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{{short description|American painter and sculptor widely|bot=PearBOT 5}}
{{short description|American painter and sculptor}}
{{Multiple issues|
{{prose|date=December 2018}}
{{BLP sources|date=April 2009}}
{{BLP sources|date=April 2009}}
}}

{{Infobox artist
{{Infobox artist
| name = Roxy Paine
| name = Roxy Paine
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| caption =
| caption =
| birth_date = {{birth year and age|1966}}
| birth_date = {{birth year and age|1966}}
| birth_place = [[New York City]]
| birth_place = [[New York City]], U.S.
| death_date =
| death_date =
| death_place =
| death_place =
| nationality = [[United States|American]]
| field = [[Sculpture]], [[painting]]
| field = [[Sculpture]] [[Painting]]
| training = {{ubl|[[College of Santa Fe]]|[[Pratt Institute]]}}
| training = [[College of Santa Fe]] (now [[Santa Fe University of Art and Design]]), [[Pratt Institute]]
| movement = [[Contemporary Art]]
| movement = [[Contemporary Art]]
| works = [[Artist]]
| patrons =
| patrons =
| influenced by =
| influenced by =
| influenced =
| influenced =
| awards = [[Trustees Award for an Emerging Artist, The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, Ridgefield, CT 1997]] [[John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship 2006]]
| awards = {{ubl|[[Guggenheim Fellowship]] 2006|[[The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum|Aldrich Museum]] trustees award 1997}}
}}
}}


'''Roxy Paine''' (born 1966,<ref name="ReferenceA"><nowiki>http://kavigupta.com/artist/roxypaine/cv</nowiki></ref> [[New York City]]) is an American painter and sculptor widely known for his installations that often convey elements of conflict between the natural word and the artificial plains man creates. He was educated at both the [[College of Santa Fe]] (now [[Santa Fe University of Art and Design]]) in New Mexico and the [[Pratt Institute]] in New York.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://archive.beelergallery.org/roxy-paine-2/|title=Roxy Paine|date=2016-10-13|website=Beeler Gallery Roxy Paine Comments|accessdate=2019-04-23}}</ref>
'''Roxy Paine''' (born 1966, [[New York City]])<ref name="Museum of Modern Art"/> is an American painter and sculptor widely known for his installations that often convey elements of conflict between the natural world and the artificial plains man creates. He was educated at both the [[College of Santa Fe]] (now [[Santa Fe University of Art and Design]]) in New Mexico and the [[Pratt Institute]] in New York.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://archive.beelergallery.org/roxy-paine-2/|title=Roxy Paine|date=2016-10-13|website=Beeler Gallery Roxy Paine Comments|accessdate=2019-04-23}}</ref>


Since 1990, Paine's works have been exhibited in major collections and galleries across the United States, Germany, Sweden, England, the Netherlands, and Israel. His most reviewed exhibitions include ''Replicants, Machines, Dendroids,'' and ''Dioramas''. Paine is represented by Paul Kasmin Gallery in New York [http://kavigupta.com/ The Kavi Gupta Gallery] of Chicago & Berlin, and by the [[Marianne Boesky Gallery]] in New York.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.marianneboeskygallery.com/artists |title = Artists - Marianne Boesky Gallery - Chelsea & Aspen Art Gallery}}</ref> Roxy Paine currently lives and works in [[Brooklyn]] and [[Treadwell, New York]].
Since 1990, Paine's works have been exhibited in major collections and galleries across the United States, Germany, Sweden, England, the Netherlands, and Israel. His most reviewed exhibitions include ''Replicants, Machines, Dendroids,'' and ''Dioramas''. Roxy Paine currently lives and works in [[Brooklyn]] and [[Treadwell, New York]].


== Biography ==
== Biography ==
Paine was born in New York City and raised in the suburbs of northern Virginia. Throughout his childhood, he spent his free time exploring the wooded, overgrown areas of land that separated housing developments in his neighborhood. He describes his experience of growing up in suburbia as a "twisted vision of nature", his environment possessing an "overwhelming blandness". Around age 13 or 14, Paine used his local creek as a place to experiment with using drugs and alcohol. <blockquote>"There was a creek nearby when I was growing up. That's where I spent most of my time. I would constantly reroute the stream, building dams. I was mostly interested in the water. What I remember distinctly about nature in the suburbs were the borders. The natural world is totally controlled and manipulated in suburbia."</blockquote>At age 15, Paine ran away to California to live with his brother, a hiker and rock climber. His brother's "outdoor western" influence spurred them to hike places like [[Yosemite National Park|Yosemite]] and [[Joshua Tree National Park|Joshua Tree]]. Living in California helped Paine make his decision to become an artist. He moved to New Mexico and enrolled at the [[College of Santa Fe]], but he soon dropped out due to poor relations with his professors. <blockquote>"In general, the teachers hated me. I always had problems with art teachers. I don't know why. I didn't go in trying to be confrontational, but it always ended up with bad blood somehow."</blockquote>He then moved to New York and attended [[Pratt Institute]] for a time, originally as a painting major but later switching to sculpture. In addition to paintings, Paine produced unusual, functional ceramic and metal musical instruments. He eventually dropped out of Pratt, and with help from some of his colleagues, formed the artist collective [[Brand Name Damages]] in 1989.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Roxy Paine : second nature|last=Ketner, Joseph D.|date=2002|publisher=Contemporary Arts Museum|others=Herbert, Lynn M. (Lynn McLanahan), 1956-, Volk, Gregory., Paine, Roxy, 1966-, Contemporary Arts Museum., Rose Art Museum.|isbn=0936080744|location=Houston|oclc=51903098}}</ref>
Paine was born in New York City and raised in the suburbs of northern Virginia. Throughout his childhood, he spent his free time exploring the wooded, overgrown areas of land that separated housing developments in his neighborhood. He describes his experience of growing up in suburbia as a "twisted vision of nature", his environment possessing an "overwhelming blandness". Around age 13 or 14, Paine used his local creek as a place to explore. <blockquote>"There was a creek nearby when I was growing up. That's where I spent most of my time. I would constantly reroute the stream, building dams. I was mostly interested in the water. What I remember distinctly about nature in the suburbs were the borders. The natural world is totally controlled and manipulated in suburbia."</blockquote>At age 15, Paine ran away to California to live with his brother, a hiker and rock climber. His brother's "outdoor western" influence spurred them to hike places like [[Yosemite National Park|Yosemite]] and [[Joshua Tree National Park|Joshua Tree]]. Living in California helped Paine make his decision to become an artist. He moved to New Mexico and enrolled at the [[College of Santa Fe]], but he soon dropped out due to poor relations with his professors. <blockquote>"In general, the teachers hated me. I always had problems with art teachers. I don't know why. I didn't go in trying to be confrontational, but it always ended up with bad blood somehow."</blockquote>He then moved to New York and attended [[Pratt Institute]] for a time, originally as a painting major but later switching to sculpture. In addition to paintings, Paine produced unusual, functional ceramic and metal musical instruments. He eventually dropped out of Pratt, and with help from some of his colleagues, formed the artist collective [[Brand Name Damages]] in 1989.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Roxy Paine : second nature|last=Ketner, Joseph D.|date=2002|publisher=Contemporary Arts Museum|others=Herbert, Lynn M. (Lynn McLanahan), 1956-, Volk, Gregory., Paine, Roxy, 1966-, Contemporary Arts Museum., Rose Art Museum.|isbn=0936080744|location=Houston|oclc=51903098}}</ref>


