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Frieze New York

Booth B16

May 2 – 6, 2018

Alfredo Jaar (Kindness) of (Strangers), 2015

Alfredo Jaar
(Kindness) of (Strangers), 2015
Neon, mirrors, and framed print
3 Mirrors: 48 x 144 inches (121.9 x 365.7 cm) each
Edition of 3 + 2 APs

Samuel Levi Jones

Samuel Levi Jones
Submerge, 2018
Deconstructed life preservers on canvas
70 x 32 inches (177.8 x 81.3 cm)

Rosemary Laing Rose of Australia, 2017

Rosemary Laing
Rose of Australia, 2017
Archival pigment print
23.6 x 47.25 inches (60 x 120 cm)
Edition of 8

Ana Mendieta Guanaroca (Esculturas Rupestres), 1981 (Estate print 1994)

Ana Mendieta
Guanaroca (Esculturas Rupestres), 1981 (Estate print 1994)
[First Woman (Rupestrian Sculptures)]
Estate black and white photograph
53.5 x 39.25 inches (135.9 x 99.7 cm)
Edition of 3

Zilia Sánchez Topologia Erotica, 1982

Zilia Sánchez
Topologia Erotica, 1982
Acrylic on stretched canvas
32 x 43 inches (81.3 x 109.2 cm)

Krzysztof Wodiczko Poliscar Variant 2, 1991/2017

Krzysztof Wodiczko
Poliscar Variant 2, 1991/2017
Steel, aluminum, moped wheels, fabric, motor, video components

Press Release

Galerie Lelong & Co. is pleased to present at Frieze New York 2018 with an exhibition centered around the theme of migration. On view will be works by artists Alfredo Jaar, Samuel Levi Jones, Rosemary Laing, Ana Mendieta, Zilia Sánchez, and Krzysztof Wodiczko, who each offer their own critical examinations of migration in both personal and public spheres. The artists’ work is particularly relevant as the current global conversation continues to question borders, identity, and isolationist vs. international policies. In keeping with the theme of the exhibition, a portion of proceeds will be donated to the International Rescue Committee.

Highlights of the booth will include works by Jaar and Wodiczko. This will be a rare opportunity to see a version of Wodiczko’s 1991 vehicle, Poliscar. This work builds a physical space designed to enable the political, public presence of the homeless population as they navigate the constant need to migrate. Equipped to broadcast radio transmissions and convert into sleeping quarters, the work brings a social ill to light by conceptualizing an irrational diagnosis. Jaar’s (Kindness) of (Strangers) (2015) confronts visitors with a large-scale arrangement of neon arrows that track the travel routes of migrants in 2015.

The illuminated pathways across Europe highlight the perpetual flux and extraordinary journey of migrants fleeing war and persecution, where they encounter kindness or lack thereof.

Samuel Levi Jones, whose ongoing practice centers on physically undoing objects associated with systems of power and control, will present a new work inspired by the refugee crisis. Using life preserver vests, Jones questions why creators of crisis neglect to take any responsibility for their aftermath.

Also on view will be Rosemary Laing’s newest photographic series, Buddens, which investigates the impact that migration and the movement of peoples have on the land, both in her native Australia and beyond.  Ana Mendieta’s photographs express the processes of loss and reclamation within her own personal experience as an exile from Cuba to the United States. Zilia Sánchez, also Cuban-born, forms sensual paintings from her nomadic life travelling between Havana, Madrid, New York, and San Juan.

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