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PO Box 97
South Kent, CT 06785
By Appointment
917 270 8044
James Barron founded his art business in 1987 as a private art dealer and consultant, and established James Barron Art in 2010.  The gallery specializes in modern and contemporary American and European art, including works by Picasso, Matisse, Arp, Giacometti and Pollock, as well as Warhol, Diebenkorn, LeWitt, Mangold, Pepper, Caro and Olitski.  Barron is equally adept in guiding both new and experienced collectors. The gallery has an ongoing series of interviews with artists and art historians, reflecting a longstanding tradition of special events.

 
Current Exhibitions

Beverly Pepper: Capturing Light



October 4, 2024 - December 31, 2024
Beverly Pepper was an American sculptor known for her monumental works in steel, cast iron, bronze, stainless steel, and stone. Born in Brooklyn in 1922, Pepper left New York in 1949 to study painting in Paris. A 1960 trip to Angkor Wat inspired Pepper to pursue sculpture, and her earliest works, such as Antediluvian (1960), explored organic forms in carved wood. Pepper began exhibiting her sculptures in both New York and Rome. In 1962, she was one of ten artists invited by Giovanni Carandente to fabricate major works in Italsider factories for an outdoor exhibition in Spoleto. Pepper then continued to work in factories in both Italy and the United States, becoming the first American artist to use Cor-Ten steel while working in a U.S. Steel factory. Splitting her time between New York and Todi, Italy, Pepper produced a prolific body of both indoor and outdoor sculptures, site specific works, and land art throughout her life. Her work has been widely exhibited, is held in numerous public collections, and has been the subject of multiple monographs. The Beverly Pepper Sculpture Park opened in Todi in 2019. With sculptures from 1960 through 2015, Beverly Pepper: Capturing Light includes some of Pepper’s earliest sculptures in wood and twisted steel, as well as her mid-career Altars and totemic works. Towards the end of her career, Pepper executed a series of soaring, curved sculptures in Cor-Ten steel, which are featured prominently in Capturing Light.

Katherine Bradford: Underworlds and Outer Space



October 4, 2024 - December 31, 2024
"The characters [in Katherine Bradford's paintings]... are moving along the surface of the earth, and between underworlds and outer space. The paintings suggest rapture in all senses of the word – enchantment and bliss, as well as imminent demise. They have an unearthly, radiant inner light." Jennifer Samet, Hyperallergic

 
Past Exhibitions

Robert Mangold



July 25, 2024 - August 25, 2024
"I’ve always had the desire to make the work a unity, to make all the elements—the periphery line and the internal line, the surface, color—equal, totally locked together." Robert Mangold "Color is so erratic. It’s a wild card in painting. Your attitude towards color is the hardest thing. And now I think of myself as much a colorist as a structuralist." Robert Mangold "I have used circles, squares, ellipses and all manor of four- and many-sided forms and combined forms. I see no difference between this and the way a writer or poet would use words and made-up words to express an idea: the key is to express an idea." Robert Mangold

Vera Girivi

Vera Girivi: Cats, Clocks, and a Bikini



July 2, 2024 - August 29, 2024
“The cat is an ancient animal. It has a certain kind of wisdom accumulated over time. It watches you, lets time pass, and calculates all of its moves.” Vera Girvi “Time is crucial to me now. A clock has been ticking quickly.” Vera Girivi

Christina Nicodema: Extra Special



March 28, 2024 - April 30, 2024
“With all of these things—the cakes, the plates, even the tables that they’re placed upon—they’re about moments where as soon as they’ve been observed or captured in a photograph, or as soon as the celebration has been had, it’s gone in an instant. It’s over; it’s yesterday’s news. It’s ten years ago, which becomes 25 years ago.” Christina Nicodema “It’s a moment of peak perfection or celebration. The exhibition title Extra Special refers to how we all want to feel this specialness or uniqueness... Everyone wants their moment. An Instagram post is fresh for 24 hours, and then it goes off into the content landfill. I like that high school beauty queen metaphor for a moment that can’t be retained, a type of peak specialness that is so fleeting.” Christina Nicodema “[The cakes] possess memories of the past, of societal structures or family structures. I’m thinking about how those things fade and degrade and transform over time, just like our memories. All we have to hold onto are our stories and memories of these things. And our memories are imperfect narratives. They’re never what really happened.” Christina Nicodema