<br />
==Work==
==Work==
In his body of work, Paine mirrors natural processes, drawing increasingly on the tension between organic and man-made environments, between the human desire for order and nature's drive to reproduce. His highly detailed simulations of natural phenomena include an ambitious series of hand-wrought stainless steel trees, vitrines of mushroom and plant life in various states of decay and several large-scale machines designed to replicate creative processes. Many of his works create a platform to ask aesthetic questions about art, the natural, and the unnatural world rather than answer these questions like his counterparts he ignites the flame of inquiry.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Goodman |first1=J |year=2014 |title=Dendroids, Replicants, and Sculpture Machines |journal=Sculpture |volume=33 |issue=8 |pages=24–31 }}</ref> Collectively, his works demonstrate the human attempt to impose order on natural forces, depicting the struggle between the natural and the artificial, the rational and the instinctual. Paine has said, "I'm interested in taking entities that are organic and outside of the industrial realm, feeding them into an industrial system, and seeing what results from that force-feeding. The end results are a seamless containment of these opposites."<ref>Tsien, Billie http://bombsite.com/issues/107/articles/3261 "Roxy Paine" ''[[BOMB Magazine]]'' Spring 2009, retrieved July 27, 2011</ref>
In his body of work, Paine mirrors natural processes, drawing increasingly on the tension between organic and man-made environments, between the human desire for order and nature's drive to reproduce. His highly detailed simulations of natural phenomena include an ambitious series of hand-wrought stainless steel trees, vitrines of mushroom and plant life in various states of decay and several large-scale machines designed to replicate creative processes. Many of his works create a platform to ask aesthetic questions about art, the natural, and the unnatural world. Rather than answer these questions like his counterparts, he ignites the flame of inquiry.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Goodman |first1=J |year=2014 |title=Dendroids, Replicants, and Sculpture Machines |journal=Sculpture |volume=33 |issue=8 |pages=24–31 }}</ref> Collectively, his works demonstrate the human attempt to impose order on natural forces, depicting the struggle between the natural and the artificial, the rational and the instinctual. Paine has said, "I'm interested in taking entities that are organic and outside of the industrial realm, feeding them into an industrial system, and seeing what results from that force-feeding. The end results are a seamless containment of these opposites."<ref>Tsien, Billie http://bombsite.com/issues/107/articles/3261 "Roxy Paine" ''[[BOMB Magazine]]'' Spring 2009, retrieved July 27, 2011</ref>


===Early work===
===Early work===
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''Distillation,'' as described by Hilarie Sheets in ''The New York Times,'' <blockquote>pushes the metaphoric content that underpins these sculptures to new extremes. It still uses arboreal forms, but they now mesh with other overtly defined branching systems: a vascular network of arteries and veins with two plump kidneys, mushroom colonies and their germinating mycelia, neuron bundles and taxonomic diagrams, and raw pipelines connected to steel tanks and industrial valves.<ref name="Sheets, Hilarie. 'Man of Steel's Industrial Web Mirroring Nature,' The New York Times, October 17, 2010.">[https://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/17/arts/design/17roxy.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1 Sheets, Hilarie. 'Man of Steel's Industrial Web Mirroring Nature,' The New York Times, October 17, 2010.]</ref></blockquote>
''Distillation,'' as described by Hilarie Sheets in ''The New York Times,'' <blockquote>pushes the metaphoric content that underpins these sculptures to new extremes. It still uses arboreal forms, but they now mesh with other overtly defined branching systems: a vascular network of arteries and veins with two plump kidneys, mushroom colonies and their germinating mycelia, neuron bundles and taxonomic diagrams, and raw pipelines connected to steel tanks and industrial valves.<ref name="Sheets, Hilarie. 'Man of Steel's Industrial Web Mirroring Nature,' The New York Times, October 17, 2010.">[https://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/17/arts/design/17roxy.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1 Sheets, Hilarie. 'Man of Steel's Industrial Web Mirroring Nature,' The New York Times, October 17, 2010.]</ref></blockquote>


''Ferment'' was permanently installed in April 2011 on the south lawn of The [[Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art]] in [[Kansas City, MO]]. Taking more than three years to produce, this 56-ft tall stainless steel dendroid sculpture, as described by Paine, "was trying to capture a churning, swirling force."
''Ferment'' was permanently installed in April 2011 on the south lawn of The [[Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art]] in [[Kansas City, Missouri]]. Taking more than three years to produce, this 56-foot-tall stainless steel dendroid sculpture, as described by Paine, "was trying to capture a churning, swirling force."


In June 2014, ''Symbiosis'' (2011) was installed in Philadelphia, PA in Iroquois Park, originally on temporary loan to the [[Association for Public Art]] courtesy of Paine and Marianne Boesky Gallery. In 2015, the Association for Public Art received a grant from the Daniel W. Dietrich II Trust, Inc. to acquire ''Symbiosis'', enabling the dendroid to remain in Philadelphia.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.associationforpublicart.org/artwork/symbiosis/|title=Symbiosis - Association for Public Art|newspaper=Association for Public Art|language=en-US|access-date=2017-02-02}}</ref>
In June 2014, ''Symbiosis'' (2011) was installed in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in Iroquois Park, originally on temporary loan to the [[Association for Public Art]] courtesy of Paine and Marianne Boesky Gallery. In 2015, the Association for Public Art received a grant from the Daniel W. Dietrich II Trust, Inc. to acquire ''Symbiosis'', enabling the dendroid to remain in Philadelphia.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.associationforpublicart.org/artwork/symbiosis/|title=Symbiosis - Association for Public Art|newspaper=Association for Public Art|language=en-US|access-date=2017-02-02}}</ref>


===Dioramas===
===Dioramas===
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==Gallery==
==Gallery==
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150">
<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px">
File:Roxy Paine - Inversion 02.jpg|Roxy Paine's ''Inversion'', 2008, at Billy Rose Art Garden, [[Israel Museum]]
File:PikiWiki Israel 19477 quot;Inversionquot; by Roxy Paine in Israel Muse.JPG|''Inversion'', 2008, at Billy Rose Art Garden, [[Israel Museum]]
File:One Hundred Foot Line - 05.jpg|''One Hundred Foot Line'', 2010, National Gallery of Canada
File:Graft-sculpture.JPG|Roxy Paine's ''Graft,'' 2008, at National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.nga.gov/press/2009/roxy-paine.html|title=Roxy Paine's "Graft"|website=www.nga.gov|access-date=2019-04-24}}</ref>
File:Stainless Steel Tree 2 (27636786621).jpg|''Graft'', 2008–2009, National Gallery of Art
File:Roxy Paine, Apparatus, Carcass, Install, 2013.jpg|Roxy Paine's ''Caracuss (''First Solo show ''Apparatus)'', 2013, at Kavi Gupta Gallery Chicago
<!-- Deleted image removed: File:Down Town Manhattan.jpg|Roxy Paine's ''Conjoined'', 2007, Madison Square Park, New York -->

File:Down Town Manhattan.jpg|Roxy Paine's ''Conjoined'', 2007, Madison Square Park, New York
</gallery>
</gallery>

==Selected exhibitions==
;Solo Exhibitions

2016

''Roxy Paine: Thermoplastic Flux'', [[Paul Kasmin Gallery]], New York, NY, September 15 - October 22

''Roxy Paine: Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor,'' [http://archive.beelergallery.org/roxy-paine-2/ Beeler Gallery], [[Columbus College of Art & Design]], October 13

''Roxy Paine'', [http://www.thegundgallery.org Gund Gallery], Columbus, Ohio, January - June 2016

2015<br>
''Articulated Confusion: The Drawings of Roxy Paine'', [[Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park]], Grand Rapids, MI<ref name="ReferenceA" />

2014<br>
Marianne Boesky, New York, NY<ref name="ReferenceA"/>

2013<br>
''Roxy Paine'', [[Kavi Gupta]], Chicago, September 20 - December 20, 2013<ref name="ReferenceB"/>

