Hollis Taggart Contemporary to Present Group Show of Portraiture

  • NEW YORK, New York
  • /
  • February 26, 2023

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Paul Anagnostopoulos Forever Haunted By Our Time, 2022 Acrylic and oil on wood panel 36 in. (91.4 cm) diameter Photography by Emile Askey

Reminisce, Featuring Painting and Sculpture by Five Contemporary Artists,

Will be on view at Hollis Taggart March 23 – May 6, 2023

Opening Reception Thursday, March 23, from 5-8PM

February 27, 2023 – Hollis Taggart Contemporary is pleased to announce Reminisce, a group show featuring new and recent work by Paul Anagnostopoulos, Jonni Cheatwood, Katie Hector, Justine Otto, and Adrienne Elise Tarver. Exploring the depth and breadth of contemporary portraiture, the exhibition celebrates the myriad ways identity can be expressed and portrayed through both painting and sculpture. Reminisce is the first exhibition in Hollis Taggart’s recently expanded flagship at 521 West 26th Street curated by Paul Efstathiou, the gallery’s Director of Contemporary Art, since the gallery consolidated its main Chelsea and satellite Southport, CT, locations. The exhibition will be on view on the second floor of the gallery from March 23 through May 6, 2023, with an opening reception on Thursday, March 23, from 5-8PM.

While the artists included in Reminisce come from very different backgrounds, they are united by their shared desire to push the bounds of portraiture, one of the oldest and most common genres of art. Featuring both portraits of specific people as well as of anonymous individuals, the faces and figures in Reminisce at times pose and directly confront the viewer, and at others look away or are blurred, withholding direct eye contact. There are figures pictured in domestic spaces and in elaborate landscapes, as well as some who have become one with their surroundings. Taken together, Reminisce offers a view into the diversity of approaches to portraiture taken by young artists today. Details on each artist’s work follows below.

“The five artists in Reminisce represent the cutting edge of contemporary portraiture, and I am so excited to be returning to New York City with a show of their most recent work,” said Efstathiou. “Following more than two successful years in Southport, CT, I am looking forward to returning to Manhattan to curate Hollis Taggart’s contemporary division and to present it alongside the gallery’s stellar modern and more historic programming. Looking back at one of the oldest artistic genres through a contemporary lens, Reminisce is the perfect show to celebrate the consolidation of the gallery’s divisions into one flagship space.”

Working in acrylic and oil painting, the Greek-American artist Paul Anagnostopoulos (b. 1991 in Merrick, NY; based in New York, NY) reexamines and reclaims Greco-Roman imagery to celebrate queer intimacy and storytelling in the contemporary moment. His paintings combine figures from ancient art, queer erotica, and life drawing in fantastical landscapes that transcend time. Reminisce will feature new and recent paintings by Anagnostopoulos as well as new terra cotta vases by the artist, in which he updates the traditional form with vibrant scenes of gay romance and melancholy.

 

Jonni Cheatwood (b. 1986 in Thousand Oaks, CA; based in Los Angeles, CA) is a self-taught painter who mixes oil, oil sticks, acrylics, and textiles to create characters that are at once unrecognizable and universally relatable. Cheatwood’s painted scenes incorporate found textiles, resulting in unexpected textures and shapes that reference both interior and exterior spaces. Reminisce will feature Cheatwood’s most recent works, including Mama T’s Wall O’Crosses (2023), a painting reflecting the complex web of relationships between people and nature that encourages viewers to contemplate their own place within this interconnected system.

 

The works of Katie Hector (b. 1992 Lawrenceville, NJ; based in Los Angeles, CA) are composite portraits in which she layers bleach and dye, building up and erasing her materials to create blurred figures that have a glowing and almost ghostlike effect. Referring to her portraits as “allegories for longing, intimacy, and grief in response to isolation and dissociation,” the three works in Reminisce were all made this year, and reflect upon contemporary feelings of isolation and dissociation within our collective image-dominant culture.