Controlled Chance



March 14, 2024 - April 30, 2024
"It is often said that Gilliam’s painting style is inspired by jazz... Colors blended, interpenetrated, and formed expressive, abstract worlds of color that were beyond the artist’s control, despite the regulated production process." Ann Mbuti "I think that lack of control helps to open up this whole way of working, where it’s much more about pooling and letting the alchemical aspects of the paint happen. It’s about directing but not really enforcing what happens." Jackie Saccoccio Works by: Charles Alston Anthony Caro Ruth Duckworth Friedel Dzubas Sidival Fila Sam Gilliam Peter Halley Norman Lewis Dan Miller Pat Passlof Beverly Pepper Jackie Saccoccio Kikuo Saito Joel Shapiro Aaron Siskind

Jeannette Montgomery Barron: Making Calls



December 22, 2023 - February 2, 2024
"Making Calls refers to how I first started drawing. I used to doodle when I was on the phone with someone, not to distract myself, but to make me focus more on the conversation. After awhile I thought, Well, why don’t I just draw without the phone? I started drawing a little bit more, and it turned into a practice that very much calmed me down. It made feel a certain way—peaceful–and then I couldn’t stop drawing." Jeannette Montgomery Barron

Alison Hall



December 22, 2023 - February 2, 2024
“The artists who many critics cite when writing about Alison Hall’s paintings are Agnes Martin, Sol LeWitt, and Ad Reinhardt. Hall is one of the few contemporary abstract painters that I know of whose highly formal paintings do not diminish in the company of such rigorous ascetics. This is because her slow, mesmerizing, monochromatic works provoke a state of exalted seeing that is unlike anyone else’s, including the aforementioned artists.” John Yau, Hyperallergic

Vera Girivi: Life



December 4, 2023 - January 20, 2024
"It rarely happens that I imagine a theme and then paint it later. I don't like planning too much. Life surprises you every day, and if you want to make it go one way, the opposite occurs." Vera Girivi

Francesco Polenghi: Ocean of Peace



December 4, 2023 - January 20, 2024
“Polenghi makes his marks like breathing. There is no figure, no ground in these paintings—just this incessant bustle of matter set in motion by an invisible breath.” Barry Schwabsky Francesco Polenghi (1936 - 2020) was an Italian painter based in Milan. Polenghi developed his early painting style in the 1960s while working in advertising and studying philosophy, in particular Baruch Spinoza. He then spent much of the 1980s in India, where he lived in an ashram and continued to study philosophy and religion. When he moved back to Italy in 1988, Polenghi focused more intently on painting, creating an extensive body work that synthesized his studies into philosophy and his experiences across Italy, the United States, and India. Working in a type of meditative trance, Polenghi repeatedly traced a network of lines and forms across the canvas while chanting the Gayatri mantra. “Every painting of Polenghi’s in fact obeys the Shakespearean precept ‘to thine own self be true'... Thus Polenghi works in a state of trance, transcribing the uncensored dictation of his unconscious.” Arturo Schwarz

Winfred Rembert: Looking for Rembert



September 27, 2023 - November 15, 2023
With the success of our Winfred Rembert presentation at the Independent 20th Century, we would like to share the exhibition with our local audience. “Winfred Rembert’s tooled-leather ‘paintings’ command whatever space they inhabit. Carving art into strips of leather, a skill he learned while incarcerated, he memorialized scenes from his life in Jim Crow America, from surviving a lynching, to picking cotton and breaking rocks in a prison line. The self-taught artist had a remarkable eye for color and pattern, and a lingering sorrow that sustains in the work’s quiet intensity.” Tessa Solomon, ARTnews

Sol LeWitt: Irrational Thoughts



September 27, 2023 - November 15, 2023
“Irrational thoughts should be followed absolutely and logically.” Sol LeWitt “To be truly objective one cannot rule anything out. All possibilities include all possibilities without pre-judgement or post-judgement.” Sol LeWitt

