GARY LANG - Ace Gallery
Transcription
GARY LANG - Ace Gallery
GARY LANG OUT STANDING TIME Portrait of Gary Lang by Donna Granata Focus on the Masters Portrait Series, 2008 GARY LANG OUT STANDING TIME Essay by David Pagel Introduction by Stanley I Grand August 15–October 12, 2008 Rosemary Berkel and Harry L. Crisp II Museum Cape Girardeau, Missouri Introduction Stanley I Grand “O ut Standing Time” is the third Gary Lang solo exhibition with which I’ve been associated. The first, an installation at the Madison [Wisconsin] Art Center, now the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art, took place in 1987. In 1997 I organized a mid-career retrospective at the Sordoni Art Gallery, Wilkes University. It therefore seems fitting that my final exhibition at the Rosemary Berkel and Harry L. Crisp II Museum, Southeast Missouri State University, is a Gary Lang exhibition. Lang’s Sordoni retrospective surveyed works from 1975-1997, from Barcelona Painting (1975), a Pop-infused, painted collage completed while on a Fulbright/Hayes fellowship he received after earning his M.F.A. at Yale, to his Los Angeles Weapons (1980), to Plaid Painting (1989), which was followed by Mirror and Dream Twister Paintings in the 1990s along with the increasing monumental tondi such as Grand Circle (1997) with a diameter of 113 inches. By this time Lang had established his reputation as an abstract painter and superb colorist creating primarily all-over compositions and working in series. Lang created his rectangular and square paintings by laying down a single, straight line of color from the top of the canvas to the bottom. He then rotated the canvas 90 degrees and painted the second line from top to bottom. He continued thusly, rotating the canvas after each stroke until he’d finished and only a single line remained uncrossed. Dividing Time, Lang’s 13-minute video, which is part of this exhibition, is a digital version of this same methodology. In these paintings, Lang experimented with the qualities of his lines. Initially, he’d tape the areas to be painted, which produced a hard-edged line with a hint of violence—the result of tearing away the tape. Later he eschewed this mechanical process in preference for a hand-drawn line full of subtle variations, imperfections, and humanity. The Circle Paintings, on the other hand, consisted of concentric circles that either radiated outward from the center like expanding gyres or else sucked the viewer into the heart of a tornado. All pulsated, like a heart. In 1998 Lang had been living in New York City since 1985, he was forty-eight, married to artist Ruth Pastine, and the father of an infant son. He was thinking about going home to southern California, and he painted Native. Lang worked on Native—a large painting which David Pagel brilliantly analyzes in his contribution to this catalogue—for eight months during which time he also completed three small paintings—two Still from Dividing Time: Profiles 1, 2008 Courtesy Quint Contemporary Art of which—Enchanced 3 (Niagra) and Eye Lights—are also in this exhibition. Native was to be a fertile field that Lang cultivated for many years. For example, works such as Diamond Painting 12, which is illustrated in the catalogue but was not available for inclusion in the exhibition, explore certain themes inherent in Native. Specifically, we see the new emphasis on verticality combined with the repetition of regular geometric elements. These are clearly departures from the all-over Mirror compositions. Thus Native and the other 1998 paintings simultaneously represent directions taken and not taken. The formal geometric qualities were explored in the series of Diamond Paintings, but other aspects were not investigated until a decade later when, finally settled in his Ojai, California studio, he was able to pick up the threads first explored in Native. Lang has always been a methodical painter, who develops his ideas through multiples. In this exhibition, he is both more confident and less calculating. He knows that the works in “Out Standing Time” are either a harbinger or a dead end. Time will tell. “Out Standing Time” is Lang’s attempt, as he says, to “possess what you cannot possess.” Like water, which is a powerful subtheme in Lang’s recent paintings (Smoking Waters, River Dreams, River Painting Series: Agua Particular), time is infinitely protean and powerful. In these works Lang’s jazz sensibility is at play as he rifts between the lyricism of Smoking Waters and the tighter structure of Agua Particular. For Gary Lang painting is a way to sidestep mortality, step into infinity, and out stand time. 6 This exhibition is dedicated to the memory of Placide and George Schriever, late of New York City, and long-time supporters of the museum at Southeast Missouri State University. In addition to generous gifts of works of art made during their lifetimes, they bequeathed a small endowment that helps underwrite an annual exhibition. Several gallerists have assisted with this exhibition. Mark Quint and Ben Strauss-Malcolm, of Quint Contemporary Art, La Jolla, California, provided the video Dividing Time: Profiles 1. Edward Cella