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DANCING FOXES PRESS/ICA MIAMI
Ryan Sullivan
Edited by Karen Kelly, Barbara Schroeder. Text by Alex Gartenfeld, Tim Griffin, Christian Scheidemann. Interview by Laura Owens.
The first full-scale monograph on the work of New York–based artist Ryan Sullivan (born 1983), this book explores the relationships his abstract paintings propose between image and object. Staging complex interactions of materials, Sullivan produces images that are seemingly in motion, alive and contingent in their embodiment and description of material flows. Published on the occasion of Sullivan’s exhibition at ICA Miami, the book focuses on a group of large-scale works that are distinguished by noncompositional forms and alternately vivid, murky and sublime palettes. Ultimately transcendent of medium and process, Sullivan’s works offer critical solutions to a world in which abstraction has taken on a life of its own.
FORMAT: Pbk, 8.25 x 10 in. / 96 pgs / 36 color. LIST PRICE: U.S. $35.00 LIST PRICE: CANADA $47.5 ISBN: 9780996690607 PUBLISHER: Dancing Foxes Press/ICA Miami AVAILABLE: 2/28/2017 DISTRIBUTION: D.A.P. RETAILER DISC: TRADE PUBLISHING STATUS: Out of stock indefinitely AVAILABILITY: Not available TERRITORY: NA ONLY
Published by Dancing Foxes Press/ICA Miami. Edited by Karen Kelly, Barbara Schroeder. Text by Alex Gartenfeld, Tim Griffin, Christian Scheidemann. Interview by Laura Owens.
The first full-scale monograph on the work of New York–based artist Ryan Sullivan (born 1983), this book explores the relationships his abstract paintings propose between image and object. Staging complex interactions of materials, Sullivan produces images that are seemingly in motion, alive and contingent in their embodiment and description of material flows. Published on the occasion of Sullivan’s exhibition at ICA Miami, the book focuses on a group of large-scale works that are distinguished by noncompositional forms and alternately vivid, murky and sublime palettes. Ultimately transcendent of medium and process, Sullivan’s works offer critical solutions to a world in which abstraction has taken on a life of its own.