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Gagosian now represent Kathleen Ryan globally.

Kathleen Ryan in her studio, 2024 Photo: Jeff Henrikson Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

Gagosian has announced the global representation of Kathleen Ryan. Her debut exhibition with the gallery will be held in 2026.

A California-born sculptor, Ryan produces meticulously crafted interpretations of everyday objects that prompt meditation on themes of seduction and repulsion, refinement and excess. Profoundly influenced by her West Coast roots, the artist often focuses on pop-cultural artifacts associated with Los Angeles, such as muscle cars and bowling balls, alongside biological forms like fruit, flowers, and spiderwebs. By applying traditional craftsmanship to natural and industrial materials in a wide range of scales and formats, Ryan unites the organic and the artificial, transforming her subjects into tongue-in-cheek allegories for the entropic cycle of life and death.

Kathleen Ryan Bacchante, 2015 Concrete, stainless steel, and granite 65 x 46 x 50 inches (165.1 x 116.8 x 127 cm) © Kathleen Ryan Photo: Jeff McLane Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

While offering a critique of contemporary life and society, Ryan is also fascinated by the wider contexts and histories of visual culture. In Bacchante (2015), a sculptural reinterpretation of a 1627 portrait by Hendrick ter Brugghen, she uses concrete casts of balloons to explore the sensual tension evident in the painter’s depiction of grapes—an impression offset by her clustered forms’ interconnecting chains. In the nostalgia-tinged Satellite in Repose (2019), hand-modeled ceramic forms perch like parrots on the skeletal remnant of a satellite dish, the stalactite-like appearance of their tails lending the entire structure a fossilized look and adding to its ambivalent stance toward technological progress and obsolescence. And in the Generator series (2022–), oyster-like hinged sections of automobile bodies enclose delicate metallic and crystalline spiderwebs.

Kathleen Ryan, Bad Melon, 2020, installation view at François Ghebaly, Los Angeles, California
Artwork © Kathleen Ryan Photo: Jeff McLane Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

In Ryan’s series Bad Fruit (2018–), pieces of decaying fruit are wittily reimagined in unexpected materials at altered scale. Mining the American decorative craft tradition of pin-beaded fruit, the artist encrusts each carved form’s surface with glass and acrylic beads to delineate “fresh” parts and semiprecious stone beads such as agate, garnet, and turquoise for “rotten” areas, producing the impression of partial decomposition. Through this conceptual and material disjunction, the series explores ideas of desire and overconsumption that resonate with the illusory excesses of contemporary culture. Bad Melon (2020) is a scatter of giant watermelon chunks built from glass beads, stones, and other objects. The rind of each piece is made of aluminum salvaged from a 1973 Airstream Safari camper, an iconic leisure vehicle redolent of postwar optimism, the surface of which is now rusty and scratched. Through this juxtaposition, the work evokes both the death of an American dream, and the resilient life embodied by coral as it envelops and repurposes a submerged wreck.

Kathleen Ryan, Screwdriver, 2023 Onyx, citrine, rhodonite, garnet, agate, tektite, lava rock, turquoise,
aquamarine, serpentine, magnesite, amazonite, black tourmaline, jasper, prehnite, ruby in zoisite, marble, amber, labradorite, smoky quartz, quartz, acrylic, steel pins on coated polystyrene, aluminum umbrella, and 68’ AMC Javelin trunk 77 x 107 x 88 inches (195.6 x 271.8 x 223.5 cm) © Kathleen Ryan
Photo: Paul Salveson Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

Among Ryan’s recent exhibition projects was Spotlight: Kathleen Ryan, at the Institute of Contemporary Art San Francisco. This featured Screwdriver (2023), for which the artist transformed the trunk of a 1968 AMC Javelin into the rind of an orange slice in a huge sculptural cocktail garnish. Ryan’s first museum survey also opened this year, at the Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg, Germany, and will travel to Kistefos Museum, Jevnaker, Norway, in 2025. It gathers thirty of her sculptures from the past ten years, including several newly commissioned works.

About the artist

Kathleen Ryan was born Santa Monica, California, in 1984, and lives and works in Jersey City, New Jersey. She graduated with a BA from Pitzer College, Claremont, CA, in 2006, and an MFA from the University of California, Los Angeles, in 2014. Collections include the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, Durham, NC; Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach, FL; Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AR; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas; Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; and Kistefos Museum, Jevnaker, Norway. Exhibitions include Bacchante, Theseus Temple, Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna (2017); Cultivator, MIT List Visual Arts Center, Cambridge, MA (2019); New Art Gallery, Walsall, England (2019); Aldrich Projects: Kathleen Ryan: Head and Heart, Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, CT (2023); Spotlight: Kathleen Ryan, Institute of Contemporary Art San Francisco (2024); and Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg, Germany (2024). Awards include the Rosa Schapire Art Prize, Hamburger Kunsthalle (2020) @katieryankatieryan

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