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Terence Koh

20110822225014-ryan-p911 Fight This Generation   Pick-button
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Dan Colen, Terence Koh, Hanna Liden, Nate Lowman, Adam McEwen, Ryan McGinley, Agathe Snow, Dash Snow, Aaron Young at OHWOW Los Angeles June 30th, 2011 - August 27th, 2011
Posted 8/22/11

It may be true, as OHWOW's press release breathlessly claims, that theirs is “a group exhibition distinct of a decade and definitive of era,” but if so, it's an era that, thus defined, is distinguished mainly by its forgettability. Poorly curated, with equally little to offer to fans of the nine artists represented in the show as to the uninitiated, Post 9/11 fails to make the case for the significance of the ten or so post-millennial years of New York art-making with which it's concerned.The... [more]

20110220191640-koh_nothingtoodoo Life in the Fast Lane   Pick-button
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Terence Koh at Mary Boone Gallery - 24th St. February 12th, 2011 - March 19th, 2011
Posted 2/20/11

Mary Boone’s bookshelves, usually occupied by a panoply of big art books, are barren. In fact, the only object in Mary Boone’s Chelsea gallery, besides the gallerist’s desk and phone in the anteroom, is a heaping mound of sodium chloride. It’s not the refined table variety, but the kind of industrial looking salt you’d expect to be stored in a highway maintenance facility. The salt pile, which peaks out around six feet, has a conical shape as if it had been poured in the center of Boone... [more]

20101214090336-3728_1000 Radiance   Pick-button
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Reza Aramesh, Jake and Dinos Chapman, Desiree Dolron, Terence Koh, Dawn Mellor, Gino Saccone, Peter Schuyff, Conrad Shawcross at Paradise Row January 14th, 2011 - February 19th, 2011
Posted 1/30/11

The first part will take place at Paradise Row in London in January, the second at Galerie Gabriel Rolt, Amsterdam in May 2011, encompassing the transition from winter into spring. Light-Part 1 is a gathering of very different works by a restricted but coherent selection of artists, each finding an inroad to the theme of Light, imaged in the thresholds of illumination and darkness. This ambitious project is interpreted in austere pieces, as in a kinetic sculpture by Conrad Shawcross... [more]

Maurizio-cattelan-untitled-opera-per-la-xiv-biennale-internazionale-di-scultura-di-carrara-ph Another Biennale? This time in marble...   Pick-button
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Nevin Aladağ, Carl Andre, Libero Andreotti, Asymptote, Zorka Wollny    , Artur Żmijewski, Vanessa Beecroft, Huma Bhabha, Rossella Biscotti, Leonardo Bistolfi, Monica Bonvicini, Carlos Bunga, Aldo Buttini, Giorgio Andreotta Calò, Valentin Carron, Maurizio Cattelan, Marcelo Cidade, Nemanja Cvijanović, Arturo Dazzi, Sam Durant, URS FISCHER, Lucio Fontana, Norman Foster, Yona Friedman, Massimiliano Fuksas, Cyprien Gaillard, Frank Gehry, Antony Gormley, Cai Guo-Qiang, Zaha Hadid, Thomas Houseago, Liu Jianhua, Grigor Kepinov, Daniel Knorr, Terence Koh, Grzegorz Kowalski, Daniel Libeskind, Wu Maoquan, Arturo Martini, Paul McCarthy, Fausto Melotti, Ohad Meromi, Gustav Metzger, MVRDV, Deimantas Narkevicius, Kristina Norman, Jean Nouvel, Yerbossyn Meldibekov and Nurbossyn Oris, Damián Ortega, Santiago Sierra, Alina Szapocznikow, Dymitr Szwarc, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Kevin van Braak, Bogulov Veniamin, Ingal Vladimir, Yelena Vorobyeva and Viktor Vorobyev, Gillian Wearing, Adolfo Wildt at INTERNATIONAL SCULPTURE BIENNALE OF CARRARA July 26th, 2010 - October 31st, 2010
Posted 7/6/10

Monuments represent power and are generally speaking stand-ins for national identity; in a word, they are authoritarian. Monuments-as-objects have had their sense and meaning radically changed with an array of failure and crises across the modern historical and political panorama. We are presently plagued with the decay of monuments, a de-monumentalization of symbols and historical icons often replaced by other varieties, less governmental, more icon: TV personalities, general phemera and the omni... [more]

Img_4376 SUPERNATURE at AMP   Pick-button
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Markus Amm, Charles Atlas, Amy Bessone, Guenther Brus, Dan Colen, Diohandi, Gardar Eide Einarsson, Charlie Hammond, Annette Kelm, Terence Koh, Thomas Kratz, George Lappas, Linder, Robert Longo, Lorna Macintyre, Sophie Mackfall, Jack McConville, Michaela Meise, Scott Myles, Sterling Ruby, Rudolph Schwarzkogler, Daniel Silver, Jannis Varelas, Jennifer West at AMP February 10th, 2010 - March 31st, 2010
Posted 3/23/10

              Are You Satisfied with Your Body! Let Me Prove I can Make You a New Man in Only Fifteen Minutes a Day! - Copy from advertisement for Charles Atlas' Dynamic Tension® fitness regime You don’t really see a muscle as a part of you, in a way. You see it as a thing... You form it. Just like a sculpture. - Arnold Schwarzenegger The exhibition SuperNature: An Exercise in Loads at AMP Gallery uses professional bodybuilders as its point of departure, focusing on the... [more]

23 More Stories from New York   Pick-button
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Carol Bove, Terence Koh, Andrew Lord, Dash Snow at Peres Projects (Temporary) June 20th, 2009 - August 15th, 2009
Posted 8/9/09

"Story without a Name," a group exhibition curated by Blair Taylor. The exhibition includes film and collage by Dash Snow, and sculpture by Carol Bove, Terence Koh and Andrew Lord. All four of these artists currently live and work in New York City.At the onset of the Great Depression in the 1930s, Joseph Cornell took work designing textiles and selling appliances door-to-door to support his family and his habit of collecting ephemera with which to make artwork. He later referred to this period as... [more]

11 Kohbunny   Pick-button
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Terence Koh at Peres Projects (Temporary) May 1st, 2009 - June 13th, 2009
Posted 6/1/09

The following is an email conversation with Terence Koh about his 2008 sculpture, "Boy by the Sea," which depicts a perfect mirror image of Terence Koh's body at 2/3 size, with bunny ears, and covered with 65,000 faux pearls. In making the work, Koh had his body scanned three-dimensionally, and, using the resulting data, was able to reproduce an exact replica of his body in the size he would have been as a boy. 1. A few years ago, you made a drawing of a boy by the sea. Is it the same bo... [more]


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