Current
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Robert Indiana:
February 27 – March 29, 2025 509 West 27th Street, New York Kasmin presents Robert Indiana: The Source, 1959–1969, a focused survey of the transformative decade in which Indiana established his unique artistic language, achieving wide recognition and cementing his place as an icon of American art. Featuring 20 works drawn exclusively from the artist’s personal collection as endowed by Indiana to the Star of Hope Foundation, the exhibition includes an example from the artist’s first edition of LOVE sculptures, conceived in 1966 and executed between 1966—1968, and a vitrine display of archival materials including some of the artist’s journals. This exhibition marks Kasmin’s first collaboration with the Star of Hope Foundation, which was established by the artist in his lifetime, and the gallery’s eighth solo exhibition of work by Indiana since 2003. View More
The Source, 1959–1969 -
Pablo Dávila:
February 27 – March 29, 2025 297 Tenth Avenue, New York The first solo exhibition of Mexico City-based artist Pablo Dávila (b. 1983), Why Did You Take My Watch? features new works that iterate Dávila’s research-based process in various media. Employing a visual language to encapsulate complex systems, theories and ideas, Dávila’s works offer poetic reflections on the perception of time and space. View More
Why Did You Take My Watch? -
Lyn Liu: H-Dropping
Kasmin at Casa Siza, Mexico City February 4 – March 28, 2025 In H-Dropping, Lyn Liu explores contradictory or nonfunctioning states of being in a suite of 11 paintings, each characterized by the psychological experience of the uncanny, a core motif in Liu’s practice. The exhibition has been realized by Liu to encompass all three exhibition galleries of Casa Siza, a gallery and residence designed by renowned Portuguese architect Álvaro Siza, and coincides with the opening of Zona Maco and Mexico City Art Week. On the occasion of Lyn Liu’s exhibition, Kasmin Books will publish a limited-edition, fully-illustrated artist’s book featuring an original text by critic and essayist Jenny Wu. View More