The Armory Show 2022: Zarouhie Abdalian, Troy Lamarr Chew II, Liam Everett, Laeh Glenn, Chris Johanson, Koak, K.R.M. Mooney, Alex Olson, Will Rogan, Kikuo Saito, Didier William

Sep 8 - 11, 2022
  • Altman Siegel is pleased to participate in The Armory Show, presenting a selection of works by Zarouhie Abdalian, Troy Lamarr Chew II, Liam Everett, Laeh Glenn, Chris Johanson, Koak, K.R.M. Mooney, Alex Olson, Will Rogan, Kikuo Saito, and Didier William.
  • Didier William lives and works in Philadelphia. Within his practice, William has developed a distinct and ever-morphing visual language through...
    Didier William, Blessed Garden (detail), 2022, Acrylic, oil, ink, wood carving on panel, 64 x 152 in, 162.56 x 386.08 cm

    Didier William lives and works in Philadelphia. Within his practice, William has developed a distinct and ever-morphing visual language through bold patternmaking and use of vivid color. William's recent work largely draws on his memories of growing up in Miami after immigrating from Port-au-Prince, Haiti as a young boy. Pulling from Haitian history, language, mythology, and his personal experiences, he explores the legacies of colonialism, resistance, and then struggle for agency and identity. His work examines the relationship between formalism - his compositions combine both painting and printmaking techniques and push the limits of figuration and abstraction - and the narrative capacities of painting.

    • Chris Johanson Untitled, 2022 Acrylic on canvas 21 x 20 in 53.3 x 50.8 cm
      Chris Johanson
      Untitled, 2022
      Acrylic on canvas
      21 x 20 in
      53.3 x 50.8 cm
  • Chris Johanson lives and works in Los Angeles and Portland. A central figure of San Francisco's Mission School, the post-punk...
    Chris Johanson, Untitled, 2022, Acrylic on canvas, 21 x 20 in, 53.3 x 50.8 cm

    Chris Johanson lives and works in Los Angeles and Portland. A central figure of San Francisco's Mission School, the post-punk movement that integrated aspects of both graffiti and folk art, Johanson's multidimensional practice encompasses painting, drawing, sculpture, design, and music. Incorporating disparate influences that underscore the complexity of life, his work is centered upon themes that include spirituality, sociology, and environmental observation.

     

    To produce his recent paintings, Johanson paints in a way that is slow, deliberate, and meditative. Through this process, he has said he has been able to “slow down my thoughts, to reduce the noise of my life.”

    • Chris Johanson Untitled, 2020-2022 Acrylic on paper 18 x 24 in 45.7 x 61 cm
      Chris Johanson
      Untitled, 2020-2022
      Acrylic on paper
      18 x 24 in
      45.7 x 61 cm
    • Troy Lamarr Chew II the roc, 2022 Oil and dye on canvas 60 x 48 in 152.4 x 121.9 cm
      Troy Lamarr Chew II
      the roc, 2022
      Oil and dye on canvas
      60 x 48 in
      152.4 x 121.9 cm
  • Troy Lamarr Chew II lives and works in Los Angeles. Chew explores the legacy of the African diaspora and how...
    Troy Lamarr Chew II, the blueprint, 2022, Oil and dye on canvas, 60 x 48 in, 152.4 x 121.9 cm

    Troy Lamarr Chew II lives and works in Los Angeles. Chew explores the legacy of the African diaspora and how it reverberates through American culture. His work looks methodically at systems of coded communication and how this is translated and mistranslated within the diaspora and throughout the mainstream. His rich visual language draws heavy inspiration from hip hop culture. A highly skilled realist inspired by European painting techniques, Chew utilizes these art historical traditions to underscore their exclusion of Blackness.

     

    Part of his Out the Mud series, the artist’s most recent paintings, the roc and the blueprint, reference kpokpoi, or country cloth, from Bo, Sierra Leone. Country cloth is a thick material traditionally made from locally grown cotton that is spun into thread, dyed, and woven into strips on a tripod loom. Historically regarded as a sign of wealth or prestige, Chew brings this material in conversation with, and repositions it within, contemporary rap culture.

