For Immediate Release
TRENDING AT METRO CURATES
– NO BORDERS, NO BOUNDARIES
New York: Whether it’s a single artist or a thematic booth, visitors to the 4th edition of Metro Curates at the Metropolitan Pavilion, which opens with a VIP preview on January 21, will cast their collective eye on a veritable treasure trove of the unusual and unexpected. Here is a sampling of some of the spectacular highlights that make this four-day fair a must-see for art lovers of all persuasions:
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![]() Street Dog by Federico Uribe, 2014 Demonstrating Uribe's mastery in his preferred unconventional medium of colored pencils, this vibrant sculpture reflects the artist's close connection to animals, both wild and domestic, and his strong empathy for them. |
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![]() Late 19th century ‘5000 Cigars From Geo T. Warren & Company’ zinc lined wood box, with one side referencing 'Smoke Warren's Elixer of Life Cigars' on one side and the other side referencing 'Smoke Warren's Junior Cigars.’ Used to ship cigars in smaller quantities and then destroyed upon reaching their destination, this rare piece along with its provenance and wording, is one of three known to exist. |
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![]() Panel of Joe Louis and Max Schmeling boxing match, 1938 This plaster-relief panel depicts one of the great sporting events of the 20th century: the boxing match between Joe Louis and Max Schmeling for the 1938 World Championship at Yankee Stadium that pitted an African-American against a German during the era of Naziism. |
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![]() An exceptional, original hand-carved Male-Female Table by James Callahan, c. 1978 This exceptional and elegantly hand-made table mimics the graceful form of human legs with an eye-opening surprise between its legs! |
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![]() African-American Barbershop Chest of Drawers, circa 1950 In its extraordinary sculptural power, this unique carved and notched chest demonstrates the power, vision and spirit of the African-American art-making process in America |
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![]() Random Order by Dawn Walden, 2014 Of Ojibway descent in the Pacific Northwest, the artist finds inspiration in the random woven construction of bird nests and creates baskets that are traditional and orderly on the inside and seemingly arbitrary on the out, as exemplified by this large sculpture. |
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![]() Whimsy Table with Quilt Top by Albert and Carrie Adams, 1941 This enchanting piece of signed furniture (Made by Albert Adams, Oct 24, 1941 In WIS, USA, Labor 125 days) is embellished with 90 chains of acorns, incised doves and stars carved from single pieces of wood, and the top has a crazy quilt insert that original component of the piece and is signed “Carrie,” who was the artist’s wife. |
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![]() Untitled by Deborah Remington, 1949 A student of Clyfford Still and an active participant in the Beat scene in San Francisco in the 1950s, Remington was also one of six poets and artists, and the only woman, who founded the important Six Gallery in 1954 in San Francisco, where Allen Ginsberg had his first public reading of “Howl.” |
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![]() The Lovers by Rachel Selekman, 2010 By the transformation of industrial and functional pipes, the artist has created a compelling depiction of entwined, gazing figures. |
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![]() Standing Couple This compelling nine-and-one-half-inch tall figure dates from the 19th century or earlier is a superb example of the art of the Dodon Culture in Mali. |
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![]() The Flag is Bleeding #2 (The American Collection #6) by Faith Ringgold, 1997 With her work prized by major museums, Ringgold, an African-American artist who began quilting in the 1980s, was influenced by the fabric of her mother’s fashion design business, and is well known for her painted story quilts that blur the line between high art and craft, of which this work is an exemplar. |
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![]() Homeless Family by Dick Lubinsky, circa 1960 This mixed-media piece exemplifies the humanity captured in the artist's works, which were made while he lived in the Bronx in the 1960s and 1970s and struggled with schizophrenia. |
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![]() Red and Yellow by Ethel Stein, 2012 At the age of 96, the artist is still weaving, and this arresting work once again combines her signature modern designs with her deep knowledge of historical weaving techniques, which are quite complex despite their deceptively simple appearance. |
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![]() Bill Rauheiser’s Billiards/ Roxy Barber Shop, II, circa 1970 The legendary 95-year old Detroit photographer has spent decades capturing what he calls society in motion. |
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![]() A Tiffany-Made Presentation Battle Flag, 1861 Though best known for jewelry and silver, Tiffany once produced the very best battle flags, and this extraordinary example evidences both the most exceptional embroidery skill and the finest fabric to be had in America. |
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![]() Scarecrow, by Mark Kindschi, 2014, forged and hammered steel Highlighting the unique synchronicity between classic Native American art and the contemporary art that shares its inherent magic, Kindschi’s Scarecrow personifies this theme as it presents the relationship of the natural world to the human species as a powerful, universally recognized icon. |