Art + Architecture, Santa Barbara, provided the Hybrid Line Variations. Thanks to Douglas Chrismas and Jennifer Kellen, ACE Gallery, Los Angeles. Kate Schaefer, Concord Printing Services, Cape Girardeau, designed the catalogue. Barry Thornton, Concord Printing Services, oversaw the production. I have had the pleasure of working with Kate and Barry on all the catalogues produced at the museum since 2000 and personally thank them for their commitment to excellence. Master printer Bob Stagner printed the catalogue on a Heidelberg press. Bill Dewey of Santa Barbara photographed the works in the catalogue. Donna Granata provided the portrait of Gary Lang. We owe special thanks to Professor David Pagel for his insightful essay. The exhibition would not have been possible without the wholehearted support and efforts of the Crisp Museum Staff: James Phillips, Curator of Collections; Ellen Hahs, Curator of Education; Peggy Haney, Museum Specialist; Gary Tyler, Outreach Specialist; and Krystal Floyd, Student Intern. In addition the Crisp appreciates the ongoing support of: Dr. Kenneth Dobbins, Southeast Missouri State University President; Dr. Jane Stephens, Provost; Dr. Frank Barrios, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts; Dr. Gary L. Miller, Director of the Holland School of Visual and Performing Arts; and Professor Patricia Reagan, Chair Art Department. We also appreciate Professor Ronald Clayton’s assistance in re-stretching Native. The College of Liberal Arts and the Art Department provided support for me to visit Gary Lang and David Pagel in California. The Missouri Arts Council, a state agency, provided financial assistance for this project. Gary wishes to thank Tom Rosenberg, Executive Producer, Lakeshore Entertainment, for his longstanding, unwavering support and encouragement, and to acknowledge Ruth Pastine for her constant counsel. I thank Gary, Ruth Pastine, a wonderful artist in her own right, and their children Chance and Sage for the hospitality extended to me when I visited their home in Ojai. As I noted earlier, I have followed— and from time to time played a small part in—Gary Lang’s career for over twenty years. My respect for him has only grown. 7 Connoisseur of Happenstance David Pagel M ore than a decade separates the earliest painting in this exhibition from the dozen or so others in it. In 1998, Gary Lang painted Native, a nearly tenfoot-square canvas made up of gently undulating strands of asymmetrical, sharply demarcated diamonds and triangles in a rainbow of colors that samples the spectrum and shifts, in chromatic intensity, from blazing lemon yellows and dazzling olive-greens to cool ocean blues and supersaturated burgundies while leaving plenty of room for an exquisite variety of delicate dove grays, faded sunsetsky pinks, icy whites, and warm midnight blacks, among a seemingly endless list of oddly sophisticated tertiary tints. In a sense, Lang’s painting is simple. Comprised of only four elements—color, shape, line, and size—it sticks to the basics of painting and forgoes depiction, reference, illusion, and narrative to create the possibility that viewers see it for what it is: an occasion for an engaging experience of something unlike anything else out there yet connected to the swirling stew of particles, atoms, and molecules that make up absolutely everything out there—from the tiniest micro-organisms that thrive in a drop of water to the inconceivable vastness of deep space, in which entire planets, solar systems, and galaxies are dwarfed by the infinity of the cosmos. In this sense, Native is anything but simple. It’s among the most perceptually nuanced canvases of its time, an age filled, on the one hand, with images inspired by the easy-to-read techniques of graphic design, and, on the other, by the sentimentality of excessively personalized story-telling, often in the slapdash style of homemade cartoons and grungy comics. Lang’s combination of pedestrian, everyday simplicity and mind-blowing complexity is the heart and soul of Native, as well as the animating force that pulses through the paintings he made ten years later, all of which amplify the idiosyncratic dynamics of Native, heightening and intensifying its sweet, swaying rhythms and jaunty, eye-popping zigzags in their own maverick fashion. Together, Lang’s 1998 painting and its 2008 offshoots take eccentricity from its place on the fringe of social conventions and locate it in the center of things—where life is lived fully and furiously, with no looking back and with little regard for the rules. A large part of Native’s magic resides in the way that Lang has managed to transform the most basic geometric shapes and most rudimentary painterly activities—putting down one color after another, in shapes that require no more manual dexterity or technical expertise than is commonly found in the hands of a six-year-old—into a deliciously orchestrated instance of being alive to the moment: of being acutely aware of one’s surroundings, stimulated by the visible resplendence of their myriad details, and, simply put, thrilled by the inexplicable richness and vividness and unpredictability of