimism, creative development, and new technologies as well as related aspects of dislocation, exploitation, and environmental damage. The exhibition looks at the sustainability of the current land rush in the local area through artworks both inspired by the attractant qualities of the region (light, space, architecture, nature, lifestyle) and those reminding us where history has taken us before. The exhibition includes work by artists Blake Baxter, Diane Best, Ryan Campbell, Gerald Clarke Jr., Sofia Enriquez, Kim Manfredi, Carlos Ramirez, Cara Romero, Aili Schmeltz, Ryan Schneider, Phillip K. Smith III, and Kim Stringfellow.
Tear by Richard Hudson. Presented by Michael Goedhuis at Intersect Palm Springs 2022 Focus on Form: Sculpture Garden
Focus on Form: Sculpture Garden provided a spotlight on sculpture at the entry to the Fair, featuring 18 large-scale works by such artists as Stephanie Bachiero (Peter Blake Gallery), Michael DeJong (New Discretions), Andy Dixon (Over the Influence), Tara de la Garza (bG Gallery), Richard Hudson (Michael Goedhuis), Robert Indiana (Galerie Gmurzynska), Dominique Labauvie (Bleu Acier), Robert Raphael (SITUATIONS), Alex Schweder (Edward Cella Art & Architecture), Jesse Small (Nancy Hoffman Gallery), Julian Voss-Andreae (HOHMANN), and Ben Allanoff.
Works from the Fair will be online at Artsy.net, Intersect’s exclusive online marketplace partner, through March 3, 2022.
Hedi Slimane Shoots Kaia Gerber In The South Of France For The Women's Summer 22 Baie Des Anges Campaign
The campaign was shot in October 2021 by Hedi Slimane in the South of France. Kaia introduces the new Cuir Triomphe Chain Shoulder Bag in all black. This particular style and the full collection will be available from February 25 in store and CELINE.COM.
Shrinking Away To Nothingness: A Review Of Francis Bacon's Man And Beast @ The Royal Academy Of Arts
Francis Bacon, Head VI, 1949
Oil on canvas, 91.4 x 76.2 cm
Arts Council Collection, Southbank Centre, London
© The Estate of Francis Bacon. All rights reserved, DACS/Artimage 2021. Photo: Prudence Cuming Associates Ltd
The Royal Academy presents Francis Bacon: Man and Beast, an impressive showcase of the Northern Irish artist. It reveals his unquestionable skill and craftsmanship as well as the infinitely dark depths of his imagination.
Banished at sixteen from his Catholic family in 1926 for being openly gay, Bacon left Ireland for Berlin, then Paris until landing in London in 1929 to establish himself as an acclaimed artist. Exempt from military service in 1939 because of his asthma, Bacon spent time in London and Hampshire, surrounding himself with artists that included Lucian Freud.
Walking through Man and Beast makes you ponder the shifting tides of post-war England and how it inspired individuals such as Joe Orton, the Kray Twins, Philip Larkin, and Bacon himself. Similar to Edvard Munch's Scream, Bacon’s work prompts an unsettling effect of synesthesia. Perhaps this is no surprise for an artist who strove to render the “brutality of fact.”
Profound and moving, his figurative works focus on the human form; crucifixions, self-portraits, and portraits of friends. Faces appear as if covered with nylon stockings, or cut away to expose the tendon and bone beneath; figures are reduced to a tiny space on the canvas, suggestive of being tortured in a shell, or shrinking away to nothingness.
