Press Release

Paula Cooper Gallery is delighted to present new video and photographic works by London-based artist Carey Young, including the US debut of Appearance (2023), her ambitious forty-nine-minute silent video featuring female judges. First seen in the artist's major, critically acclaimed one-person exhibition at Modern Art Oxford in 2023, Appearance expands Young's twenty-year investigation of the law.

Revisiting Andy Warhol's Screen Tests, Young invited fifteen British judges to pose one by one, seated in a judicial chair in a stark white film studio. Young's sitters include two UK Supreme Court judges; the UK's youngest ever female judge, now aged thirty-seven; and the UK's only trans female judge. Close-up shots linger on an expressive range of sartorial choices: power heels, a hijab, gold-trimmed finery, dyed-blue hair, an afro, or the frayed edges of a robe threadbare from years of service. The judges defy the stereotypes of judicial identity and Young examines the trappings of their authority, her close-ups evoking their personalities, emotions, and cultural or ethnic heritage. Presented on a grand scale, Appearance explores the power relations between judge and camera and ideas of judgement between artist, judge, and viewer, while deftly proposing an alternative world of absolute female authority.

Surfaces of Law, Young's new photographic series, portrays details of courthouses, prisons, law firms and law schools to consider how architecture can serve as a metaphor for the law itself. In the artist's words, "the project explores the 'materiality' of law as a lived and living system which people experience emotionally and haptically, no matter the nature of their interface with 'the law'." Selected photographs from the series feature cells, prison seating and beds, security areas, and other disciplinary or carceral spaces in Belgium, Switzerland, and France. Whilst evoking the absent bodies of the suspect, the guard or the imprisoned, Young's use of grids, saturated colour and sharp rectilinear planes visually conflate artistic ideas of abstraction with law, institutional and state power.

Lastly, the photograph Court Artist (Supreme Court) (2023) presents a reflection of the artist captured in a framed photograph of the US Supreme Court from 1981, which includes Sandra Day O'Connor, the first woman to serve as a US Supreme Court justice, who died in December 2023. The image relates the artist's body and identity to the judicial portrait as a genre - which has almost always featured men.

Appearance was made possible thanks to the support of Arts Council England, Modern Art Oxford Commissioning Circle and University College London.

Read more

Also Exhibiting at Paula Cooper Gallery

About the Gallery

Paula Cooper Gallery, the first art gallery in SoHo, opened in 1968 with an exhibition to benefit the Student Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam. The show included works by Carl Andre, Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, Robert Mangold and Robert Ryman, among others, as well as Sol LeWitt’s first wall drawing.

View gallery profile
Address
521 West 21st Street
New York
United States
Opening Hours
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am – 6pm
(1)
New York 521 West 21st Street
Paula Cooper Gallery
521 West 21st Street, New York, United States
Opening hours
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am – 6pm
View exhibitions
Your Contemporary Art Partner