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Holly Johnson Gallery in Dallas is pleased to announce the opening of Manhattanville
Project, an exhibition of new paintings by Mark Sheinkman. A reception for the artist will be
held Saturday, September 11, from 6 8 pm. The exhibition continues through October 9,
2010.
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Mark Sheinkman has been mining the richness of graphite and the permutations of the
line
since the early 1990s. The line can appear as an infinite continuum or as a cluster in which
tonalities and curves of varying strength traverse the space in graceful turns or wild jerks.
The ghostly ribbons of white twist and undulate as if floating in space or deep waters.
They follow a dynamic current, are set in motion, lose focus, seem to dissolve into
imperceptibility, manifest themselves once again into a strong material presence.
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Robert E. Edelman, in an essay for Sheinkmans solo exhibition at the Kemper
Museum of
Contemporary Art, writes, Their lyricism is reflected in Sheinkmans ability to create a
space that is at once apprehensible and enigmatic. Not least of all, the structural
soundness of the work is apparent in the inherent logic of its construction.
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The exhibition title, Manhattanville Project, refers to the location of the
artists studio,
located in an area of West Harlem called Manhattanville. The titles of the paintings in this
exhibition come from street names in Upper Manhattan and Manhattanville/Harlem.
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Mark Sheinkman received his B.A. from Princeton University in 1985. He lives and works
in
New York City. His work has been exhibited internationally in such institutions as Museum
Gegenstandsfreier Kunst in Otterndorf, Germany, Museo de Arte Contemporaneo Esteban
Vicente in Segovia, Spain, Grand Rapids Art Museum in Grand Rapids, Michigan, Kemper
Museum of Contemporary Art in Kansas City, Missouri, as well as in numerous
contemporary art galleries in the United States and Europe.
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Sheinkmans work is found in many public and private collections including the
Museum of
Modern Art, NY, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY, the National Gallery of Art,
Washington, DC, the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, TX, Yale University Art Gallery, New
Haven, CT, Fogg Art Museum at Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, as well as the
Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris. Recent articles on his work include reviews in Art in
America, The New York Times, and many others.
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Holly Johnson Gallery is located at 1411 Dragon Street in Dallas. Gallery hours
are 11 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. For further information please call 214-369-0169 or
email info@hollyjohnsongallery.com.
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