2011<br>
''Roxy Paine: Scumaks and Dendroids'', [[Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art]], Kansas City, MO, April 29 - August 28, 2011

2010<br>
''Roxy Paine: Distillation'', [[James Cohan Gallery]], New York, October 16 - December 11, 2010

''Roxy Paine'', [[Wanas Foundation]], Knislinge, Sweden

''Roxy Paine: Scumaks'', The Mill, Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut

2009<br>
''Roxy Paine: Dendroid Drawings and Maquettes'', [[James Cohan Gallery]], New York, May 1 - June 6, 2009

''Roxy Paine on the Roof: Maelstrom'', The [[Metropolitan Museum of Art Roof Garden]], New York, NY, April 28 - November 29, 2009
''Roxy Paine: SCUMAKS", [[James Cohan Gallery]], New York, Opened June 26, 2008''

2007<br>
''Roxy Paine'', [[Madison Square Park]], New York, NY, May 15 – December 31, 2007

2006<br>
''Roxy Paine: PMU'', curated by Bruce Guenther, [[Portland Art Museum]], Portland, OR, February 25 – May 28, 2006

2004<br>
''Roxy Paine: New Work'', [[James Cohan Gallery]], New York, January 14 – February 25, 2004

''Defunct'', [[Aspen Art Museum]], Aspen, CO, 2004

2002<br>
'Roxy Paine'', [[James Cohan Gallery]], New York, November 8 - December 22, 2002

''Scumak'', [http://www.bernardtoalegallery.com Bernard Toale Gallery], Boston

''Roxy Paine: Second Nature'', co-curated by Joseph Ketner and Lynn Herbert, Rose
Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA. Traveled to [[Contemporary Arts Museum Houston]], TX; [[SITE Santa Fe]], New Mexico; [[De Pont Museum of Contemporary Art]], Tilburg, Netherlands (April 2002 through January 2004)

2001<br>
''Roxy Paine'', [[Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami]], FL, November 11, 2001 - January 27, 2002

''Roxy Paine'', [[Grand Arts]], Kansas City, MO, June 29 - August 11, 2001

"Roxy Paine", Christopher Grimes Gallery, Los Angeles, May 26 - June 30, 2001

"Roxy Paine", [[James Cohan Gallery]], New York, April 5 - May 5, 2001

''Roxy Paine'', [https://www.galeriethomasschulte.de Galerie Thomas Schulte], Berlin, Germany, February 13 - April 20, 2001

1999<br>
"Roxy Paine", [http://www.bjorkholmengallery.com Roger Björkholmen Gallery], Stockholm, Sweden, February 26 - March 31, 1999

''Roxy Paine'', [https://feldmangallery.com Ronald Feldman Fine Arts], New York, NY, January 9 - February 13, 1999

1998<br>
''Roxy Paine'', [[Musee D'Art Americain Giverny]], Giverny, France, June 1 - November 15, 1998. Traveled to [[Lunds Kunsthall]], Lund, Sweden, March 6 - April 18, 1999

''Roxy Paine'', [[Renate Schroder Galerie]], Koln, Germany, April 24 - June 6, 1998

1997<br>
"Roxy Paine", [[Ronald Feldman Fine Arts]], New York, March 15 - April 26, 1997
"Roxy Paine", [[Temple Gallery, Tyler School of Art, Temple University]], Philadelphia, September 5 - October 11, 1997

1995<br>
''Roxy Paine'', [[Ronald Feldman Fine Arts]], New York, NY, April 29 - June 3, 1995

1992<br>
''Roxy Paine'', [[Herron Test-Site]], Brooklyn, NY, October 9 - November 8, 1992

1991<br>
''Horns'', [[The Knitting Factory]], New York, December 3–31, 1991

<br />

;Group Exhibitions

2016

''Impossible Blossom'', September 5, 2016, [[The New School]], New York, NY

''False Narratives,'' June 24 - July 31, 2016, [https://www.pierogi2000.com/2016/05/false-narratives-at-pierogi/ Pierogi], New York, NY
''Built,World'', June 7—
September 4, 2016, [[SCAD Museum of Art]], Savannah, GA

''Audacious: Contemporary Artists Speak Out'', March 2016 - February 2017, [[Denver Art Museum]], Denver CO

2015

''Social Ecologies,'' [http://curatorialprojects.brooklynrail.org Rail Curatorial Projects], December 5, 2015 - February 21, 2016, [[Industry City]], Brooklyn NY.

''Devotion,'' [[Catinca Tabacaru Gallery]]'','' Co-curated by Will Corwin, November 21, 2015 - January 17, 2016, NY, NY.

''20 Years / 20 Shows,'' [[SITE Santa Fe]], March 12 - May 31, Santa Fe, NM.

''Sweet Sensation: UConn Reads 'The Omnivore's Dilemma,'' [[William Benton Museum of Art]], February - March, curated by Jean Nihoul

2013<br>
"Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital", [[Museum of Art and Design]], New York, NY<ref name="ReferenceA"/>

2012<br>
''Lifelike'', [[Walker Art Center]], Minneapolis, MN

2011<br>
''Color in Flux'', [https://weserburg.de Weserburg Museum für moderne Kunst], Bremen, Germany<br>
''Nod Nod Wink Wink: Conceptual Art in New Mexico and Its Influences'', [[The Harwood Museum of Art]], Taos, New Mexico

2010<br>
''The Secret Life of Trees'', [[Monica de Cardenas Galleria]], Zuoz, Switzerland<br>
''Out of the Woods'', [[Leslie Tonkonow]], New York<br>
''17th Biennale of Sydney: The Beauty of Distance: Songs of Survival in a Precarious Age'', Sydney, Australia

2009<br>
''Reflection, Refraction, Reconfiguration: Mediated Images from the Collection of Polly and Mark Addison'', [[Colorado State University Art Museum|University Art Museum]], [[Colorado State University]], Fort Collins, CO<br>
''Remote Proximity: Nature in Contemporary Art'', [[Kunstmuseum Bonn]], Bonn, Germany<br>
''The Rose at Brandeis: Works From the Collection'', [[The Rose Art Museum]], Brandeis University, Waltham, MA

2008<br>
''Bending Nature'', [[Franklin Park Conservatory]], Columbus, OH<br>
''Bizarre Perfection'', [[Israel Museum]], Jerusalem, Israel<br>
''Freedom: Den Haag Sculpture 2008'', [[The Hague]], The Netherlands<br>
''Public Art Projects,'' Art Basel 39, Basel, Switzerland<br>
''Paragons: New Abstraction from the Albright-Knox Gallery'', [[Doris McCarthy Gallery]], University of Toronto Scarborough, Toronto, Ontario

2007<br>
''Delicatessen'', [[Dorothy F. Schmidt Center Gallery]], Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida<br>
''Art Machines/Machine Art'', [[Schirn Kunsthalle]], Frankfurt, Germany. Travelled to [[Museum Tinguely]], Basel, Switzerland (through July 2008)<br>
''Molecules that Matter'', [[Tang Teaching Museum]], Saratoga Springs, NY. Travelled to [[Chemical Heritage Foundation]], Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; College of Wooster Art Museum, Wooster, Ohio (through May 2009)<br>
''The Outdoor Gallery: 40 Years of Public Art in New York City Parks'', The Arsenal Gallery in Central Park, New York<br>
''Drawings from the Collection of Martina Yamin'', [[Davis Museum and Cultural Center]], Wellesley College, MA

