Grenville Davey: Duality Paradoxes

“People are not naïve in the way that they approach objects,” Grenville Davey told British cultural critic Tim Marlow in 1993, “but there are other possibilities, however oblique.” Davey’s sculpture deals with those “other possibilities,” particularly the place of the human within the physical world as material fact.

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Gianni Caravaggio

TURIN, ITALY Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea di Torino “Seed,” as image and word, is just one metaphor in a show where metaphors proliferate. In this way, Caravaggio addresses complex phenomenological, cognitive, and artistic concepts with paradoxical lightness and simplicity.

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El Anatsui

LONDON Tate Modern Long before being commissioned for Turbine Hall, El Anatsui knew the Tate name. When he was growing up in Ghana (formerly known as Gold Coast, a British Crown colony until 1957), the only cube sugar available was supplied by the London-based conglomerate, Tate and Lyle.

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Madeline Hollander

NEW YORK Bortolami Rather than trading on Deleuzian idioms and hackneyed “rhizomatic” platitudes—which, even if applicable, merely describe the ubiquity of synthetic processes, having little to do with sculpture’s necessary domain of optical perception—Hollander’s work homes in on the relations of linked relata.

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