
Galerie Lelong & Co., New York, is pleased to present our solo exhibition with Leonardo Drew, featuring new sculptures and a major site-specific installation Number 305 (2021), building on the vocabulary established in his site works, Number 123 (2014) and the ‘explosion’ piece Number 215 (2019). Whole sculptures are included in the installation along with multiple elements from Drew’s different vocabularies, now combined in a singular work. Unevenly shaped wooden pieces lay flat akin to wall drawings, while horizontal elements create the effect of speed lines and add another layer of dynamism. Number 305 commands the space, allowing the viewer to focus on the choreography of individual elements including drawings and sculptures that build an immersive experience. In addition, a group of new individual sculptures explode the grid while using it as a system to control action. By incorporating open rift spaces, Drew’s use of tension enlivens each work in motion.
From the early 1990s, Drew has been making assemblage-based installations and sculptures in his distinctive abstract language that speaks of life’s cyclical nature. Possessing an in-depth knowledge of materials and their materiality gained over three decades of practice, Drew weathers store-bought wood and other construction materials through processes that make them appear to have been found in a state of natural decomposition.
Through oxidation, shredding, and splintering, Drew builds a library of material to use in his layered compositions. These masses of elements, many of which have been rendered as small as toothpicks, are utilised in an additive process to orchestrate richly layered sculptural surfaces that pulse with the rhythm of the artist’s energy and appear to almost burst from the armatures.
These highly individualistic and monumental sculptures reflect interior and exterior landscapes, revealing his keen awareness of our world in flux. His intention in his work is to ‘make chaos legible.’ Instead of assigning them descriptive titles, Drew chooses to number his works, believing that each piece will find eventual completion in its resonance with the viewer.
Since his first outdoor public art project, City in the Grass (2019), at Madison Square Park, Drew has continued to explore the possibilities for wave-like momentums to energise the work. In the installation Number 305, a totemic form appears to simultaneously lift off from and be grounded by the wall, incorporating gaping negative spaces that reinforce the curves of the sculpture, animate it, and emphasise its gravitas. Drew’s rigorous approach extends to the recycling and re-invention of materials and older works into new ones—an act that parallels the rebirths seen in the natural world. Evident in Number 306 (2021), Drew repurposed a ‘carpet’ element from City in the Grass, now transposed from the ground onto the wall in an assemblage that comprises smaller wood elements seemingly disintegrating and congregating at once.
Following his first solo exhibition with Galerie Lelong, New York, in 2019, solo museum presentations have been held at the University of Massachusetts Amherst; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson; and North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh. This exhibition coincides with two ongoing solo exhibitions at the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art (an updated installation of City in the Grass on view through November 14, 2021, and Drew’s site-specific installation in the museum’s lobby through January 2, 2022) and the traveling solo exhibition Leonardo Drew: Cycles, from the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer Foundation, at the Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum, Florida International University from September 1–November 17, 2021.


Leonardo Drew is known for creating contemplative abstract sculptural works that play upon a tension between order and chaos. At once monumental and intimate in scale, his work recalls post-Minimalist sculpture that alludes to America’s industrial past. Drew transforms accumulations of raw materials such as wood, scrap metal, and cotton to articulate various overlapping themes with emotional gravitas: from the cyclical nature of life and decay to the erosion of time. His surfaces often approach a language of their own, embodying the laboured process of writing oneself into history.
Galerie Lelong & Co. represents prominent contemporary artists and estates from the United States, Latin America, Europe, Asia, and Australia. This uniquely diverse group includes mid-career and established artists at the forefront of the international art world working across all media.

A respected voice in contemporary art discourse.
Focusing on ambitious storytelling and insightful art-world commentary. Ocula Magazine publishes in-depth interviews, critical essays and timely analysis on the artists, exhibitions and ideas driving the global art world.
Learn more about Ocula Magazine
Showcasing the best of the art world.
Ocula partners with galleries from around the world to highlight their artists, artworks and exhibitions. Gallery membership is by application and invitation, with each member vetted by an independent panel.
Learn more about Ocula Membership
Specialises in the sale of major artworks.
Led by a team with deep ties to the world’s leading auction houses, galleries and collectors. Ocula’s advisory team offers bespoke services to high-net-worth clients from around the world who are looking to acquire the best of contemporary and modern art.
Learn more about our team and services