2006<br>
''Recent Acquisitions'', [[Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal]], Montreal, Canada, October 28, 2006 - March 25, 2007<br>
''Meditations in an Emergency'', [[Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit]], MI, October 28, 2006 - April 29, 2007<br>
''A Brighter Day'', James Cohan Gallery, New York, NY<br>
''Garden Paradise'', curated by Lacy Davisson Doyle and Clare Weiss, The Arsenal Gallery in Central Park, New York, NY<br>
''American Academy Invitational Exhibition of Painting and Sculpture'', [[The American Academy of Arts and Letters]], New York, March 7 - April 9<br>
''Uneasy Nature'', curated by Xandra Eden, [[Weatherspoon Art Museum]], The University of North Carolina, Greensboro, NC, February 18 - May 28

2005<br>
''Ecstasy: In and About Altered States'', organized by Paul Schimmel with Gloria
Sutton, [[Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles]], CA<br>
''The Empire of Sighs'', [[Numark Gallery]], Washington D.C.<br>
''Extreme Abstraction'', Albright Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY<br>
''Sculpture'', James Cohan Gallery, New York<br>
''Flower Myth. Vincent van Gogh to Jeff Koons'', [[Fondation Beyeler]], Riehen/Basel, Switzerland<br>
''Material Terrain: A Sculptural Exploration of Landscape and Place'', curated by Carla Hanzal, commissioned by Laumeier Sculpture Park, St. Louis, MO. Traveling to Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History, Santa Cruz, CA; University of Arizona Museum of Art, Tucson, AZ; Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis, TN; Cheekwood Museum of Art, Nashville, TN; Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL (February 2005 through December 2007)

2004<br>
''PILLish: Harsh Realities and Gorgeous Disasters'', curated by Cydney Payton, [[Museum of Contemporary Art Denver]], Denver, CO, through January 2, 2005<br>
''Paintings That Paint Themselves, or so it seems'', [[Kresge Art Museum]], Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI<br>
''Summer Show'', James Cohan Gallery, New York<br>
''Between the Lines'', James Cohan Gallery, New York<br>
''The Flower as Image'', [[Louisiana Museum for Moderne Kunst]], Humlebaek, Denmark<br>
''Natural Histories: Realism Revisited'', Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art, Scottsdale, AZ, May 29 - September 12

2003<br>
''Work Ethic'', [[Baltimore Museum of Art]], Baltimore, Maryland, October 12, 2003 - January 11, 2004. Traveled to the [[Des Moines Center for the Arts]] May 15 - August 1, 2004<br>
''UnNaturally'', organized by Independent Curators International (ICI), curated by Mary-Kay Lombino. Traveled to Contemporary Art Museum, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL; H & R Block Artspace at the Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, MO; Fisher Gallery, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA; Copia: The American Center for Wine, Food and the Arts, Napa, CA; Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL (January 2003 through November 2004)<br>
''The Great Drawing Show 1550-2003 A.D'', Michael Kohn Gallery, Los Angeles, April 12 - May 31<br>
''Decade'', Schroeder Romero, Brooklyn, April 11 - May 19

2002<br>
''[[The Whitney Biennial]] in Central Park'', curated by Tom Eccles, organized by the
Public Art Fund, New York in collaboration with [[The Whitney Museum of American Art]], New York<br>
''Early Acclaim: Emerging Artist Award Recipients 1997-2001'', [[The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum|The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art]], Ridgefield, CT, September 22 - December 31

2001<br>
''Painting Matter'', James Cohan Gallery, New York, May 3 - June 15, 2002<br>
''2001 Brooklyn!'', [[Palm Beach Institute of Contemporary Art]], Palm Beach, FL, September 4 - November 25<br>
''Arte y Naturaleza'', Outdoor Sculpture Garden, Montenmedio Arte Contemporaneo, Cadiz, Spain, June 2 - October 2<br>
''Present Tense 6'', Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel, May - December<br>
''A Contemporary Cabinet of Curiosities - Selections from the Vicki and Kent Logan Collection'', [[California College of Arts and Crafts]], San Francisco, January 17 - March 3<br>
''Give and Take'', [[Serpentine Gallery]] in collaboration with the [[Victoria and Albert Museum]], London, January 30 - April 1<br>
''Making the Making'', Apex Art, New York, January 5 - February 3<br>
''Waterworks: U.S. Akvarell 2001'', curated by Kim Levin, [[Nordiska Akvarellmuseet]], Skarhamn, Sweden<br>
''01.01.01: Art in Technological Times'', [[San Francisco Museum of Modern Art]], San Francisco, CA<br>
''All-Terrain'', [[Contemporary Art Center of Virginia]], Virginia Beach, VA

2000<br>
''From a Distance: Approaching Landscape'', curated by Jessica Morgan, [[Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston]], MA<br>
''WILDflowers'', [[Katonah Museum of Art]], Katonah, NY, July 28 - October 3<br>
''Working in Brooklyn: Beyond Technology'', [[Brooklyn Museum of Art]], Brooklyn, NY, July 1 - September 12<br>
''5th Lyon Biennale of Contemporary Art: Sharing Exoticism'', [[Lyon Biennale]], Lyon, France, June 27 - September 24<br>
''Vision Ruhr'', Dortmund Coal Factory, Dortmund, Germany, May 11 - August 20<br>
''The Greenhouse Effect'', Serpentine Gallery, London, April 4 - May 21<br>
''Sites Around the City: Art and Environment'', curated by Heather Sealy Lineberry, Arizona State University Art Museum, Tempe, AZ, March 4 - June 4<br>
''Greater New York: New Art in New York Now'', [[PS1 Contemporary Art Center]] in collaboration with the [[Museum of Modern Art]], New York, February 27 - April 16<br>
''Visionary Landscape'', Christopher Grimes Gallery, Santa Monica, CA, January 8 - February 19. Travelled to The End, [[Exit Art]]/The First World, New York, January 29 - April 8<br>
''As Far As the Eye Can See'', [[Atlanta College of Art Gallery]], Atlanta, GA, January 29 - March 7

1999<br>
''Best of the Season: Selected Work from the 1998-99 Gallery Season'', [[The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum]], Ridgefield, CT, September 26 - January 9, 1999

1998<br>
''Interlacings: The Craft of Contemporary Art'', [[Whitney Museum of American Art]] at Champion, Stamford, CT, September 10 - November 21<br>
''22/21'', Emily Lowe Gallery/Hofstra Museum, Hempstead, NY, September 8 - October 25<br>
''Elise Goodheart Fine Art'', Sag Harbor, NY, July 24 - August 16<br>
''DNA Gallery'', Provincetown, MA, July 17 - August 5<br>
''Nine International Artists at Wanas, 1998'', [[Wanas Foundation]], Knislinge, Sweden, May 24 - August 18<br>
''Landscapes'', Meyerson & Nowinski, Seattle, WA, January 8 - March 1

1997<br>
''Redefinitions, A View From Brooklyn'', California State University, Fullerton, CA, November 9 - December 11<br>
''Sculpture'', James Graham & Sons, New York, July 10 - August 29<br>
''Summer of Love'', [[Fotouhi Cramer Gallery]], New York, July 2 - August 2<br>
''Artists Respond to 2001: Space Odyssey'', [[Williamsburg Arts and Historical Society]], Brooklyn, June 21 - July 26<br>
''Benefit for Pat Hearn'', [[Morris-Healey Gallery]], New York, February 26 - March 9<br>
''9 to 5 at Metrotech: New Commissions for the Common'', The [[Public Art Fund]], Brooklyn, NY, October 30, 1997 - May 31, 1998<br>
''Best of the Season 1996-97'', [[The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum|The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art]], Ridgefield, CT, September 14 - January 4, 1997<br>
''Current Undercurrent: Working in Brooklyn'', [[Brooklyn Museum of Art]], Brooklyn, July 25, 1997 - January 25, 1998