    • Koak Little Tuber, 2022 Flashe and graphite on canvas 61 x 48 1/2 in 154.9 x 123.2 cm
      Koak
      Little Tuber, 2022
      Flashe and graphite on canvas
      61 x 48 1/2 in
      154.9 x 123.2 cm
  • Koak lives and works in San Francisco. The artist creates emotionally charged portraits, often of female figures, imbuing her subjects...
    Koak, Little Tuber, 2022, Flashe and graphite on canvas, 61 x 48 1/2 in, 154.9 x 123.2 cm

    Koak lives and works in San Francisco. The artist creates emotionally charged portraits, often of female figures, imbuing her subjects with a sense of agency and inner life to challenge patriarchal views of the feminine. Engaging hierarchies of gender as well as form, Koak interrogates commonly held cultural assumptions defining women as passive objects of desire. Drawing on the visual vocabulary of comics and often translating this into sculptural form, the exquisite technique Koak is known for allows her line-making to appear beautifully effortless, but is in fact the result of a rare type of generous and hand-made master craftsmanship.

  • Liam Everett lives and works in Sebastopol, CA. Everett has established the studio as a site of both investigation and...
    Liam Everett, Untitled (like the grasses showing tender faces to each other), 2022, Ink, oil, sand on linen, 59 x 37 1/2 in, 149.9 x 95.3 cm

    Liam Everett lives and works in Sebastopol, CA. Everett has established the studio as a site of both investigation and rehearsal. His practice is mediated by a set of open-ended, continually shifting questions as to the influence of gesture, material, obstruction, and the environment upon his work. Rather than offering definitive answers, however, Everett's paintings further elaborate these questions and act as record of the material encounters that occur within them.

    • Liam Everett Untitled (when we learn to feel the ending), 2022 Ink, oil, sand on linen 59 x 37 1/2 in 149.9 x 95.3 cm
      Liam Everett
      Untitled (when we learn to feel the ending), 2022
      Ink, oil, sand on linen
      59 x 37 1/2 in
      149.9 x 95.3 cm
  • Zarouhie Abdalian lives and works in New Orleans. The artist typically employs modest materials to produce subtle conceptual or formal...
    Zarouhie Abdalian, message (lower parts) iii, 2021, Gypsum cement, graphite, 17 3/4 x 13 3/4 x 3 in, 45.1 x 34.9 x 7.6 cm

    Zarouhie Abdalian lives and works in New Orleans. The artist typically employs modest materials to produce subtle conceptual or formal effects that stage an alteration or a shift of perception within the immediate environment. Rooted in the particularities of site and context, her work often responds to the specific attributes of a given location, architectural setting, or social landscape. Using sound, performance, and sculpture, she draws attention to the overlooked by framing a space and restoring forgotten aspects of its layered history.

     

    For message (lower parts) iii, Abdalian presents the anatomy of a firearm, cast in cement and rubbed with graphite, in a way that reads as a kind of code transmitted in relief.

  • Laeh Glenn lives and works in Sebastopol, CA. The artist's paintings consider the conflation of historical precedents in painting with...
    Laeh Glenn, Rug, 2022, Oil on canvas over panel, wood frame, 19 1/4 x 15 1/8 in, 48.9 x 38.4 cm

    Laeh Glenn lives and works in Sebastopol, CA. The artist's paintings consider the conflation of historical precedents in painting with the digital textures of image culture. Glenn's work addresses the digital life of an image; namely, how repetition and sharing influence image quality and how painting has the ability to converse with damaged images. Often beginning with source material found online, Glenn returns to images multiple times, with each subsequent painting shifting slightly in tone, texture, or scale.

     

    Glenn's paintings included in this presentation are indicative of her exploration of flatness and suspended time. Like the images they are sourced from, these works are at once repeatable yet entirely unique.

