Press Release

This exhibition of work by gallery artists explores the relationship between the artist and prints and multiples.

Ghiora Aharoni incorporates found objects and cultural artifacts into his sculptures and installations, which makes each edition unique. When All Roads Are One, one of his time-based media sculptural works, is an editioned series of three, one of which was recently acquired by The Metropolitan Museum of Art for the permanent collection.

For Karen Knorr and Kim Joon, who both utilize digital technology, the print is the final product of their labor and creativity. Their multiples are perfect in their exact likeness. Karen Knorr seamlessly merges her meticulous photographs, often taken with a large-format analogue camera, with digital technology to create surrealistic images. Kim Joon constructs fantastical compositions with computer software that he brings to life in a digital print.

For Kamolpan Chotvichai, Miya Ando and Ricardo Mazal the print is one part of a process—a catalyst for new bodies of work, or ideas to be re-imagined. Miya Ando meticulously applies silver leaf and pigment onto paper in her work-on-paper series Gekkou (Moonlight), making each clearly part of the series, but wholly unique. Painter and photographer Ricardo Mazal often begins a new body of work by first taking a photograph that inspires the shapes and colors of his distinctive oil paintings. Kamolpan Chotvichai begins with her own image, which is printed on paper.

Work by Susan Weil, known for her blueprint collaborations with Robert Rauschenberg and photographer José Betancourt, and a large-format photograph by Shirin Neshat will also be on view.

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Artists Exhibiting

Also Exhibiting at Sundaram Tagore Gallery

About the Gallery

Established in 2000 in New York City, Sundaram Tagore Gallery represents established and emerging artists from around the globe, specialising in work that is aesthetically and intellectually rigorous, infused with humanism and art historically significant. The gallery was founded with a mission to show that some of the best and most meaningful art was being created by artists deeply engaged in cross-cultural explorations. Our international roster of artists cross cultural and national boundaries, synthesising Western visual language with forms, techniques and philosophies from Asia, the Subcontinent and the Middle East. More than twenty years later, we continue to champion artists, particularly women and those from underrepresented cultures, whose work exemplifies our interconnectedness.

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542 West 26th Street
New York
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Tuesday – Saturday
10am – 6pm
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New York 542 West 26th Street
Sundaram Tagore Gallery
542 West 26th Street, New York, United States

Opening hours
Tuesday – Saturday
10am – 6pm
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