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![]() A child’s bicycle of tubular steel & hard rubber wheels, absorbed within the old growth of a tree’s trunk, Midwestern origin, 2nd half of the 20th century Bicycle/Tree is an omnibus of specialties, served up in a in a cocktail of common elements in an uncommon relationship. There is age and wonder, patina and form. History and mystery enter at some point--how did this happen, who was the owner, was this an accident? We can move on to the questions of Natural vs. the manufactured. The elements vs. the machine and the cycle of life. |
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![]() Topsy Turvy Doll, late 19th-early 20th century Featured on the cover of the American Folk Art bible American Vernacular, this carved doll was long part of a private collection and is one of the most recognized artifacts of 19th-century Americana. |
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![]() Crudely Drawn Mimic by Marcelyn McNeil, 2013 This artist specializes in the synergy of dissonant elements through rigid lines and soft shapes, neutral tones and bright colors in order to make a bold, yet quietly confident statement—all fully expressed in this work. |
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![]() Fox and Rabbit Tobacco Boxes The bottom plaque of this whimsical and very rare 17-inch carving of a fox and rabbit walking hand-in-hand reads “Interlaken Juillet 1878” |
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![]() Cow Blanket by Kate “Granny” Donaldson, circa 1935 A rare and exceptional example of “outsider” art made by North Carolinian Kate Clayton Donaldson (1864-1960), better known as “Granny.” This work is an outstanding example of the appliquéd and embellished cow blankets for which she is celebrated. |
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![]() Cabinet of Curiosities with Shells, by Robert Buratti, 2012 Never before offered for sale in New York, Ms. Harris debuts Australian artist Robert Buratti, whose work is driven by enlightenment, trances and visions. His remarkable works are a perfect match for the world of Kunstkammer, the theme of Ms. Harris’s presentation. |
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![]() Life in the Country byKirkMangus, year? A lively yellow vessel animated by the artist's deft and spontaneous sgraffito drawing on the surface, this work records a moment in time in permanent clay. |
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![]() Untitled (Stag on Mound with Fireworks) byMartínRamírez Outsider artist Ramírez's depictions of male deer are renowned for their large extravagant and graceful antlers, and those on this stag recall Picasso's Cubist period, which were themselves derivative of African tribal masks. |
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![]() Wilton, Iowa by Barry Phipps, 2014 Making his New York debut, Barry Phipps' photographs of Iowa depict the stark two-dimensionality of the facades of barns, storefronts, water towers, and the vernacular architecture of small-town America. His rigorous compositions employ line, texture, and color to reveal underlying formal structures. |
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![]() Brahmastra for A New Age (UFO/Time Machine) by Shawn Thornton, 2010-13 Visionary Thornton completed this work over a three-year period while recovering from a brain tumor, and it calls to mind the traditions of Adolph Wolfli, August Lessage and other well known Art Brut practitioners. |
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![]() Untitled, Oil on canvas by W. Conway, 1890 This painting by Conway is in the tradition of the French still life or nature morte. The isolation of the subject—in the vein of Soutine--increases the impact and makes it more confrontational. |
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![]() Sunbather with Hose by William Baziotes, 1936-39 Of Baziotes, Roberta Smith in The New York Times once wrote: “He paralleled several of his contemporaries, most prominently Jackson Pollock, with whom he and Gerome Kamrowski would collaborate in a dark, drippy automatist painting in 1940-41.” |
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![]() Balandrán Poncho, 17th-18th century This amazing dyed alpaca textile comes from the Bolívar region, province of Arque, Department of Cochabamba, and is part of the most significant group of Aymara and Quechua weavings ever assembled. |
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![]() Beekeepers, by Stephanie Wilde This painting, one of several from a seven-year ongoing project that started in 2008 and ends this year, addresses the disappearance of the honeybee. Wilde, a self-taught artist, incorporates unusual formats and intriguing elements referencing science and nature. |
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![]() Beginning to See, 2013, a blown glass sculpture by Preston Singletary, Santa Fe Inspired by the rattles of the ancient Tlingit tribes, this one of a kind object is made out of incredible hand-crafted glass, by a contemporary native North West Coast Columbia Tlingit master artist. |
About Metro Curates:
Metro Curates embraces a wide range of offerings that include ethnographic material, American folk art, applied and decorative arts, historic and contemporary textiles and Native American Art combined with modern and contemporary fine art and design. “From the outset our aim has been to illustrate the intellect, beauty, and vision in American arts and design, while placing it in a context that is both more contemporary and international,” says Ms. Kerrigan.
The Opening Night Preview, sponsored by The High Boy, an online marketplace for fine and decorative arts, jewelry and sculpture is on Wednesday, January 21, from 6:00 to 9:00 PM. The show opens to the public on Thursday, January 22. Hours are Thursday, January 22: 11:00 AM to 7:00 PM; Friday, January 23: 11:00 AM to 7:00 PM; Saturday, January 24: 11:00 AM to 7:00 PM; Sunday, January 25: 12 noon - 5:30 pm. General admission is $20 per person; a multi-day pass is $35 per person.
For general information visit metroshownyc.com