Roscoe Hall: Thoughts from the Black Belt



September 27, 2023 - November 15, 2023
“A day trip to the Talladega National Forest at a hunting cabin provided by the Alabama Game and Fish department really left me thinking. I started these pieces midday in complete silence, with thoughts of the world I’m leading and often hiding from... I took that time embrace my fears of developing a stronger grip on my voice in my art practice, in my family, and in my vices. Thoughts from the Black Belt aren’t as sad as they used to be. Full of progression through education, but always has an array of silence. It often feels like the rest of the world will never hear or see about the slow ways of change.” Roscoe Hall

Vera Girivi: Reflections



July 15, 2023 - August 15, 2023
"The people in my paintings are searching to confirm their own presence." Vera Girivi "Sometimes I don't like what the mirror reflects. It's distressing to look at yourself and not recognize yourself. Luckily it's an irrational sensation that lasts a brief instant." Vera Girivi

Mirrors and the Uncanny



July 15, 2023 - September 16, 2023
"Freud said that the uncanny is the only feeling which is more powerfully experienced in art than in life." Stanley Kubrick Mirrors and the Uncanny explores the familiar seen as unfamiliar, as in a mirror, a doppelgänger, or in repetition. The show highlights artists who use mirrors and glass in their work, or who depict mirrors through painting and photography. Works by: Dawn Clements Louise Dahl-Wolfe Sidival Fila Peter Flaccus Vera Girivi Jacob Kassay André Kertész Richard Klein Jeannette Montgomery Barron Beverly Pepper Tristano di Robilant Laura de Santillana Elisabetta Zangrandi

Ghost of a Dream: without a king, everybody wants some heaven



May 28, 2023 - July 7, 2023
“As we were collecting [the lottery tickets], we started thinking about the people behind the tickets: whose hopes are these, and what do they want when they’re scratching?” Lauren Was, Ghost of a Dream Ghost of a Dream is a collaborative artist duo (Lauren Was and Adam Eckstrom) whose work centers on the ephemera of people's hopes and dreams. Our exhibition reconceptualizes collages made from discarded lottery tickets, which they created for the oratorio of Santa Maria Della Vita in Bologna. "Repetitive hope keeps people going... whether your faith is going to church on Sundays in search of an everlasting future, or whether it's going to the bodega and spending five bucks every Friday at 5pm. Whatever your religion is, it’s about the hope that you're going to win in the end." Adam Eckstrom, Ghost of a Dream

Poetry for the Underdog



May 28, 2023 - July 7, 2023
“[My work is] built around a pathos and understanding of the downtrodden and discarded; a poetry for the underdog.” Mike Ousley Works by: Sidival Fila Vera Girivi Elisabetta Maestro Mike Ousley Reza Shafahi Ashley Shapiro Janet Sobel Elisabetta Zangrandi

Dawn Clements: Nothing Happens Fast



May 2, 2023 - June 15, 2023
"Part of deciding to draw the flowers every day was that, instead of me moving my point of view, the flowers are going to be constantly moving before my eyes. I said, 'I want to do one every day because I want to see the change, to see how they live and die before my eyes.'" Dawn Clements "Clements reminds us that you don’t need much—sheets of paper, ballpoint pen, and watercolor—to make something great, and that the most abiding pleasures may be found right in front of you. I have come to think of these drawings as love letters to the world." John Yau

Sidival Fila: Metafora Blu



April 14, 2023 - May 20, 2023
"Sewing is the process by which I build the world. It is a way of connecting things... We are connected to nature, to other people, to ourselves, to plants, to animals. The thread becomes a symbol of our holistic universe." Sidival Fila "My use of metafora indicates that I don’t want to describe or represent nature, but I recognize there is something of nature in my work. There is something in the fold that suggests a wave or an erosion, or even a human body. It is a metaphor for the real: something that stands for the real but does not literally describe it." Sidival Fila "Ignorance is the enemy. Ignorance brought us Hitler, Mussolini, Berlusconi, and Trump. I believe you can change the world one child—and one education—at a time." Sidival Fila As a Franciscan monk, Sidival Fila uses his art to generate funds to send children to school in impoverished areas around the world.