sensory experiences so simple we ordinarily overlook them in our haste to make it through the day by getting the job done with as little fuss as possible. The bold, initially rambunctious painting slows down the rapid-fire pace of modern life and repays every minute you spend with it, discovering its sensuous rhythms and offbeat pulse. Native is a generous painting and it immediately goes to work on the perceptual machinery of viewers by never letting your eyes rest, for long, anywhere on its surface. Even eyes accustomed to the whiplash immediacy of computers and the instantaneous appeal of the Internet are drawn, like moths to flames, to Lang’s wall-size painting. It neither presumes that viewers must wait patiently for art to reward them, nor reveals all its secrets in a splitsecond, leaving no reason for second and third looks, much less the slowly unfolding pleasures of sustained scrutiny. Instead, Native gets your attention quickly and then does something interesting with it. It’s a painting that’s made to be lived with, to be seen in as many moods as you bring to it, over and over again. No real focal points organize its surface into anything like a typical pictorial composition, with some areas or points of interest given greater priority than others. Likewise, no color or shape is any more—or less—important than any other. Nearly all of the diamonds and triangles that link up vertically across the expanse of the canvas are related to the ones immediately above and below them coloristically, by gradual shifts in tint, like the ones that make up color wheels, hardware store paint-chip arrays, and the light-to-dark gradients that form the grounds of many of Ed Ruscha’s enigmatic Pop paintings. Gerhard Richter’s color-chart paintings also come to mind, especially when one recalls that the German artist never intended them to celebrate the impersonal arbitrariness of modern life but sought, in the potential endlessness of their grids, a harmonious expansiveness, a sort of unconventional composure and wholeness, 10 replete with its own look and logic. Native takes this intuitive strand that runs through Richter’s hard-edge, geometric paintings and runs with it, multiplying it exponentially and weaving it into dynamic fields whose meandering, push-pull opticality recalls beautifully woven textiles, suffused with the glowing, desert-meetsthe-sea Mediterranean light of Southern California. If Navajo blanket-makers wove the flowing, wind-blown robes depicted in many Baroque paintings, these fabrics might convey the same feel that the loosely interlocked planes and spaces in Native do, which also combine the drifting sensuality of underwater kelp beds with the crisp contours of stained glass windows, especially when natural light pours through their pieced-together planes and becomes luscious, three-dimensional color. The all-over, every-part-counts equality of Lang’s painting bespeaks an ethos of democratic evenhandedness. This unprivileged sense of come-one, come-all accessibility governs its relationship with viewers, who are never presumed to be scholars or experts but simply curious folks with a taste for visual adventures and a propensity for see-for-yourself experiences. That’s the bedrock of philosophical skepticism—of not taking anything on faith or authority but of measuring it against one’s self, according to how it works in the here and now, according to one’s own needs and desires. It’s also profoundly American, in the sense that pedigrees and credentials matter less than pragmatic, matter-of-fact results, always well-served by a solid work ethic—no short cuts or slickness or glibness or trickery. At the same time, Native embodies an ethos of winging it—of working without an exact plan, of improvising, taking chances, making mistakes, making changes, and going with the flow—in short, in adapting to what is already on the canvas by subtly (or not so subtly) adjusting the temperature and density of the colors and the shapes and the sizes of the areas they cover. Richard Diebenkorn made great paintings by recording the drama of these adaptations, recalibrations, and re-alignments. So did Henri Matisse, with more ease and grace. In contrast, Lang has made a great painting by downplaying the significance of these compositional decisions, covering over, almost completely, colors and shapes with others that create more effective mixes of dissonance and harmony. But he is not a fussy painter or finish fetishist. If you look closely you can see painted-out passages, previous colors, and ghostly traces of earlier versions. Even so, the overall thrust of the painting is not to present viewers with a history of its making—a palimpsest of rough drafts or abandoned prototypes, of missteps and fixes. The point is to leave viewers with a fully resolved painting, a finished work in which the artist’s decisiveness and confidence are embodied. This makes for a riveting object jam packed with fresh discoveries that let you see the world with fresh eyes. Lang’s painting is more concerned to turn the present toward the future than to turn it back toward the past, where memory and melancholia