    • Laeh Glenn Wack, 2020 Oil on canvas, painted frame 21 1/4 x 17 1/4 in 54 x 43.8 cm
      Laeh Glenn
      Wack, 2020
      Oil on canvas, painted frame
      21 1/4 x 17 1/4 in
      54 x 43.8 cm
    • K.R.M. Mooney Eutectic c. (i), 2020 Specialized jewelers vise, insulation, cast mistletoe, silver, steel, bronze 7 x 4 1/4 x 7 1/2 in 17.8 x 10.8 x 19.1 cm
      K.R.M. Mooney
      Eutectic c. (i), 2020
      Specialized jewelers vise, insulation, cast mistletoe, silver, steel, bronze
      7 x 4 1/4 x 7 1/2 in
      17.8 x 10.8 x 19.1 cm
  • K.R.M. Mooney lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. The artist's work often occupies intermediary positions between abstract, autonomous, and site-specific...
    K.R.M. Mooney, Eutectic c. (i), 2020, Specialized jewelers vise, insulation, cast mistletoe, silver, steel, bronze, 7 x 4 1/4 x 7 1/2 in, 17.8 x 10.8 x 19.1 cm

    K.R.M. Mooney lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. The artist's work often occupies intermediary positions between abstract, autonomous, and site-specific sculpture. Distilling observable and imperceptible properties by installing works directly on the floor, overhead or in passageways, his work inherits architectural details such as the conditions of light or a site's neighboring morphologies. Each project is a means to consider the affective, embodied and relational aspects of site and space.

  • Long overlooked within traditional art historical discourses, Kikuo Saito's practice, and life, articulate a state of in-betweenness. Informed by his...
    Kikuo Saito, Pink Umbrella, 2007, Oil on canvas, 71 3/4 x 54 5/8 x 2 in, 182.2 x 138.7 x 5.1 cm

    Long overlooked within traditional art historical discourses, Kikuo Saito's practice, and life, articulate a state of in-betweenness. Informed by his background in the theater, the artist created space for himself within established Color Field circles by devising a distinctive lexicon that integrated his multitude of experiences and artistic interests. Hence, Saito's paintings are both historically significant and timely, reflecting a need to contemplate the hybridity and complexity of personal identity.

    • Alex Olson Sea Script, 2020 Oil and modeling paste on canvas 71 x 50 in 180.3 x 127 cm
      Alex Olson
      Sea Script, 2020
      Oil and modeling paste on canvas
      71 x 50 in
      180.3 x 127 cm
  • Alex Olson lives and works in Los Angeles. Through the use of color, layering, and texture - both in terms...
    Alex Olson, Sea Script, 2020, Oil and modeling paste on canvas, 71 x 50 in, 180.3 x 127 cm

    Alex Olson lives and works in Los Angeles. Through the use of color, layering, and texture - both in terms of three-dimensional impasto and implications within visual patterning - she controls surface tensions in at once a meticulous and playful manner. Layers appear to peel away to reveal other layers, suggesting several paintings imbedded in one, some of which remain forever concealed. Pulling from both historical abstraction and contemporary design, Olson's paintings consider the juggling act between the eye and the brain to parse out evidence and desires, sources, and analysis, past and present.

     

    In Sea Script, two elements coexist simultaneously. The painting's ground is comprised of calligraphic scribble that is made visible through the brushwork on the surface. With this work, Olson was interested in considering the fixity of text, as well as the ways one can present something that contains two truths at the same time.

    • Will Rogan Cv & narrative bio, 2022 Spanish cedar, mixed hardwood, oil paint 12 x 8 x 4 in 30.5 x 20.3 x 10.2 cm
      Will Rogan
      Cv & narrative bio, 2022
      Spanish cedar, mixed hardwood, oil paint
      12 x 8 x 4 in
      30.5 x 20.3 x 10.2 cm
  • Will Rogan lives and works in West Brookfield, VT. His multifaceted practice often reflects on the prosaic manifestations of time's...
    Will Rogan, Cv & narrative bio, 2022, Spanish cedar, mixed hardwood, oil paint, 12 x 8 x 4 in, 30.5 x 20.3 x 10.2 cm

    Will Rogan lives and works in West Brookfield, VT. His multifaceted practice often reflects on the prosaic manifestations of time's passage that he identifies in his local environs. Taking the form of photography, collage, sculpture, or video, Rogan's work possesses a subtlety and quietude that inspires thoughtful consideration of the material effects of time and space. Entangling his work with organic elements and ecological processes, he alludes to the impacts of environmental destruction and the multitude ways in which different registers of time are perceived.

  • For more information contact info@altmansiegel.com or 415.576.9300.