Moira Dryer and Laura de Santillana: Air and Light



April 14, 2023 - May 20, 2023
"[Dryer’s] painting was a subtle and volatile mix of air and light, experimentation and perfectionism, open-ended casualness and resolution, understatement and high concept." Ross Bleckner "It contains nothing, but it’s still a container, a vessel. It contains color and light." Laura de Santillana We are pleased to present works by Moira Dryer and Laura de Santillana, two artists who have never been exhibited together before. Working in different mediums—Moira Dryer with casein on ordinary plywood, and de Santillana with compressed glass—both defied the nature of their materials: the weight of wood and glass became sheer lightness and effervescence. Both played with transparency and translucency, and both were poetic artists who drew inspiration from Italian art. Born two years apart, Dryer in 1957 in Toronto and de Santillana in 1955 in Venice, both died in the prime of their careers, Dryer at 34 and de Santillana at 64, having achieved so much, but with much more left to be said.

Mosaics



January 21, 2023 - March 30, 2023
Mosaics highlights works that are in dialogue with the art of mosaics, but aren’t necessarily mosaics themselves; it encompasses painting, sculpture, etching, drawing, photography, textile, and mixed media relief. Works by: Olga de Amaral Jules de Balincourt Chuck Close Ghost of a Dream Jessica Eaton Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian Sidivial Fila Hermine Ford Jeffrey Gibson Vera Girivi Tadaaki Kuwayama Sol LeWitt Beverly Pepper Howardena Pindell Jason Middlebrook Jan Müller Sophy Naess Rakuko Naito Kay Rosen Shahzia Sikander Stephen Shore James Siena Stanley Whitney Jack Whitten Pola Wickham Elisabetta Zangrandi "A mosaic is any picture or pattern — representative or not — that is made up of small, often fragmented pieces arranged together to form a cohesive whole. In a way, one could imagine that our entire world is made of mosaics, from the atoms that constitute our bodies to the skyscrapers which form city skylines to the stars which shape the night sky." Deborah Goodman Davis, curator of Mosaics

Sol LeWitt

Sol LeWitt: Works on Paper, 1972 - 1999



October 29, 2022 - December 23, 2022
"I strive to create something I would not be ashamed to show Giotto." Sol LeWitt After moving to Spoleto in the late 1970s, LeWitt embraced gouache as a medium. He found great inspiration in the frescoes of early Florentine painters, especially Giotto, and incorporated their vivid colors into his abstract compositions on paper. Although the gouache works have a looser, less rigid quality than LeWitt’s earlier works, they rely on a strict vocabulary of colors and shapes, which LeWitt explored in various combinations. "In my case, I used the elements of these simple forms – square, cube, line and color – to produce logical systems. Most of these systems were finite; that is, they were complete using all possible variations." Sol LeWitt As a virtual addition to our show, we are excited to share several exceptional R Series works. R30 (1972) is one of the earliest and most important pieces from this body of work. This is the first time it has been assembled and exhibited.

Beverly Pepper

Beverly Pepper: Time



October 29, 2022 - December 23, 2022
"Time, that fourth dimension, has always been an essential element in Pepper’s work — a desire to create something outside history, something bigger and more enduring than herself, than all of us." Megan O’Grady, T Magazine Beverly Pepper’s career as a sculptor began after a 1960 trip to Angkor Wat, where the artist was inspired by the roots of the Banyan trees growing over ancient ruins. Pepper’s earliest sculptures incorporated natural forms of wood and bronze. Our exhibition includes several early works that have not been previously exhibited. While she later explored different materials and methods, all of her works share a timeless quality and a link to nature. Pepper’s hard-edged stainless works from the late 1960s through early 1970s strive to capture the natural world and surrounding environment in their polished planes; Pepper’s soaring iron and Cor-Ten pieces take a material found deep within the Earth and thrust it into the sky. "Pepper is ever mindful of history... Her sculptures may be read as timeless references that nevertheless maintain a vital dialogue between past and present." Douglas G. Schultz, Sculpture in Place "I was a woman, but I never thought of myself as a woman-artist. Or a maverick for that matter." Beverly Pepper