reign. That is part of its dyed-in-the-wool, deeply American optimism, its sense of possibility and openness and excitement, not to mention its conviction that every single instant has the potential to be unique, and, equally important, not explained by the moments that led up to it, but unpredictable, mysterious, free. The irregular, handmade triangles and diamonds in Lang’s painting create an all-over saw-tooth or zigzag pattern that is not really a pattern because no part of its surface repeats any other. Every square inch of the canvas’s vibrant, dynamically animated surface is different from every other square inch—of which, incidentally, there are 12,769. The look, feel, and impact of every bit of Native are as unique as a snowflake and as singular as a fingerprint. And, like those ordinary, organic forms, the smallest sections of Lang’s painting belong together not because they exactly match one another—like the mass-produced objects and standardized items that make up so much of the modern world—but because they stand apart from one another yet share sufficient similarities—in size, shape, and rhythm—to be grasped as parts of a larger whole, which is a whole lot greater than the sum of its parts. Native is energized by a terrifically reciprocal relationship between standalone uniqueness and go-with-the-flow teamwork, of simultaneously standing out—as an individual—and fitting in—as a member of a larger group. As a painting, it is a silent yet eloquent argument for multiple perspectives and an implicit critique of the commonly held belief that individuals and groups are intrinsically opposed. Lang painted Native not long after his son Chance was born. His daughter, Sage, followed two years later. In 2001, Lang moved with his wife, Ruth Pastine, from New York City to the countryside just outside Ojai, California, approximately 70 miles north of Los Angeles. Moving from motel to apartment, searching for the right house, he painted when he could, eventually in a makeshift studio that now houses a ping-pong table and serves as storage for outdoor toys and cardboard boxes filled with the stuff left over from previous lives. From 2004 to 2006, while Lang designed and built a freestanding studio, he did not paint on canvas. As soon as his studio was finished, he set to work, without a clear plan but with the kid-in-a-candy-shop excitement 11 of someone who had been away from the work he loves for too long. The first five paintings he made, Smoking Waters 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 do not pick up right where Native left off so much as they take its best effects and run with them, solidifying and amplifying the 1998 painting’s funky rhythms by compressing them into body-sized spaces. Each of the new canvases measures approximately 82 × 48 inches, about the size of a small doorway. In a sense, Lang’s Smoking Waters paintings are to Native what Native is to Richter’s color-chart paintings: complex, increasingly sophisticated elaborations on the earlier works’ intuitive attempts to make each of the elements of a painting simultaneously stand on its own and cohere into a larger, harmonious whole. Lang’s Smoking Waters paintings transform Native’s overall saw-tooth structure (of crisp, diagonal lines formed by abutted diamonds and triangles) into an even more irregular, unpredictable, and kinky configuration—a sequence, but not, emphatically, a series—of meandering paths alternating with slightly wider spaces, all vertically oriented. Where Native consists of more than a thousand little jagged shapes that feel fractured or faceted yet still interlock to form a consistent, if piecemeal, patchwork, crazy-quilt-style plane (and leave color alone to open the impression of shallow space), Lang’s Smoking Waters paintings consist of 40-50 vertical elements. Color and shape work in concert to open up larger and deeper spaces. If the wide and narrow bands of subtle gradients of shifting colors that stutter and stagger and stammer across the surfaces of Lang’s sizzling paintings were straighter, like Tim Bavington’s air-brushed canvases, 12 or consistently curved, like Sol LeWitt’s hand-painted panels that evoke sinuous sound waves, it would make sense to call his works stripe paintings. But Lang’s compositions are too idiosyncratic, out-of-step, and off-kilter to be described so conventionally. It’s also hard to say which elements of his paintings are lines and which are spaces. In other words, the curiously complex configurations that make up the paintings’ surfaces make it clear that the difference between a wide line and a narrow space is neither consistent nor defensible—and that one can be the other, depending upon a viewer’s perspective. Traditionally speaking, lines are contours that demarcate shapes. In contrast, Lang’s lines do not describe the edges of shapes, like the lines on a map, so much as they link two disparate spaces—moving through distinct fields or expanses by holding them together. They are not, properly speaking, lines, but very narrow spaces. Like the spaces they join, they change color—gradually, subtly, delicately. They also change direction—abruptly, unpredictably, and