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The Zwirner Gallery opened in 1993 on the ground floor of 43 Greene Street in SoHo in New York City [2] with a one-man show of the Austrian sculptor Franz West. [3] [4]In 2002 it moved to 525 West 19th Street in the Chelsea neighborhood of New York. [5]
In 2001, Zwirner organized the "I Love NY Art Benefit" exhibition at David Zwirner Gallery to benefit victims of the World Trade Center attacks. A few days after the September 11 attacks, Zwirner asked its artists to donate works to the exhibition. He then called on the help of other New York dealers to organize their own benefit exhibitions.
Gagosian Gallery, Los Angeles since 1979, New York since 1989, London since 2000, Roma since 2007, Athena since 2009, Paris and Geneva since 2010, Hong Kong since 2011, Le Bourget since 2012, San Francisco since 2016, Basel since 2019 [5] [6] Barbara Gladstone Gallery, New York since 1979, Brussels since 2011 [7] [6] Marian Goodman Gallery, New ...
The gallery located to 57th Street in 1975 and regularly exhibited both paintings and prints. [5] In 1985 it moved to 59 Wooster Street, in the downtown area of New York City, into an art neighborhood that had been named SoHo and included 83 other art galleries. [6] The art dealer David Zwirner got his start in the art business there. [7]
In the first of four shows at David Zwirner, Icarus and the World Trade Center (1998), Schimert turned from the cooler, ethereal environs of the sea and Moon to the explosive, searing heat from the Sun, treated as a metaphor for the New York-defined arena of ambition, success and wealth.
The gallery's exhibition spaces are located in Cologne at Neven-DuMont-Strasse 17, in Berlin at Fasanenstrasse 30, and in New York at 17 East 82nd Street. [3] Since its founding the gallery has had various locations in Cologne. [4] Its first location was at Bismark Strasse 50, in a former storage facility of the Cologne gallerist Rudolf Zwirner ...
Previous location of White Columns, at 320 West 13th Street, New York City. White Columns is New York City's oldest alternative non-profit art space. [1] White Columns is known as a showcase for up-and-coming artists, and is primarily devoted to emerging artists who are not affiliated with galleries. All work submitted is looked at by the director.
In 2023, David Zwirner Gallery in New York staged its second posthumous solo exhibition of work by González-Torres, including two works that had never been executed as the artist envisioned. [119] The first, "Untitled" (Sagitario) (1994-1995), is a variant of the double pools of water the artist had sketched before his death: two large pools ...