Reza Shafahi

Reza Shafahi: Regeneration



October 29, 2022 - December 23, 2022
“It also becomes an expression of sexuality and regeneration. To me, the work communicates an essential life lesson: be attentive to the pleasures of the moment, and cherish them in a vault built to last for the benefit of one’s time yet to come.” Charles M. Schultz, Brooklyn Rail Reza Shafahi began creating art at age 72, after a career as a professional wrestler. Shafahi incorporates elements of fantasy, mysticism, and literature and film references from his native country of Iran. Shafahi's unique visual language expresses a singular Iranian experience. In this moment of political dissent — and an uprising for Iranian women's rights — we are proud to once again share Shafahi's unique voice. "[Shafahi] has maintained a practice that is singularly motivated by his own imagination. There is a combination of innocence, sincerity, sexuality, and violence... these pieces have the feel of diary entries." Charlie M. Schultz, The Brooklyn Rail

Roscoe Hall

Roscoe Hall: Government Promises



September 10, 2022 - October 22, 2022
Roscoe Hall’s most recent body of work, Government Promises, addresses the “movement of human interaction, employment, education and waiting to be told how one is supposed to live their life.” Hall examines the Black experience in America and the historical tradition of government intervention, often to the detriment of those it is allegedly helping, while touting the promise of progress. Hall uses mixed media and vibrant color to create textured, layered works that communicate not only his personal history, but the larger legacy of African Americans in this country. Roscoe Hall lives and works in Birmingham, AL, where is also a professional chef. He holds a BFA from University of San Diego and an MFA from Savannah College of Art and Design. His work has been included in numerous museum and gallery shows, and is in the permanent collection of museums including the Abroms-Engel Institute for the Visual Arts, Birmingham, AL. Hall is the recipient of the 2022 Peter S. Reed Foundation Grant for Painting.

Winfred Rembert

Winfred Rembert: Memory is Alive



September 10, 2022 - October 22, 2022
“I carried this all my life, all of these things that happened to me... I didn’t realize that by keeping my story inside so long, it would change my life and make me sick.” Winfred Rembert, Chasing Me to My Grave All the works in this exhibition are on loan by private collectors. At age 51, Rembert began carving his memories—including his childhood in the Jim Crow South and his imprisonment following a Civil Rights protest— into both vibrant and painful paintings on leather. Rembert was posthumously awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 2022 for his memoir Chasing Me to My Grave: An Artist’s Memoir of the Jim Crow South. Rembert’s work has been subject to a wave of critical interest, and recent museum acquisitions include the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. and the Blanton Museum of Art, Austin. We wish to express our gratitude to the anonymous lenders to this exhibition.

Vera Girivi

Vera Girivi: At the garden's edge



August 17, 2022 - September 24, 2022
"Covid forced us to limit our movements. I remember whole afternoons walking back and forth along the perimeter of the garden and looking up at the terraces where others did the same. My figures have freed themselves." Vera Girivi

Alexis Rockman

Alexis Rockman: A Molecule from Madness



August 15, 2022 - September 4, 2022
Alexis Rockman is known for his paintings and works on paper that explore the collision between the human induced ecological crisis and its effects on ecosystems and civilization. Initially inspired by his early fascination with the dioramas at the American Museum of Natural History, where his mother, now an urban archeologist, worked in the office of famed anthropologist Margaret Mead, Rockman's work builds on both the history of natural and cultural histories and the history of landscape painting.

Kikuo Saito

Kikuo Saito: Paint with Drawing



June 3, 2022 - July 16, 2022
We are pleased to exhibit Kikuo Saito: Paint with Drawing, a selection of four superb works from 1980 through 2010. Azalea (1981) and Blue Kettle (1980) exemplify Saito's earlier style, for which he first gained acclaim, combining large expanses of color with fluid, calligraphic flourishes. Later in his career, Saito wove together dense layers of colorful, freewheeling brushstrokes to execute works like Copper Moon (2010).