1996<br>
''Imaginary Beings'', [[Exit Art]]/The First World, New York, December 2 - January 27, 1996<br>
''Art on Paper'', [[Weatherspoon Art Gallery]], The University of North Carolina, Greensboro, NC, November 12 - January 21, 1996<br>
''Human/Nature'', The [[New Museum of Contemporary Art]], New York, NY, April 20 - May 18<br>
''Better Living Through Chemistry'', [[Randolph Street Gallery]], Chicago, March - April, 1996<br>
''Momenta Art'', Inside Out, Brooklyn, September 15 - October 7, 1996<br>
''Currents in Contemporary Art'', [[Christie's East]], New York, July 22–31, 1996<br>
''Inside: The Work of Art'', [[California Center for the Arts]], Escondido, CA, June 16 - October 13, 1996<br>
''Wish You Were Here'', [[Bronwyn Keenan Gallery]], New York, March 1–30, 1996<br>
''New York State Biennial'', [[New York State Museum]], Albany, NY, February 8 - May 26, 1996<br>
''NY Withdrawing'', [[Ronald Feldman Fine Arts]], New York, January 13 - February 17, 1996<br>
''Multiples'', [[Pierogi 2000]], Brooklyn, NY, December 2, 1995 - January 15, 1996

1995<br>
''Lookin' Good-Feelin''', [[450 Broadway Gallery]], New York, December 5–9, 1995

1994<br>
''Red Windows: Benefit for Little Red School House'', [[Barneys]] Windows, November - December, 1994<br>
''Spring Benefit'', Sculpture Center, New York, April 19, 1994<br>
''Garden of Sculptural Delights'', [[Exit Art]]/The First World, New York, NY, March 2 - April 23, 1994<br>
''Free Falling'', [[Berlin Shafir Gallery]], New York, January 22 - February 19, 1994

1993<br>
''UNTITLED (14)'', [[Ronald Feldman Fine Arts]], New York, November 13 - December 23, 1993<br>
''INFLUX'', [[Gallery 400]], Chicago, November 3 - December 4, 1993<br>
''4 Walls Benefit'', [[David Zwirner Gallery]], New York, November 1993<br>
''Fantastic Wandering'', [[Cummings Art Center]], New London, CT, October 9 - November 10, 1993<br>
''Extracts'', [[Islip Art Museum]], Islip, NY, August 8 - September 19, 1993<br>
''Real Art Ways'', Popular Mechanics, Hartford, CT, June 19 - July 16, 1993<br>
''Outside Possibilities '93'', The Rushmore Festival at Woodbury, New York, June 5 - July 4, 1993<br>
''The Nature of the Machine'', [[Chicago Cultural Center]], Chicago, April 3 - May 30, 1993<br>
''Out of Town: The Williamsburg Paradigm'', [[Krannert Art Museum]], University of Illinois, Champaign, IL, January 22- February 28, 1993

1992<br>
''Fever'', [[Exit Art]], New York, December 14, 1992 - February 6, 1993

1991<br>
''Group'', [[Jimenez-Algus Gallery]], Brooklyn, September 13 - October 13, 1991<br>
''Generator 547'', Entropy, New York, August 2 - September 5, 1991<br>
''Tweeking the Human'', [[Brand Name Damages]] and Minor Injury Galleries, Brooklyn, June 7–31, 1991<br>
''The Ego Show'', [[Minor Injury Gallery]], Brooklyn, April 5 - May 2, 1991

1990<br>
''Desire and Deception'', Brand Name Damages, Brooklyn, October 9–21, 1990<br>
''Group Show'', [[Ridge Street Gallery]], New York, September 3–26, 1990<br>
''Roxy Paine and David Fasoldt'', [[Brand Name Damages]], Brooklyn, NY, March 29 - April 6, 1990


==Awards==
==Awards==
*Roxy Paine was awarded by the [[Guggenheim fellowship|John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship]] in 2006.
*Roxy Paine was awarded by the [[Guggenheim fellowship|John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship]] in 2006.<ref name="Artforum">{{cite web |last1= |first1= |title=2006 Guggenheim Fellows Announced |url=https://www.artforum.com/news/2006-guggenheim-fellows-announced-173916/ |website=Artforum |access-date=3 November 2023 |date=12 April 2006}}</ref>
*He also received a Trustees Award for an Emerging Artist by, [[The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum|The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art]], Ridgefield, CT in 1997.
*He also received a Trustees Award for an Emerging Artist by, [[The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum|The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art]], Ridgefield, CT in 1997.


Line 381: Line 98:
The artist Roxy Paine contributed many of his works to the following locations:
The artist Roxy Paine contributed many of his works to the following locations:


*City of Beverly Hills, CA<ref name="Beverly Hills Courier">{{cite web |last1=Crews |first1=Cameron |title=City of Style: Beverly Hills Shows Off its Public Art |url=https://beverlyhillscourier.com/2021/06/11/city-of-style-beverly-hills-shows-off-its-public-art/ |website=Beverly Hills Courier |access-date=4 November 2023 |date=11 June 2021}}</ref>
*City of Beverly Hills, CA
*Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AR<ref name="James Cohan">{{cite web |title=Roxy Paine: Yield at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art |url=https://www.jamescohan.com/news/roxy-paine-yield-at-crystal-bridges-museum-of-american-art |website=James Cohan |access-date=4 November 2023 |language=en}}</ref>
*Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AR
*De Pont Museum of Contemporary Art, Tilburg, The Netherlands
*De Pont Museum of Contemporary Art, Tilburg, The Netherlands<ref name="Museum De Pont">{{cite web |title=Roxy Paine New York USA 1966, lives and works in New York |url=https://depont.nl/en/collection/artist/roxy-paine |website=Museum De Pont |access-date=4 November 2023}}</ref>
*Denver Art Museum, Denver, CO<ref name="Denver Art Museum">{{cite web |title=Vibrating Field |url=https://www.denverartmuseum.org/en/object/2001.806a-f |website=Denver Art Museum |access-date=4 November 2023}}</ref>
*Denver Art Museum, Denver, CO
*Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park, Grand Rapids, MI
*Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park, Grand Rapids, MI<ref name="Frederik Meijer Gardens">{{cite web |title=Neuron - Meijer Gardens |url=https://www.meijergardens.org/sculpture/neuron/ |website=Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park |access-date=4 November 2023 |date=6 October 2023}}</ref>
*Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.
*Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.
*Il Giardino Dei Lauri, Città della Pieve (PG), Italy
*Il Giardino Dei Lauri, Città della Pieve (PG), Italy
*Israel Museum, Jerusalem<ref name="The Israel Museum, Jerusalem">{{cite web |title=Inversion |url=https://www.imj.org.il/en/artistec/roxy-paine |website=The Israel Museum, Jerusalem |access-date=4 November 2023}}</ref>
*Israel Museum, Jerusalem
*Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, TX<ref name="Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth">{{cite web |title=Conjoined |url=https://collection.themodern.org/objects/2276/conjoined;jsessionid=E697BBDCAAB4326365493D7E0863F7F5 |website=Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth |access-date=4 November 2023 |language=en}}</ref>
*Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, TX
*Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY<ref name="Museum of Modern Art">{{cite web |title=Roxy Paine |url=https://www.moma.org/artists/25415 |website=Museum of Modern Art |access-date=4 November 2023}}</ref>
*Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY
*National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.
*National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.<ref name="National Gallery of Art">{{cite web |title=Roxy Paine's "Graft" |url=https://www.nga.gov/press/2009/roxy-paine.html |website=National Gallery of Art |access-date=4 November 2023}}</ref>
*National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, ON<ref name="National Gallery of Canada2">{{cite web |title=One Hundred Foot Line |url=https://www.gallery.ca/collection/artwork/one-hundred-foot-line |website=National Gallery of Canada |access-date=4 November 2023}}</ref>
*National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, ON
*Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO<ref name="Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art">{{cite web |title=Ferment |url=https://art.nelson-atkins.org/objects/56321 |website=Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art |access-date=4 November 2023 |language=en}}</ref>
*Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO
*The New School for Social Research, New York, NY
*The New School for Social Research, New York, NY
*North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, NC<ref name="North Carolina Museum of Art">{{cite web |title=Artist: Roxy Paine |url=https://ncartmuseum.org/artist/roxy-paine/ |website=North Carolina Museum of Art |access-date=4 November 2023}}</ref>
*North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, NC
*Fundación NMAC, Cadiz, Spain
*Fundación NMAC, Cadiz, Spain
*Olympic Sculpture Park, Seattle Art Museum, WA<ref name="Seattle Art Museum">{{cite web |title=Split |url=https://art.seattleartmuseum.org/people/12842/roxy-paine;jsessionid=38D94D865BD5C6CBB7E0F7BFBB2987E1/objects |website=Seattle Art Museum |access-date=4 November 2023}}</ref>
*Olympic Sculpture Park, Seattle Art Museum, WA
*Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA<ref name="The Rose Art Museum">{{cite web |title=PMU No. 10 |url=https://rosecollection.brandeis.edu/objects-1/info?query=Exhibitions%3D%2245%22%20and%20Disp_Obj_Type%3D%22Painting%22%20and%20Disp_Maker_1%3D%22Roxy%20Paine%22&sort=9 |website=The Rose Art Museum {{!}} Brandeis University |access-date=4 November 2023}}</ref>
*Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA
*Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, MO<ref name="Saint Louis Art Museum">{{cite web |title=Placebo |url=https://www.slam.org/collection/objects/42222/ |website=Saint Louis Art Museum |access-date=4 November 2023}}</ref>
*Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, MO
*San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, CA
*San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, CA<ref name="SFMOMA">{{cite web |title=Paine, Roxy |url=https://www.sfmoma.org/artist/Roxy_Paine/ |website=SFMOMA |access-date=4 November 2023}}</ref>
*Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE
*Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE<ref name="Sheldon Museum of Art">{{cite web |title=Paine, Breach |url=https://sheldonartmuseum.org/work/paine-breach |website=Sheldon Museum of Art |access-date=4 November 2023}}</ref>
*Wanas Foundation, Knislinge, Sweden
*Wanas Foundation, Knislinge, Sweden
*Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY<ref name="Whitney Museum of American Art">{{cite web |title=Roxy Paine |url=https://whitney.org/artists/7976 |website=Whitney Museum of American Art |access-date=4 November 2023 |language=en}}</ref>
*Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY


==See also==
==See also==
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==External links==
==External links==
{{commons category|Roxy Paine}}
* {{Commons cat inline|Roxy Paine}}
*[http://curatorialprojects.brooklynrail.org Brooklyn Rail Curatorial Projects]
*[https://www.pierogi2000.com/2016/05/false-narratives-at-pierogi/ False Narratives at Pierogi]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20131214042356/http://kavigupta.com/artist/roxypaine Kavi Gupta CHICAGO | BERLIN]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20131005022519/http://www.marianneboeskygallery.com/artists/roxy-paine_1/works Marianne Boesky Gallery]
*[http://www.jamescohan.com/artists/roxy-paine/ James Cohan Gallery]
*[https://www.madisonsquarepark.org/Programs/Roxy_Paine.aspx Roxy Paine in Madison Square Park]
*[http://www.publicartfund.org/pafweb/projects/02/whitney_biennial/whitney_biennial_paine_02.html Public Art Fund: Whitney Biennial in Central Park, 2002]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20101124034805/http://www.gallery.ca/roxypaine/en/index.htm National Gallery of Canada: Roxy Paine - One Hundred Foot Line, 2010]
*[http://www.artinfo.com/articles/story/9448 Interview with Roxy Paine at ARTINFO.com]
*[https://www.academia.edu/9617911/Conversation_between_Roxy_Paine_and_Allan_McCollum_2004 Conversation between Roxy Paine and Allan McCollum]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20080526022930/http://www.fundacionnmac.org/english/coleccion.php?id=74 Roxy Paine at NMAC Foundation]
*[http://www.metmuseum.org/special/se_event.asp?OccurrenceId=%7B6267CA47-491B-4776-A468-0673F8362B0F%7D Maelstrom at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY]
*[https://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/24/arts/design/24roof.html Ken Johnson's review of Maelstrom, The New York Times]
*[https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/10/29/AR2009102905219.html Blake Gopnik's review of Graft, National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden, The Washington Post]
*[https://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/17/arts/design/17roxy.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1 Hilarie Sheet's feature 'Man of Steel's Industrial Web Mirroring Nature,' The New York Times.]


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Paine, Roxy}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Paine, Roxy}}
[[Category:American sculptors]]
[[Category:20th-century American sculptors]]
[[Category:Contemporary sculptors]]
[[Category:Contemporary sculptors]]
[[Category:Pratt Institute alumni]]
[[Category:Pratt Institute alumni]]
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[[Category:1966 births]]
[[Category:1966 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:21st-century American sculptors]]

Latest revision as of 20:49, 8 November 2024

Roxy Paine
Born1966 (age 57–58)
Education
Known forSculpture, painting
MovementContemporary Art
Awards

Roxy Paine (born 1966, New York City)[1] is an American painter and sculptor widely known for his installations that often convey elements of conflict between the natural world and the artificial plains man creates. He was educated at both the College of Santa Fe (now Santa Fe University of Art and Design) in New Mexico and the Pratt Institute in New York.[2]

Since 1990, Paine's works have been exhibited in major collections and galleries across the United States, Germany, Sweden, England, the Netherlands, and Israel. His most reviewed exhibitions include Replicants, Machines, Dendroids, and Dioramas. Roxy Paine currently lives and works in Brooklyn and Treadwell, New York.

Biography

[edit]

Paine was born in New York City and raised in the suburbs of northern Virginia. Throughout his childhood, he spent his free time exploring the wooded, overgrown areas of land that separated housing developments in his neighborhood. He describes his experience of growing up in suburbia as a "twisted vision of nature", his environment possessing an "overwhelming blandness". Around age 13 or 14, Paine used his local creek as a place to explore.

"There was a creek nearby when I was growing up. That's where I spent most of my time. I would constantly reroute the stream, building dams. I was mostly interested in the water. What I remember distinctly about nature in the suburbs were the borders. The natural world is totally controlled and manipulated in suburbia."

At age 15, Paine ran away to California to live with his brother, a hiker and rock climber. His brother's "outdoor western" influence spurred them to hike places like Yosemite and Joshua Tree. Living in California helped Paine make his decision to become an artist. He moved to New Mexico and enrolled at the College of Santa Fe, but he soon dropped out due to poor relations with his professors.

"In general, the teachers hated me. I always had problems with art teachers. I don't know why. I didn't go in trying to be confrontational, but it always ended up with bad blood somehow."