 

The paintings of Justine Otto (b. 1974 in Zabrze, Poland; based in Hamburg, Germany) straddle abstraction and figuration, with hints of faces and figures emerging from abstract shapes and forms. Reminisce will feature both individual and group portraits by the artist, demonstrating her ability to apply her unique visual language to detailed studies of individuals as well as elaborate populated scenes. Reminisce will include new and recent paintings by the artist. Otto has been represented by the gallery since summer 2022.

 

Returning to Hollis Taggart for the first time following the successful two-person exhibition History Reclaimed in early 2020, Adrienne Elise Tarver (b. 1985 in NJ; based in Brooklyn, NY) will present recent works in which she continues to engage with the invisibility and complexity of Black female identity. Reminisce includes two large-scale collage works in which the artist uses water and the tropics as a starting point to reflect on the mythology of origin stories and histories of displacement of the Black diaspora.

 

About Hollis Taggart
Founded in 1979, Hollis Taggart presents significant works of American art, showcasing the trajectory of American art movements from the Hudson River School to American Modernism and the Post-War and Contemporary eras. Its program is characterized by a deep commitment to scholarship and bringing to the fore the work of under-recognized artists. The gallery has sponsored several catalogue raisonné projects, most recently for the American Surrealist artist Kay Sage, and has been instrumental in advancing knowledge of such artists as Alfred Maurer, Arthur B. Carles, and more recently, Theodoros Stamos, Marjorie Strider, and Michael (Corinne) West. In the summer of 2019, the gallery announced the formal expansion of its primary market business and focus on the presentation of contemporary work. It continues to expand its roster of contemporary artists, focusing on emerging and mid-career talents. With more than 40 years of experience, Hollis Taggart is widely recognized by collectors and curators for its leadership, expertise, and openness, on matters of art history, market trends and opportunities.

Contact:
Hollis Taggart Galleries

2126284000
info@hollistaggart.com

Hollis Taggart
521 W. 26th Street
Fl. 1
New York, New York
ginx@hollistaggart.com
2126284000
About Hollis Taggart

Hollis Taggart—formerly known as Hollis Taggart Galleries—was founded in 1979, with a mission to present museum-quality works of art, maintain a program motivated by scholarship, and offer personalized support in all aspects of art collecting. For nearly 40 years, the gallery has offered significant works of American art—showcasing the trajectory of American art movements from the Hudson River School to American Modernism and Post-War and Contemporary eras—and curated countless critically acclaimed shows in collaboration with the foremost leaders in the field. Hollis Taggart has also worked with more than thirty museums and institutions to produce scholarly catalogues. In addition, Hollis Taggart has sponsored three catalogue raisonné projects. The first was the two-volume catalogue raisonné of Pennsylvania Impressionist Daniel Garber, which was published in 2006 and includes over 1,500 entries. In 2000, the gallery launched the Frederick Carl Frieseke catalogue raisonné, which is currently being compiled by the artist’s grandson. Most recently, the gallery has undertaken the compilation of the catalogue raisonné of Surrealist artist Kay Sage, in partnership with Mark Kelman and Sage scholar Stephen Robeson Miller. In the summer of 2015, Hollis Taggart opened its first space in Chelsea, moving from the Upper East Side where it had been operating since its inception. In fall 2018, Hollis Taggart will move to the street-level space at 521 W. 26th Street and open a private viewing and storage annex across the street, fully consolidating its operations in Chelsea. Together, the spaces provide Hollis Taggart with nearly 4,000-square-feet to host exhibitions and engage clients with select works of art in its inventory, while improving ease of access between its locations. Today, the gallery’s program has grown to encompass contemporary practitioners, as a vital component to art historical discourse. It also continues to show significant works of historic American art, with a particular focus on the Post-War era. These two intersecting threads offer Hollis Taggart’s audiences and clients a dynamic and diverse set of offerings. As the gallery looks to the future, fostering scholarship and dialogue on American art through time remains core to its work with artists, scholars, and curators. In addition to its public program, the gallery also advises private collectors, corporations, and museums on acquisitions and assists its clients in the development of their personal collections. Hollis Taggart welcomes all inquiries from collectors who may wish to sell or consign works of art or estates. The gallery can also provide appraisal services.


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