Jules de Balincourt

Jules de Balincourt: Off the Beaten Path



June 3, 2022 - July 16, 2022
Jules de Balincourt: Off the Beaten Path highlights two significant early works. Painted at a moment when de Balincourt's visual vocabulary had come to full fruition, and his work had begun to garner worldwide acclaim, these works encapsulate the pervasive sense of paranoia at the time, when now-proven lies (weapons of mass destruction) were debated. Off the Beaten Path and Other Miscommunications and Untitled (Top or Bottom?), painted in 2006 and 2007, demonstrate de Balincourt’s trademark use of flattened color and space to suggest a sense of alienation engendered by modern society.

Group Exhibition

Never Seen



June 3, 2022 - June 1, 2022
“I wonder how many people I've looked at all my life and never seen.” John Steinbeck, The Winter of Our Discontent Works by: Charles Alston Deborah Brown Elinor Carucci Francesco Clemente Richard Diebenkorn Norris Embry Lucian Freud Vera Girivi Merlin James Jeannette Montgomery Barron Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe Sara Sebastianis Reza Shafahi John Sonsini Elisabetta Zangrandi "When you sit for an hour and a half in front of somebody, he or she shows about twenty faces. And so it's this crazy chase of, Which face? Which one is the one?" Francesco Clemente

Outsider Art Fair New York 2022



March 3, 2022 - February 6, 2022
Works by: Norris Embry Sidival Fila Vera Girivi Winfred Rembert Reza Shafahi Ashley Shapiro Janet Sobel Elisabetta Zangrandi

Sol LeWitt

Sol LeWitt: The Truth is Funny



January 28, 2022 - March 19, 2022
Our exhibition focuses on works from Sol LeWitt's R Series, which the artist created by tearing, folding, and cutting. Sometimes inscribed "Not to be sold for more than $100," these works were originally a reaction to LeWitt's growing success with his Wall Drawings, and demonstrate the seeming contradiction of LeWitt's conceptual process and his irreverent wit.

Jan Müller and Bob Thompson

Jan Müller and Bob Thompson: Outside of Time



January 28, 2022 - March 19, 2022
We are pleased to exhibit Jan Müller and Bob Thompson: Outside of Time. Although Jan Müller died several months before Bob Thompson arrived in Provincetown in the summer of 1958, his influence on Thompson's work was profound. In Provincetown, Thompson transformed his work, developing what would become his signature figurative style while looking to Müller's work for guidance. Müller's wife, Dody Müller, told him: "Don't ever look for your solutions from contemporaries— look at Old Masters."

Carla Accardi, Moira Dryer, Ruth Duckworth, Pam Glick, Beverly Pepper, Laura de Santillana, Janet Sobel, Ursula von Rydingsvard, Betty Woodman

Earthly Dreams



January 28, 2022 - March 19, 2022
Our exhibition explores unexpected visual parallels by artists who, though working decades apart and in disparate mediums, share common artistic threads: the use of earthly materials like clay and wood, the forms and flows of nature, and the tactility of the handmade object. The artists in Earthly Dreams are also all women who paid their dues for many years before gaining broader recognition. We are excited to pair together artists like Betty Woodman and Pam Glick, Ruth Duckworth and Beverly Pepper, and Moira Dryer and Ursula von Rydingsvard, who have not been previously exhibited together, but whose works resonate in their shared conceptual, material, and formal qualities.

Kikuo Saito: Dancing Across the Surface



December 1, 2021 - January 16, 2022
"His theater work also taught him to paint while the canvas lay horizontal on the floor—as was necessary with the very large backdrops for set... and his choreographic experience taught him to almost dance across the surface while painting, as well as to convey a dancing quality to the marks themselves.” John Dorfman "[Saito developed] a personal version of Color Field abstraction that depended as much on delicately inflected lines and edges as it did on expanses of seductive, saturated hues. Saito’s mature work is characterized by its inventive, often surprising use of color, ranging from frankly gorgeous, richly varied intensities to subdued near-monochromes–as well as by its eloquent drawing." Karen Wilkin "It’s perhaps not an overstatement to say that when we, as viewers, attempt to come to terms with Saito’s invented calligraphy, now plainly visible, now veiled by layers of paint, we recapitulate the artist’s youthful experience of arriving in New York and being confronted by a new language and a new alphabet. The sensuality of Saito’s color and the physicality of his paint handling could be equivalents for his pleasure in overcoming those challenges." Karen Wilkin