He then moved to New York and attended Pratt Institute for a time, originally as a painting major but later switching to sculpture. In addition to paintings, Paine produced unusual, functional ceramic and metal musical instruments. He eventually dropped out of Pratt, and with help from some of his colleagues, formed the artist collective Brand Name Damages in 1989.[3]

Work

[edit]

In his body of work, Paine mirrors natural processes, drawing increasingly on the tension between organic and man-made environments, between the human desire for order and nature's drive to reproduce. His highly detailed simulations of natural phenomena include an ambitious series of hand-wrought stainless steel trees, vitrines of mushroom and plant life in various states of decay and several large-scale machines designed to replicate creative processes. Many of his works create a platform to ask aesthetic questions about art, the natural, and the unnatural world. Rather than answer these questions like his counterparts, he ignites the flame of inquiry.[4] Collectively, his works demonstrate the human attempt to impose order on natural forces, depicting the struggle between the natural and the artificial, the rational and the instinctual. Paine has said, "I'm interested in taking entities that are organic and outside of the industrial realm, feeding them into an industrial system, and seeing what results from that force-feeding. The end results are a seamless containment of these opposites."[5]

Early work

[edit]

Paine began showing his work in Williamsburg, Brooklyn in 1990 and 1991 at an artist run collective called Brand Name Damages (which he helped to found) and he had his first solo exhibition at the short-lived Herron Test-Site in October 1992. His early work consisted of kinetic and time-based sculptures such as Viscous Pult, 1990, which consisted of a paint brush smearing ketchup, white paint and motor oil on the gallery space's front window; and Displaced Sink, 1992, which had a leaking pipe in the ceiling dripping water on a tall stack of soap bars, leaving a pool of semi-liquid soap to collect on the gallery floor.[6]

Roxy Paine's Dinner of the Dictators, 1993-95.

His next solo exhibition was at Ronald Feldman Gallery in 1995, and it included other kinetic works, but the central and most critically acclaimed work was a piece called Dinner of the Dictators, 1993–95, a vitrine enclosing the taxidermied favorite meals of infamous dictators, ranging from Genghis Khan and Adolf Hitler to Napoleon Bonaparte and Suharto. The research alone took eight months, and overall, the work took two years to produce, opening Paine to new approaches and processes in his work.[7]

From this point onward, Paine's work separated into a few distinct but nevertheless related categories. The first involves naturalistic works: minutely precise reproductions of natural objects like mushrooms, leafy plants or poppies. A second category consists of machine-based works: he has devised a number of conceptually-challenging art-making machines, like the SCUMAK (Auto Sculpture Maker), 1998, PMU (Painting Manufacturing Unit), 1999–2000,[8] and the Erosion Machine, 2005. Bridging the gap between the naturalistic and mechanized works, Paine also creates large-scale stainless steel trees and boulders of varying sizes (ranging from 8 – 50 feet in height).

Replicants

[edit]
Roxy Paine's Amanita Field, 2001, installed in Germany.

Paine's vitrines and botanical works often feature replicas of plants that have been discovered as extremely poisonous or have been used by humans for experimental hallucinogenic or drug experiences. The living plants are cast and subsequently rendered in thermoset polymers, paint, lacquer, and epoxy, among other materials. Crop, 1997–98, shows a field of poppies, with ripened pods exposing the evidence of raw opium being readied for harvest. The piece embodies the shifting views of the beauty of a field of wild flowers and the grave potential of drug addiction.[9] Amanita Muscaria Field, 2000, shows a field of psychoactive mushrooms that appear as if they are sprouting from the gallery floor. This field might present multiple readings: are these works a hallucinogenic vision on their own or do they represent the plant life that offers the possibility of arriving at that vision? Another related series of works is that of the Dead Amanita vitrines, lifelike mushrooms seem to be decaying under glass. The genus Amanita is a group of poisonous and psychoactive mushrooms that has some species that are among the deadliest if ingested by humans.

Roxy Paine's Datura 2, 2006

Another example is the leafy plant genus Datura, which has long been used as a poison and hallucinogen; many species are known by common names such as Hell's Bells or Devil's weed. Paine's re-creation of various species of Datura take on a state of potential, presenting us with a deceptively simple plant that nonetheless contains complex molecules that can give rise to an altered state of consciousness.

Machines

[edit]

Removing the artist's hand in the creative process and replacing it with a computer program is the crux of Paine's machine-based works. His first art-making machine, Paint Dipper, 1997, employed a steel armature that continuously dipped canvases into a vat of paint over the course of time, creating works that collect latex paint stalactites along the bottom edge. SCUMAK (Auto Sculpture Maker), 1998–2001, melts plastic with pigments and periodically extrudes them onto a conveyor belt, creating bulbous shaped sculptures that are each unique.

Roxy Paine's SCUMAK 2, 2001, installed at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Detroit, 2007.

PMU (Painting Manufacturing Unit), from 1999–2000, involves a metal painting arm that is programmed to expel white paint onto a canvas according to specific instructions programmed into the machine. The resulting works often can evoke landscapes or possibly layers of geological sediment.

Most recently, Paine introduced his Erosion Machine, 2005, which consists of a robotic arm that traces and cuts patterns into large blocks of stone. The course of the arm's movement is determined by data sets, such as weather conditions and school test results. The work suggests the corrosive effects of human imposition on the environment while at the same time represents the transformation of the banal into the beautiful.

About the SCUMAK (Auto Sculpture Maker), art historian Jonathan Fineburg wrote that "The beauty of the machine and the eccentricity of the results are also a paean to the romantic. Paine positions both his gardens and his machines at a fluid interface of man, nature, and science; they take the viewer to an intuitive experience of the liminal place at which scientists have arrived as they begin to redesign the human genome and connect living neurons with silicon chips."[10]

Dendroids

[edit]

Paine uses both mechanical means and the innate logic of natural forms to create his "Dendroid" tree-like sculptures. Paine's meticulous research and observation of a variety of tree species help him to understand the "language" of how a tree grows, and from there he creates fictional tree species that grow to a logic of their own. Paine has said:

I've processed the idea of a tree and created a system for its form. I take this organic majestic being and break it down into components and rules. The branches are translated into pipe and rod.[11]

Employing the language that he has invented pertaining to each of these fictive species, Paine's trees are "grown" through a laborious process of welding together the cylindrical piping and rods of diminishing size.[12] He has also described his aims with the Dendroids series by saying, "I have been seeking to expand the edges of the language, and send the work outward into those edges. Essentially, I am establishing the rules of a language, only to then break those rules."[13]

The first of these dendroids was Impostor, 1999, now at the Wanas Foundation, in Knislinge, Sweden. He has gone on to create 25 of these sculptures, including Bluff, 2002, which premiered in New York's Central Park during the Whitney Biennial in 2002, and the very ambitious Conjoined, 2007, recently on display in Manhattan's Madison Square Park (through December 31, 2007). Conjoined is a 40 ft tall by 45 ft wide sculpture of two trees whose branches cantilever in space and connect in mid air. Paine creates two different fictional tree species where each branch from one tree joins with a branch from the other. For the observer, it is unclear where one tree begins and the other ends. "Conjoined" was acquired in 2008 by and is on display at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth.

Paine's recent sculpture, Inversion, 2008, was installed in the Public Art Projects section of Art Basel 39, in Basel, Switzerland in June 2008. It was also part of FREEDOM: Den Haag Sculptuur 2008 in The Hague, Netherlands through August 2008.

Maelstrom, 2009, was on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art from April 28 - November 29, 2009[14] and Graft, 2009 was installed at the National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden in Washington, DC, in the fall of 2009. When asked about Maelstrom Paine described it as existing on five "levels" at once:

"On one level, it's a forest that has been downed by an unseen force—a force of nature or, perhaps, a force of man. I also want the sculpture to be the force itself, a swirling, churning force. The word 'maelstrom' actually has a Dutch root; it literally means 'grinding stream,' ... The third state is trees in the state of becoming abstractions. There are areas with recognizable tree parts and then others where representation is stretching, breaking apart, and coalescing again ... I want the fourth state of trance to be a pipeline in a factory that's run amuck. This is getting back to the root of the material, so to speak, which is purely industrial. Here the piece is embracing its source. And, finally, the fifth state is that of a mental storm, or what I envision happens during an epileptic seizure."