so often that they seem to be animated by their own internal energy. They also require that a viewer’s eye has to travel three or four times the distance a more direct path from edge to edge of the canvas would take. And the wider areas of loosely brushed color they abut sometimes appear to be solid, like moss-covered walls, sunfaded stucco, or the hulls of ships. At other times they seem to be craggy cracks in the picture-plane, broken openings onto shallow pools of cool water, or sudden glimpses of azure skies, or the darkness of the abyss, or the sublime infinity of deep space. In every case, the uncertainty of knowing what you’re looking at multiplies before Lang’s Smoking Waters paintings, which replace the vestiges of geometric regularity that forms the skeletal structure of Native with a compressed expanse of quirky particularities, seat-of-the-pants reversals, adamant idiosyncrasy, and unpredictability for its own sake. It is as if structurelessness itself is the organizing principle of these electrifying paintings—not the vague, amorphous indistinctness of hazy atmospheres and trendy blurriness, but the crisp rigorousness, vivid thereness, and dramatic decisiveness of singular choices of color, line, and shape. Lang’s paintings are a thrill to behold and a nightmare to describe: They derail language with the best of them, forcing viewers to look closely because there is no handy category to fit them into or ready-made description to apply to their powerfully original syncopations. Their palette is more playful, confident, less organic or naturalistic than synthetic and super-charged. A wide streak of comic verve runs through them, making for works that initially look hyperactive, even manic, but gradually settle into joyous celebrations of highly stimulated serenity: not the relaxing placidity of calm contentment but the excitement of witnessing—and being part of—a situation when everything falls into place, effortlessly, serendipitously, and with little regard for one’s intentions or will. Lang’s compositions are also more exuberant—each painting is a cornucopia of nooks and crannies. Like a labyrinthine maze without the dead-ends, claustrophobia, or sense of entrapment, these paintings revel in the sensibility that seeks out-of-the-way places, the love of stumbling onto unexpected surprises as one makes one’s way through life. They are the visual equivalent of off-the-beatentrack treasures or hole-in-the-wall favorites—not the big-budget, get-the-headlines sensations of massmarketed spectacles or the exploitative appeals to the lowest-common-denominator in all of us, but quiet, do-it-yourself discoveries of a connoisseur of happenstance, of someone wise enough to know that too much control or direction or assertive willfulness defeats one’s purposes and ruins the magic because it eliminates the mystery and the wonder and the sense of discovery that only comes on its own terms, by chance as it were. Lang’s Smoking Waters paintings are more imaginative and freeform than anything he has made. A goofy, even cartoon directness suffuses their surfaces, which sometimes evoke digital pixilation gone nutty, giant jigsaw puzzles whose parts have melted and run together, like ice-cream cones on hot summer days, or the endless, interconnected lines that form the contours of ancient Mayan reliefs, sculptures, and carved facades, not to mention the vines and roots growing over them. On the whole, Lang’s paintings from the last eighteen months reflect greater maturity than his painting from ten years ago. This is not to suggest that Native is an immature work, just to indicate that its offspring are even freer and bolder: both looser and more extreme, fractured and open, solid and expansive. The same democratic evenhandedness enlivens their eccentrically configured surfaces, only now it is fueled by anarchistic delight—neither chaos nor order as they are conventionally conceived but both together. As grounded as they are ambitious, Lang’s life-embracing paintings invite viewers to get lost in the moment while they cause the moment to expand so that it lasts a lot longer than usual and is far more resonant than expected. David Pagel is an art critic for the Los Angeles Times and an art historian at Claremont Graduate University. 13 Briar 1, 1994-95 13 × 13 Crazy Tickling Painting, 1994–95 13 × 13 Flicker, 1994-98 13 × 13 Eye Lights, 1998 15 × 15 Enchanced 3 (Niagra), 1998 17 × 17 Native, 1998 113 × 113 Hybrid Line Variations, 2006-07 Dimensions variable Diamond Painting 12, 1999 120 × 84 (Not in Exhibition) Smoking Waters 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 2008 Smoking Waters 1, 2008 82 × 47 ½ Smoking Waters 2, 2008 82 × 47 ½ Smoking Waters 3, 2008 82 × 47 ½ Smoking Waters 4, 2008 82 × 47 ½ Smoking Waters 5, 2008 82 × 47 ½ River Dream 1, 2008 50 ½ × 27 River Dream 2, 2008 50 ½ × 27 River Dream 3, 2008 50 ½ × 27 River Painting Series: Agua Particular, 2008 95 × 72 Gary Lang Studio, Ojai, California, 2008 CHECKLIST OF THE EXHIBITION All dimensions are given in inches. Height precedes width. Gary Lang is represented by ACE Gallery, Los Angeles. Briar 1, 1994-95 