Friday, January 17, 2025

Artist of the Day, January 17, 2025: Yves Scherer, a Swiss emerging artist, sculptor, installation artist. (#2194)

Yves Scherer (1987) is a Swiss emerging artist that now lives and works in New York. His work explores the concept of identity in sculptures, lenticular prints, and installations that merge autobiographies, collective memories, and fan fictions, thus blurring the line between reality and virtuality.

Post-internet artist Yves Scherer bring themes from digital culture to three dimensions, combining household materials with online imagery and interfaces. Focusing on the porous boundaries between media, virtual space, and everyday life, his series “Closer” examines the fictional realities of celebrity, digitally reconstructing the nude figure of actress Emma Watson to cyborg-like effects. Interested in surfaces and screens, Scherer often uses tatami mats as part of his works—a reference to the artist’s own living habits and typical of this form of contemporary Arte Povera.

Scherer is fascinated by the boundaries that separate and merge the public and private spheres of human interactions. Along with concepts such as reality, virtuality, fan fiction, alterity, and appropriation, the public and the personal are reiterative themes in Yves’s oeuvre. For example, in some of his newest sculptures, made of painted aluminum, the artist transforms private moments, presenting them as a public sculpted reality. Meanwhile, as part of his ongoing lenticular series, Yves creates alternative realities for celebrity personalities who belong to the public sphere of Hollywood’s star system, which he integrates into his personal narrative. By playing with these themes and shifting from one to the other, Yves evidences the porosities between both spheres, which ultimately influence each other: “I like to play with that in a way: I mix images that I took on a family vacation with a picture that Mario Sorrenti took of Kate Moss when they were a romantic couple many years ago.”

Scherer holds an MA in Sculpture from the Royal College of Art London. He has received numerous awards including the Cahier d‘ Artistes, Pro Helvetia in 2016 and the Swiss Art Award at Art Basel in 2015 as well as the Förderpreis Bildende Kunst des Kanton Solothurn. In 2016, Scherer was listed on Forbes 30 under 30 “Art & Design.”

© 2025. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Yves Scherer or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only

Yves Scherer
Rainy Day in New York, 2023
Little Mermaid, 2023
 Day and Night, 2023
Sunshine, 2023
Untitled (Camila), 2022
 Exhibition "Yves Scherer- Candids", 2022  Installation view
 Laetitia, 2021
Family Time, 2021
 Candids, 2020
 Boy 3, 2019
 Boy 2, 2019
Vincent, 2018
Untitled (Primal 2), 2018
 Legolas, 2018
Single
Crevette Girl
Couples (Bronze)
Installation view
Honeymoon
Aluminium Dibond Prada Bag, T-Shirt, Pants, and Acrylic

Thursday, January 16, 2025

Artist of the Day, January 16, 2025: Sam Gilliam, an American painter, sculptor, and arts educator. (#2193)

 Sam Gilliam (1933 – 2022) was an American abstract painter, sculptor, and arts educator. Born in Mississippi, and raised in Kentucky, Gilliam spent his entire adult life in Washington, D.C., eventually being described as the "dean" of the city's arts community. Originally associated with the Washington Color School, a group of Washington-area artists that developed a form of abstract art from color field painting in the 1950s and 1960s, Gilliam moved beyond the group's core aesthetics of flat fields of color in the mid-60s by introducing both process and sculptural elements to his paintings. 

Following early experiments in color and form, Gilliam became best known for his Drape paintings, first developed in the late 60s and widely exhibited across the United States and internationally over the following decade. These works comprise unstretched paint-stained canvases or industrial fabric without stretcher bars that he suspended, draped, or arranged on the ground in galleries and outdoor spaces. Gilliam has been recognized as the first artist to have "freed the canvas" from the stretcher in this specific way, putting his paintings in conversation with the architecture of their settings. In contemporary art, this contributed to collapsing the space between painting and sculpture and influenced the development of installation art. While this became his signature style in the eyes of some critics and curators, Gilliam mostly moved on from his Drape paintings after the early 1980s, primarily returning to the form for several commissions and a series of late-career pieces, usually created with new techniques or methods that he was exploring in his other work.

He produced art in a range of styles and materials, exploring the boundaries between painting, sculpture, and printmaking. Other well-known series of works include his early Slice paintings begun in the mid-1960s, often displayed with custom beveled stretcher bars that make the paintings protrude from the wall; his Black Paintings from the late 1970s, which Gilliam created with thick layers of black impasto over collaged forms; and a series of monumental painted metal sculptures, developed beginning in the 1980s and 1990s for several public commissions.

After early critical success, including in 1972 becoming one of the first African American artists to represent the United States in an exhibition at the Venice Biennale, Gilliam's career saw a period of perceived decline in attention from the art world in the 1980s and 1990s, although he continued to widely exhibit his work and completed numerous large-scale public and private commissions. Starting in the mid-2000s, his work began to see renewed national and international attention, and his contributions to contemporary art were reexamined and reevaluated in several publications and exhibitions. His work has since been described as lyrical abstraction. Late-career milestones included creating a work for permanent display in the lobby of the then-newly opened National Museum of African American History and Culture in 2016, and exhibiting for a second time at the Venice Biennale in 2017

© 2025. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Sam Gilliam or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only

 Sam Gilliam
 Sam's studio

The Music of Color, 1967–73
Double Merge, 1968 detail
Double Merge, 1968
Double Merge, 1968 detail
Double Merge, 1968-2019
10/27/69, 1969
Carousel, 1969
Light Depth, 1969
 Swing, 1969
Mazda, 1970
 Street, 1970
Lady Day II, 1971
Rondo, 1971
American Pavilion of the  36th VENICE BIENNALE
USA- XXXVI international Biennial Exhibition of Art, 1972
Venice
Fog In The Hollow, 1974
 "Sam Gilliam: 1967–73", 1974  Installation view
Seahorse, 1975
The Arc Maker 1 & 2, 1981
 Ibis, 1987
Time Before History, 1994
Manet II, 1999
Tapestry, 2000
Recitals, 2009
Close to Trees, 2011
Wall Cascade with mirror, 2011
Sac 1, 2012
Hommage to the square, 2016-17
Untitled, 2018
Untitled, 2018
 Excited, 2021