Distillation, 2010, was on view at James Cohan Gallery in New York from October 16 - December 11, 2010,[15] and One Hundred Foot Line, 2010, was installed permanently at the National Gallery of Canada, in Ottawa, Ontario.[16] Distillation, as described by Hilarie Sheets in The New York Times,

pushes the metaphoric content that underpins these sculptures to new extremes. It still uses arboreal forms, but they now mesh with other overtly defined branching systems: a vascular network of arteries and veins with two plump kidneys, mushroom colonies and their germinating mycelia, neuron bundles and taxonomic diagrams, and raw pipelines connected to steel tanks and industrial valves.[17]

Ferment was permanently installed in April 2011 on the south lawn of The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri. Taking more than three years to produce, this 56-foot-tall stainless steel dendroid sculpture, as described by Paine, "was trying to capture a churning, swirling force."

In June 2014, Symbiosis (2011) was installed in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in Iroquois Park, originally on temporary loan to the Association for Public Art courtesy of Paine and Marianne Boesky Gallery. In 2015, the Association for Public Art received a grant from the Daniel W. Dietrich II Trust, Inc. to acquire Symbiosis, enabling the dendroid to remain in Philadelphia.[18]

Dioramas

[edit]

In September 2013 Paine debuted the first two installations of a new series of work utilizing large-scale dioramas. The two installations were revealed in an exhibition at the Kavi Gupta gallery in Chicago.[19] The new pieces, meticulously carved from wood, are life-size replicas of a fast-food restaurant and a control room, respectively.

The new work draws from a complex dialog of Western and Eastern philosophies which both embrace and deconstruct the values and conceptual core of Paine's earlier work. Christian Viveros-Faune, in an interview with Paine,[20] discussed Paine's interests in the Japanese philosophical aesthetic of Wabi-Sabi, which emphasizes the beauty within natural and unpredictable flaws. Paine also told Viveros-Faune of an interest in Poststructuralism and the theories of Michel Foucault on Episteme, as described by Paine[21]-

"I have been very influenced by Foucault's idea of the episteme, the knowledge structure and base of an era which determines what kind of questions can and cannot be asked at any point in time. I think it is particularly pertinent at this moment when the amount of information is so vast, and access to it so instantaneous; yet the kinds of questions being asked feel throttled and narrow, a retreat into the comforts of each person's hyper-specialized realm of knowledge."[20]

Paine further discussed his interest in the new work as a manifestation of "A copy of a copy of a copy," which could be connected Foucault's fellow poststructuralist, Jean Baudrillard.

[edit]

Awards

[edit]

Public collections

[edit]

The artist Roxy Paine contributed many of his works to the following locations:

  • City of Beverly Hills, CA[23]
  • Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AR[24]
  • De Pont Museum of Contemporary Art, Tilburg, The Netherlands[25]
  • Denver Art Museum, Denver, CO[26]
  • Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park, Grand Rapids, MI[27]
  • Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.
  • Il Giardino Dei Lauri, Città della Pieve (PG), Italy
  • Israel Museum, Jerusalem[28]
  • Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, TX[29]
  • Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY[1]
  • National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.[30]
  • National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, ON[31]
  • Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO[32]
  • The New School for Social Research, New York, NY
  • North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, NC[33]
  • Fundación NMAC, Cadiz, Spain
  • Olympic Sculpture Park, Seattle Art Museum, WA[34]
  • Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA[35]
  • Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, MO[36]
  • San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, CA[37]
  • Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE[38]
  • Wanas Foundation, Knislinge, Sweden
  • Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY[39]

See also

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  • Fig, Joe (2015). Inside the artist's studio. ISBN 978-1-61689-468-9. OCLC 923017419.
  • Heartney, Eleanor; Paine, Roxy (2009). Roxy Paine. Prestel. ISBN 978-3-7913-4137-8. OCLC 294884961.
  • Paine, Roxy; Schall, Jan (2011). Roxy Paine: Ferment. ISBN 978-0-615-43782-8. OCLC 699379092.

References

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  1. ^ a b "Roxy Paine". Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  2. ^ "Roxy Paine". Beeler Gallery Roxy Paine Comments. 2016-10-13. Retrieved 2019-04-23.
  3. ^ Ketner, Joseph D. (2002). Roxy Paine : second nature. Herbert, Lynn M. (Lynn McLanahan), 1956-, Volk, Gregory., Paine, Roxy, 1966-, Contemporary Arts Museum., Rose Art Museum. Houston: Contemporary Arts Museum. ISBN 0936080744. OCLC 51903098.
  4. ^ Goodman, J (2014). "Dendroids, Replicants, and Sculpture Machines". Sculpture. 33 (8): 24–31.
  5. ^ Tsien, Billie http://bombsite.com/issues/107/articles/3261 "Roxy Paine" BOMB Magazine Spring 2009, retrieved July 27, 2011
  6. ^ Volk, Gregory. 'Roxy Paine: Dreams and Mathematics' in Roxy Paine: Second Nature, 2002. Page 27, Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston and Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA.
  7. ^ Volk, Gregory. Page 28-29.
  8. ^ Tan, Lin (2001). "Roxy Paine June 29 - August 11, 2001". Grand Arts, Kansas City, Missouri. Archived from the original on April 27, 2007.
  9. ^ Volk, Gregory. Page 33.
  10. ^ Fineburg, Jonathan. Art Since 1940: Strategies of Being, Second Edition, 2000. Page 498-499, Harry N. Abrams, Publishers, New York, NY.
  11. ^ Roxy Paine, interviewed by Allan McCollum. Bluff catalogue, 2002, Page 24. Public Art Fund and James Cohan Gallery.
  12. ^ Neil, Jonathan T.D. 'Do Androids Dream of Making Art? Roxy Paine's Robot Artworks and Artificial Environments Ask Just that Question' in Art Review, August 2006.
  13. ^ Tsien, Billie http://bombsite.com/issues/107/articles/3261 "Roxy Paine" BOMB Magazine Spring 2009, retrieved July 27, 2011
  14. ^ Metropolitan Museum website
  15. ^ "James Cohan Gallery:Distillation". Archived from the original on 2010-11-07. Retrieved 2010-10-27.
  16. ^ Sheets, Hilarie. 'Man of Steel's Industrial Web Mirroring Nature,' The New York Times, October 17, 2010.
  17. ^ "Symbiosis - Association for Public Art". Association for Public Art. Retrieved 2017-02-02.
  18. ^ "Kavi Gupta Gallery". Archived from the original on 2015-07-09. Retrieved 2015-04-24.
  19. ^ a b "Kavi Gupta Gallery". Archived from the original on 2014-01-08. Retrieved 2013-10-15.
  20. ^ "Kavi Gupta Gallery". Archived from the original on 2014-05-28. Retrieved 2013-10-23.
  21. ^ "2006 Guggenheim Fellows Announced". Artforum. 12 April 2006. Retrieved 3 November 2023.
  22. ^ Crews, Cameron (11 June 2021). "City of Style: Beverly Hills Shows Off its Public Art". Beverly Hills Courier. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  23. ^ "Roxy Paine: Yield at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art". James Cohan. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  24. ^ "Roxy Paine New York USA 1966, lives and works in New York". Museum De Pont. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  25. ^ "Vibrating Field". Denver Art Museum. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  26. ^ "Neuron - Meijer Gardens". Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park. 6 October 2023. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  27. ^ "Inversion". The Israel Museum, Jerusalem. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  28. ^ "Conjoined". Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  29. ^ "Ferment". Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  30. ^ "Artist: Roxy Paine". North Carolina Museum of Art. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  31. ^ "Split". Seattle Art Museum. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  32. ^ "PMU No. 10". The Rose Art Museum | Brandeis University. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  33. ^ "Placebo". Saint Louis Art Museum. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  34. ^ "Paine, Roxy". SFMOMA. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  35. ^ "Paine, Breach". Sheldon Museum of Art. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  36. ^ "Roxy Paine". Whitney Museum of American Art. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
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