acrylic on panel 13 × 13 Crazy Tickling Painting, 1994–95 acrylic on muslin on panel 13 × 13 Dividing Time: Profiles 1, 2008 video produced by Gary Lang and Quint Contemporary Art, La Jolla, CA 13 minutes Enchanced 3 (Niagra), 1998 acrylic on muslin on panel 17 × 17 Eye Lights, 1998 acrylic on muslin on panel 15 × 15 Flicker, 1994-98 acrylic on panel 13 × 13 Hybrid Line Variations, 2006-07 oil, acrylic and oil monoprint on paper Dimensions variable Native, 1998 acrylic on canvas 113 × 113 River Dream 1, 2008 acrylic on panel 50 ½ × 27 River Dream 2, 2008 acrylic on panel 50 ½ × 27 River Dream 3, 2008 acrylic on panel 50 ½ × 27 River Painting Series: Agua Particular, 2008 acrylic on canvas on panel 95 × 72 Smoking Waters 1, 2008 acrylic on canvas on panel 82 × 47 ½ Smoking Waters 2, 2008 acrylic on panel 82 × 47 ½ Smoking Waters 3, 2008 acrylic on canvas on panel 82 × 47 ½ Smoking Waters 4, 2008 acrylic on panel 82 × 47 ½ Smoking Waters 5, 2008 acrylic on canvas on panel 82 × 47 ½ GARY LANG Born: Los Angeles, 1950 Resides: Ojai, California EDUCATION 1975 M.F.A., Yale University, New Haven, CT 1973 B.F.A., California Institute of the Arts, Valencia, CA 1970-71 Whitney Independent Study Program, New York 1968-69 Chouinard Art Institute, Los Angeles AWARDS AND HONORS 1995 The Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts Grant 1975-1977 Fulbright/Hayes Travel Grant, Barcelona, Spain 1974 N.E.A., Yale University Sculpture Commission SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2008 Gary Lang, Out Standing Time, Rosemary Berkel and Harry L. Crisp II Museum, Southeast Missouri State University, Cape Girardeau, MO Gary Lang, Hybrid Variations 3, Edward Cella Art+Architecture, Santa Barbara, CA 2007 Gary Lang, Hybrid Variations 2, Edward Cella Art+Architecture, Santa Barbara, CA 2006 Gary Lang, Three Decades, Nathan Larramendy Gallery, Ojai, CA Gary Lang, Hybrid Variations 1, Edward Cella Art+Architecture, Santa Barbara, CA 2005 Gary Lang, Sageing: Seven New Paintings, Bentley Projects, Phoenix, AZ 2004 Gary Lang, Abundance Automata, Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, The Hague, The Netherlands Gary Lang, California Paintings, Galerie Zürcher, Paris, France Circling Madison, MMOCA, (Garden Commission), Olbrich Botanical Gardens, Madison, WI 2003 Gary Lang, Four New Paintings, Quint Contemporary Art, La Jolla, CA Gary Lang, Galerie Trabant, Vienna, Austria 2002 Circles and Cycles, A Chance Garden Phase 2, The Color Project, The Flower Fields in Carlsbad, Public Garden Commission, Carlsbad, CA Gary Lang, Painting Installation, Quint Contemporary Art, La Jolla, CA Gary Lang Paintings, Gallery K, Kurashiki, Japan 2001 Gary Lang, Mirrors, Brian Gross Fine Art, San Francisco Circles and Cycles, A Chance Garden, The Color Project, The Flower Fields in Carlsbad, Public Garden Commission, Carlsbad, CA Gary Lang, Native, Crocker Plaza, courtesy Brian Gross Fine Art, San Francisco Gary Lang, California Drip Lines, Stark Gallery, New York Gary Lang, Paintings, Galerie Trabant, Vienna, Austria Gary Lang, Paintings, Yoshizo Hirai, Osaka, Japan 2000 Open Studio, International Studio/Curatorial Program, New York 1999 Gary Lang, Diamond Paintings, Stark Gallery, New York Gary Lang, Diamond Paintings, Galerie Zürcher, Paris, France Gary Lang, Life Lines‑works on paper, Brian Gross Fine Art, San Francisco Gary Lang, Testimonials 1999, Stark Gallery, New York 1998 Gary Lang, Testimonials, Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, California Gary Lang, Intimate Works, Brian Gross Fine Art, San Francisco 54 The Hague, The Netherlands Gary Lang, Circle Paintings 1990‑96, Brian Gross Fine Art, San Francisco 1995 Gary Lang, Mirrors, Galerie Zürcher, Paris, France 1994 Gary Lang, Recent Paintings, Brian Gross Fine Art, San Francisco Michael Klein Inc., New York 1993 Gary Lang, Recent Paintings, Brian Gross Fine Art, San Francisco Gary Lang, Galeria Cadaques, Cadaques, Spain Gary Lang, Paintings 1993, Michael Klein Inc., New York 1992 Gary Lang, New Work, Michael Klein Inc., New York Gary Lang, New Work, Nina Freudenheim Gallery, Buffalo, NY Gary Lang, Site Circle Installation, Margaret Lipworth Fine Art, Boca Raton, FL 1991 Gary Lang, Plaid Paintings, Annina Nosei Gallery, New York 1997 Gary Lang, Paintings and Objects 1975‑1997, Sordoni Art Gallery, Wilkes University, Wilkes‑Barre, PA Gary Lang, Chance 1997, Galerie Zürcher, Paris, France Gary Lang, Paintings, Quint Gallery, La Jolla, CA 1990 Gary Lang, Annina Nosei Gallery, New York Gary Lang, Installation Work/New Large‑Scale Paintings, Quint‑Krichman Projects, La Jolla, CA 1996 Gary Lang, Hague Project, Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, The Hague, The Netherlands Gary Lang, Hague Project: Large Scale Wall Pieces, Crosby Street Project, New York Gary Lang, Energized Lines, Maud Boreel Fine Art, 1989 Simon Watson Gallery, New York Gary Lang, Annina Nosei Gallery, New York Gary Lang, Miniature Paintings, Pretto/Berland Hall Gallery, New York Mark Quint Contemporary Art, La Jolla, CA 1988 Gary Lang, New Small Paintings, Julian Pretto/ Berland Hall, New York 1974 Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT 1987 Gary Lang, Site Installation, Madison Art Center, Madison, WI GROUP EXHIBITIONS 1986 Gary Lang, Mark Quint Gallery, San Diego, CA Gary Lang, Galeria Cadaques, Cadaques, Spain Gary Lang, Paintings & Objects, Paris/New York, Kent Gallery, Kent, CT 1984 Kirk de Gooyer Gallery, Los Angeles Gary Lang, Paintings & Aggraphages, Baskerville + Watson Gallery, New York 1983 Mark Quint Gallery, San Diego, CA Kirk de Gooyer Gallery, Los Angeles 1982 Gary Lang, Quint Gallery, San Diego, CA Gary Lang, Barcelona Paintings, Downtown Gallery, Los Angeles 1981 Gary Lang, Paintings & Objects, Todd Gallery, Phoenix, AZ 1980 Ulrike Kantor Gallery, Los Angeles Gary Lang, Weapons, L.A.C.E. Gallery, Los Angeles 1975 Gary Lang, Barcelona Paintings, Institute of American Studies, Barcelona, Spain Centro Cultural de los Estados Unidos, Madrid, Spain 2008 Less is More, Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, The Hague, The Netherlands 2007 An Eclectic Eye, Selections from the Dan Leach Collection, Tucson Museum of Art, Tucson, AZ Tenth Anniversary, SCIART, Cal State University, Camarillo, CA Welcome to Our Neighborhood, Edward Cella Art+Architecture, Santa Barbara, CA Small is Beautiful, Klemens Gasser & Tanja Grunert Inc., New York 2006 Heavy Light, Video and Digital Works, Quint Contemporary, La Jolla, CA Explorations, Edward Celia Art+Architecture, Santa Barbara, CA New Works, Galerie Trabant, Kitzbuhel, Austria Southern Exposure, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, La Jolla, CA Canard etait toujours vivant, Panorama de la peinture contemporaine, Abbaye Saint‑André Centre d’art contemporain, Meymac, France Glass Seriously, Dorsky Projects, New York Universal Medium, McClain Gallery, Houston, TX 2004 Tinseltown Too, Domestic Settings Gallery, Los Angeles Specific Objects: The Minimalist Influence, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, CA World Peace (20th Anniversary of Bijutsu Sekai) Liu Haisu Art Museum, Shanghai, China 55 Blur Temporary Contemporary @ the Bekins, Santa Barbara, CA Galerie Trabant ‑ Steendrukkerij Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Inaugural Exhibition, Bentley Projects, Scottsdale, AZ Rupertinum Museum of Contemporary Art, Salzburg, Austria 2003 Nine Artists Installed, Peggy Phelps Gallery, Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, CA Continuous Senses, Kurashiki City Art Museum, Kurashiki, Japan 2002 Minimal, Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, The Hague, The Netherlands Painting’s Edge, Parks Exhibition Center, Idyllwild Arts, Idyllwild, CA Continuous Senses, Gallery Jurou, Kurashiki, Japan 2001 Brian Gross Fine Art, Gallery Artists, Shasta College Art Gallery, Art Department, Redding, CA Chouinard: A Living Legacy, Oceanside Museum of Art, Kruglak Gallery & Boehm Gallery, Oceanside, CA Collaborations, Galerie Trabant, Vienna, Austria Fifteen Years of Painting at Stark Gallery, Stark Gallery, New York Galerie Zürcher, Paris, France 2000 New York Artists, Eckert Fine Art Naples, Naples, FL Small Work, Nina Freudenheim, Inc., Buffalo, NY Works on Paper, Stark Gallery, New York Haulin’ Ass, Pierogi 2000 Flat Files (Armed and Dangerous), Yerba Buena Center, San Francisco (exhibition traveled to Los Angeles, Kansas City, and Berlin) 56 1999 Apprendre à Regarder, HEC Campus, Paris, France Davis Street Inaugural, Butters Gallery Ltd., Portland, Oregon 1998 I Love New York—Crossover of Contemporary Art, Museum Ludwig, Köln, Germany Flexing the Abs; New Paintings by Gary Lang, David Row, & Tad Wiley, RARE, New York Cool Painting, Brian Gross Fine Art, San Francisco Self‑Portrait, Gallery at Dieu Donne Papermill, New York 4th Annual Group Show, Ruth Bachofner Gallery, Santa Monica, CA The Paper Show, HBO Corporate Gallery, New York Paper +, Gallery at Dieu Donne Papermill, New York Paperworks from Dieu Donne Papermill, HBO Headquarters, New York Projects, Galerie Zürcher, Paris, France 1997 Current Themes, Persistent Dialogues: Works from the Maslow Collection, Everhart Museum, Scranton, PA Amour, Margaret Lipworth Fine Art, Boca Raton, FL Anniversary Shows 1973‑1997, Galeria Cadaques, Cadaques, Spain La Règle et L’Emotion, Centre Xavier Battini, L’Isle‑sur‑la‑Sorgue, France Abstraction Index, Condeso/Lawler Gallery, New York Benefit Exhibition, Pat Hearn Gallery, New York Drawing From Life, Stark Gallery, New York Small Works, Elizabeth Harris Gallery, New York 1996 The Collection of Julian Pretto, Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, CT Mid‑Winter Exhibition, Brian Gross Fine Art, San Francisco 1995 Works on Paper, Galerie Zürcher, Paris, France Color Painting, Brian Gross Fine Art, San Francisco Julian’s Show, curated by Julian Pretto, Littlejohn Contemporary, New York Arresting Images, Gallery 400, The University of Illinois, Chicago Paintings, Quint Contemporary Art, La Jolla, CA 1994 New York Abstract Painting, Salvatore Ala Gallery, New York About Color, Charles Cowles Gallery, New York Geometrie En Question, Galerie Zürcher, Paris, France 1993 Contemporarnes, Prato, Italy The Return of the Cadavre Exquis, The Drawing Center, New York Three Painters, Margaret