Elisabetta Zangrandi: La Vita è Femmina



September 8, 2021 - November 11, 2021
"I paint landscapes, but not in a classical way; my vision is inspired by fantasy, wildly full of insects, animals, chimeras, human figures and flowers. Each figure is inserted in a different 'space-time context' – there are multiple horizons, water flows from one environment to another, overwhelming emotions and memories." Elisabetta Zangrandi, interviewed by Departure Magazine We are thrilled to exhibit recent paintings by Elisabetta Zangrandi in the Cabin, including a selection of landscapes, seascapes, and Madonna and Child paintings.

Dan Miller: Clattering Poetry



September 8, 2021 - November 11, 2021
"[Miller's] best work achieves a clattering poetry of infinite discrimination." Kevin Killian With limited verbal capabilities, self-taught artist Dan Miller has used written words and drawing as his main form of communication throughout his life. He became interested in hardware, lightbulbs, and electrical tools at a young age, looking at his father's hardware catalogues. His layered, heavily-worked drawings incorporate elements such as repetitive text and abstracted forms of mechanical items including lightbulbs and electrical sockets. "Miller’s repetitive application of marks creates a rich but ultimately undecipherable field." Museum of Modern Art, New York "Mr. Miller’s abstract doodle-grids combine the historic expressiveness of drawing and modernist abstraction with a covert art world critique." Martha Schwendener, New York Times

Beverly Pepper

Beverly Pepper: Precarious Balance



September 8, 2021 - November 12, 2021
Our exhibition spans Beverly Pepper's entire career, with her earliest sculptures from 1960 through some of her final monumental works. Precarious Balance includes stainless steel sculptures from 1968, which are 9 inches tall and weigh 3 pounds, through Octavia, a late masterpiece, which stands over 11 feet tall and weighs 12 tons. Taking a cue from Pepper’s longstanding interest in science, nature, and outdoor sculpture, we have installed many of the works both in the Upper Gallery and in the surrounding landscape.

Laura de Santillana

Laura de Santillana at the Meditation Hut



July 9, 2021 - August 27, 2021
We are thrilled to present a selection of Laura de Santillana’s glass works in the Meditation Hut. The unique environment of the Meditation Hut activates these pieces, as striking sunlight and shadows play off the glass, highlighting subtle shifts in its coloration. In an April 2017 interview with James Barron, Laura de Santillana explained the void at the center of these forms: “It starts with the breath. I like working with glass because you put air -- your breath -- inside the material and you close it inside. It’s the moment between inhaling and exhaling. By trapping air inside, some interesting things happen in the process. The accidents are written inside the piece.” In works like Flag XIII (2001), this breath is made visible when illuminated in the Meditation Hut, with pockets of air glowing inside the fields of red, yellow, and green.

Sol LeWitt

Sol LeWitt: Small Gouaches



July 9, 2021 - August 27, 2021
James Barron Art is pleased to exhibit Sol LeWitt: Small Gouaches, a selection of LeWitt gouaches from 1985 to 1995, including geometric forms and the artist’s later wavy bands. The works in our exhibition feature LeWitt’s trademark use of red, yellow, blue, and grey/black; each work uses combinations of these fundamental colors to create varying shades and hues within the composition. “LeWitt’s pure reds, yellows, and blues provide once again, in the history of twentieth-century art, the shock of recognizing the unadulterated beauty of these primary hues, a eureka experience we were taught most insistently by Mondrian, but which every generation feels the need to rediscover.” Robert Rosenblum

The Red Show



May 21, 2021 - August 28, 2021
The color red is associated with power, representing passion, energy, violence, desire, and courage. Due to scarcity of available pigments, the use of red historically denoted artworks of particular importance. The Red Show explores both artist and viewer's visceral reaction to the color red, through works of various media, styles, and techniques.