Press Release

The pious and the profane may at first seem worlds apart—one immersed in reverent devotion, the other in audacious defiance. Yet they share a potency of feeling that both unsettles and enthralls.

In Pious & Profane, artists Andres Serrano and Barry X Ball delve into this charged duality, drawing upon a visit to the Vatican with a circle of prominent creatives. Serrano—whose infamous Immersion (Piss Christ) once scandalized the art world—was met with a warm reception by Pope Francis, who praised the artists’ pursuit of “harmony and beauty” even through jarring, confrontational work. In these acts, devotion and provocation become inseparable, each sparking a pathway toward transcendence.

For Serrano, the holy and the blasphemous belong in a single continuum of reflection. A selection of his early photographs from the 1980s and early ‘90s is joined here by more recent, intuitive paintings. Signifiers of Christian tradition figure prominently: Pieta II (Immersions) recreates the bowed form of Christ across Mary’s lap, while Ecce Homo (Immersions) bathes a small Jesus figurine in bodily fluids, reimagining what is “ugly” as sublime. This interplay between abjection and reverence heightens an inner friction, inviting the viewer to confront the sanctity hidden within desecration—and vice versa. Serrano’s newer paintings, with their unfettered blasts of color and looser processes, reveal yet another facet of his practice, where intensity of feeling emerges directly from pigment and gesture.

Barry X Ball, meanwhile, unearths the human core within historical saintly iconography. By adapting and modifying classical works, he peels away markers of specific faith or era, suspending his sculptures between idealized purity and haunting imperfection. Influenced by masterpieces such as Antonio Corradini’s La Purità (Dama Velata) and Giusto Le Court’s La Invidia, Ball retains the organic scars in the marble, imbuing these smooth, digitally refined figures with vestiges of natural erosion. Raised among fundamentalist Christians but later awakened by the grandeur of Renaissance art, he treats artmaking itself as a sacred endeavor. Such works have previously shown at Venice’s Ca’ Rezzonico, which sits nearby Patricia Low Contemporary’s gallery in the city.

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About the Gallery

Established in Gstaad, Switzerland in 2005, Patricia Low Contemporary is one of the main destinations for contemporary art in the famed Alpine resort. With 20 years of exhibition practice and having held around 100 shows in Gstaad (the shows in Geneva and St. Moritz outposts not included), Patricia Low has been central to putting it on the contemporary art map.

The focus is primarily on introducing the most prominent international artists to our audience, with an emphasis on the legacies of Neue Wilde, Contemporary German Painting, Young British Art, Contemporary Photography, Post-Feminism, and Pop as well as putting together historic exhibitions featuring works from the secondary market.

Patricia Low has built strong relationships with the international artists she represents or has invited to show in the Swiss Alps, among them established practitioners like Jonathan Meese, Katharina Sieverding, Herbert Brandl, Peter Halley and Gilbert & George as well as rising artists like Richard Kennedy, Anouk Lamm Anouk and Brian Rochefort.

On April 1st, 2023, Patricia Low Venezia has opened its doors on Canale Grande with a solo exhibition by L.A. based artist Amy Bessone.
Ideally situated in Dorsoduro, Venice’s museum quartier, the XVI century palazzo is adjacent to Ca Rezzonico and directly across Palazzo Grassi. Becoming part of the fabric of this city feels like a privilege to Patricia and opens a new chapter for her gallery.

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Address
Promenade 55
Gstaad
Switzerland
Opening Hours
Tuesday–Thursday: 1pm–6.30pm
Friday, Saturday: 10am–7.30pm
Sunday: 3pm–6.30pm
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Gstaad Promenade 55
Patricia Low Contemporary
Promenade 55, Gstaad, Switzerland

Opening hours
Tuesday–Thursday: 1pm–6.30pm
Friday, Saturday: 10am–7.30pm
Sunday: 3pm–6.30pm
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