Lipworth Fine Art, Boca Raton, FL East Coast—West Coast, Nancy Drysdale Gallery, Washington, DC Sailing to Byzantium with Disenchantment, Sergio Tossi Arte Contemporanea, Prato, Italy 1993 Collage, Brian Gross Fine Art, San Francisco Lang, McLaughlin, Venezia, Nina Freudenheim Gallery, Buffalo, NY Kurswechsel, Michael Klein Inc. at Transact Exhibitions, Köln, Germany 1992 Ecstasy, Dooley Le Cappelaine, New York Geometric Strategies, Marilyn Pearl Gallery, New York Ageometry, Michael Klein Inc., New York Vibology, White Columns, New York 1991 Paintings, Annina Nosei Gallery, New York Summer Show, Michael Klein Inc., New York Nancy Drysdale Gallery, Washington, DC Hill Gallery, Birmingham, Michigan Preview, Michael Klein Inc., New York 1990 Annina Nosei Gallery, New York Grids, Vrej Baghoomian Gallery, New York The Grid, Ben Shahn Galleries, William Paterson College, Wayne, NJ Mark Quint Gallery, La Jolla, CA Fluid Geometry, Cummings Art Center, Connecticut College, New London, CT Group Exhibition, Guillen & Tresserra Galleria D’Art, Barcelona, Spain 1989 Artists of the 80’s, Sordoni Art Gallery, Wilkes College, PA Aspects of Painting, Julian Pretto Gallery, New York Invitational, Fiction/Non‑Fiction Gallery, New York Group Exhibition, Annina Nosei Gallery, New York Coming of Age, Madison Art Center, Madison, WI Mutations, Annina Nosei Gallery, New York 1988 Albright‑Knox Museum, Buffalo, NY Julian Pretto Gallery, New York Adler Gallery, Los Angeles Small Format, Lang and O’Hara, New York 1987 Adler Gallery, Los Angeles Working in Brooklyn/Painting, Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY 1986 Paris Bienale, Paris, France 57 Adler Gallery, Los Angeles Modern Objects—A New Dawn, Baskerville + Watson, New York 1985 Off the Streets, Los Angeles Metropolitan Transit, Los Angeles Bill and Merry Norris Collection, Pepperdine University, Los Angeles Recent Painting in Southern California, Fisher Gallery, University of Southern California, Los Angeles 1984 Crime and Punishment, Triton Museum, Santa Clara, CA A Broad Spectrum: Contemporary Los Angeles Painters and Sculptors, Design Center, Los Angeles Olympiad: Summer ‘84, Koplin Center, Los Angeles 1983 University Place Gallery, New York Jan Baum Gallery, Los Angeles Group Exhibition, Quint Gallery, San Diego, CA 1982 4th Anniversary of Chinese Chance, University Place Gallery, New York Sunday in Rio, LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions), Los Angeles Theatrical Abstractions, Jan Baum Gallery, Los Angeles 1981 Sanders Collection, Plains Art Museum, Moorhead, MN Group Exhibition, Molly Barnes Gallery, Los Angeles Intimate Object, Downtown Gallery, Los Angeles 58 1981 Emerging Downtown Los Angeles Artists, Cyprus Gallery, Los Angeles California Artists, Tower Gallery, New York Wall Constructions, Security Pacific Bank, Los Angeles Ulrike Kantot Los Angeles Gary Lang and Joe Fay, Mark Quint Gallery, Los Angeles The New Art of Downtown Los Angeles, Madison Art Center, Madison, WI (traveled to four North American Museums) Recent Acquisitions, Community Redevelopment Agency, Los Angeles 1978 United Nations Plaza, New York 1976 Ed Thorp Gallery, New York 1975 Americans Painting in Spain, Institute of North American Studies, Barcelona, Spain; traveled to Madrid Group Exhibition, Geneva, Switzerland 1974 Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT 1972 Whitney Museum of American Art, New York PUBLIC COLLECTIONS American Embassy, Paris American Embassy, Algiers American Embassy, Hong Kong Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY Cedars Sinai Hospital—Marcia and Simon Weisman Collection, Los Angeles Contemporary Art Museum, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, MI Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, The Hague, The Netherlands Los Angeles County Museum of Art Madison Museum of Contemporary Art, Madison, WI The Maslow Collection, Wilkes‑Barre, PA Meadowbrook Art Gallery, Oakland University, Rochester, NY Menu Collection, Houston, TX Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority, Chicago Museum of Art Contemporain, Angers, France Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, La Jolla, CA Museum of Art, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Ml Plains Art Museum, Moorhead, MN Portland Museum of Art, Portland, ME Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, CT CORPORATE COLLECTIONS AT & T, Somerset, NJ AXA Art, Köln, Germany City Redevelopment Agency, Los Angeles Hewlett Packard, Palo Alto, CA IBM Corporation, Somers, NY Nordstern, Köln, Germany Paine Webber, New York Rayovac, Madison, WI Stein & Company, Chicago Thompson Publishing Group, New York Tuttle & Taylor, Los Angeles Qualcomm, San Diego, CA For Ruth, Chance and Sage Text Copyright © 2008 Cr i s p Mu s e u m Illustrations Copyright © 2008 Gary Lang Photographs of artwork: Bill Dewey All rights reserved Catalogue design: Kate Schaefer Set in Adobe Garamond 1250 copies were printed by Concord Printing Services Cape Girardeau, Missouri Cover: Smoking Waters 3, 2008 (detail) Financial assistance for this project has been provided by the Missouri Arts Council, a state agency