Many of these images accompany the show's exploration into his unerring fascination with animals. Be it chimpanzees, bulls, dogs, or birds of prey, Bacon felt he could get closer to understanding the true nature of humankind by watching the uninhibited behavior of animals. We see carnality, appetite and decay, raw expression of anxiety and instinct through his anthropomorphic forms. From his Picasso influenced bio-morphs from the ‘30s, male heads isolated in rooms, or geometric structures in the ‘40s to animals and lone figures in the late ‘50s, Man and Beast highlights his existential approach to painting and why he presented his unique human forms the way that he did. Francis Bacon: Man and Beast is on view through April 17 @ The Royal Academy of Arts. Text by Lara Monro
Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright: A Review Of Luncheon On The Grass At Jeffrey Deitch Gallery
Who said, “Painting is dead?” You’d be surprised to learn that this line was uttered by French painter Paul Delaroche in 1840 after seeing the first photographic image. Twenty-three years later, Édouard Manet painted his masterwork, Le Déjeuner sur l’herbe (1863), or Luncheon on the Grass, and modernism was born. Painting wasn’t dead, it was finally in dialogue with the zeitgeist. With Luncheon, Manet was deliberately trying to ruffle the feathers of the traditionally neoclassical establishment. Painted on a large canvas, a scale usually reserved for gods, mythic figures, and biblical representations, Luncheon was rendered with harsh, sometimes visible brushstrokes and a nearly hallucinatory depth of field. The background bather looks primordially copy and pasted, and the starkly illuminated female nude in the foreground, next to two formally dressed men, ambiguously gazes at the viewer with an uncertain contract of consent. Like Bob Dylan’s songbook, Luncheon has been covered and remixed ad infinitum, almost from the onset of the painting’s public unveiling. And now, three centuries after Manet shocked French society, more than thirty of today’s leading painters reinterpret this modernist asteroid in oil pigments at “Luncheon on the Grass— Contemporary Responses to Édouard Manet's Le Déjeuner sur l’herbe” at Jeffrey Deitch Gallery. The group exhibition is an electric vision of a new zeitgeist, a new cosmological panoply of race, gender, class and sexuality. Many of the paintings, like Ariana Papademetropoulos’ It Becomes Blurry In The Moment (2022), are so new they are virtually wet and hang with a particular urgent immediacy, like a song coming out of the speaker for the first time. Caitlin Cherry’s Mixed Clout Relationships—Feast of the Ass (2022), is a pornographic dreamscape of famous, full-frontal rappers and clout chasers depicted in a dark fragmentation of orgiastic bodies, like a fractured plasma screen television. Other recent paintings include 57-year-old Chinese painter Liu Xiaodong's Newcomers in the Village - Response to Manet (2021), which was painted on location in Changchun in Northern China and depicts a group of friends and collaborators. Newcomers, and also a work by rising artist, Dominique Fung, called Sans Les Mains (2022), offers a fresh and rare depiction of AAPI visibility along the white hegemonic power structures of modernism. There is also Vaughn Spann’s incredible Juneteenth on the grass—after lunch (2022), which features the artist’s double-headed figures with the bather almost lost in the large expanse of a bay as fireworks explode overhead. The oldest work in the show is by the late, French New Realist, Alain Jacquet—a silkscreen on canvas entitled Le dejeuner sur l’herbe (1964)—and depicts our nude muse in the foreground, our two fully-dressed men, and our bather in the background, but in the context of a typically midcentury constellation of saturated Ben Day dots and a crystalline blue pool that harkens Cannes or some other Provençal locale on a sizzling summer day. Then there is Somaya Critchlow’s dynamic and evocative Mr. Peanut!—The Picnic (2020-2021), a delicately small painting that is a grenade packed with the ammonium nitrate and TNT of racial undertones. Mr. Peanut, whose full name is the rather colonial sounding Bartholomew Richard Fitzgerald-Smythe and was created in the image of the slave owning plantation masters of the Virginian and North Carolina peanut farms, is pictured with his white gloves, monocle, and top hat cupping the breast and kissing a Black woman. But perhaps the most direct response to Manet’s modernist masterpiece comes from Iranian-born painter Tala Madani with her 15x12 inch oil on linen, entitled Pickled (2022), which features a turd swimming in a jar that is half filled (or is it half empty?) with urine—our bather is mysterious, fecal and anonymous—there is no gender, no race—thousands of years of art history boiled down to a single piece of shit in a mason jar. Luncheon on the Grass will be on view until May 7, 2022 at Jeffrey Deitch Gallery. text by Oliver Kupper