In the News: Action in the Tribeca Gallery District (and beyond)

125 NEWBURY OPENS WITH CROWDS
Artnet has an interview with Arne Glimcher, the founder of Pace Gallery and his new space on Broadway, 125 Newbury. The opening this weekend attracted crowds and stars of the art world. “We had about 700 people,” he said in the interview. “They waited in line for two and a half blocks. It was so embarrassing! It’s not a really big gallery, so you could only let so many people in at a time to keep the art safe. But everyone was in a good mood and nobody was angry that they had to wait.”

A STUDY IN NEUTRALS FROM COLIN KING
AD has a feature on interior stylist Colin King’s loft on Church and White, which is a study in neutrals. “We are sitting at the custom-made ash dining table that doubles as ground control for his rapidly evolving operation. It’s been here that, most recently, he’s conceived new collections for Beni Rugs, the hit company where he serves as artistic director at large; here that he’s designed an expanding array of objects for the Danish studio Menu; and here that he’s pored over thousands of images from past shoots for his first book, Arranging Things, coming out in March 2023 with Rizzoli.” “When I’m here it’s about reconnecting with myself and my people,” King tells AD. “This is a place to nurture my hub.”

JACQUELINE SULLIVAN GALLERY OPENS ON WALKER
Surface has a feature on a new gallery on the fourth floor of 52 Walker: Jacqueline Sullivan Gallery. “Set within a sprawling fourth-floor former textile factory reimagined by designer Nick Poe, the gallery opened in late September with the group show “Substance in a Cushion”—a poem from Gertrude Stein’s book Tender Buttons. Much like the American novelist’s writing, the objects on view invoke curiosity about seemingly mundane objects and their relationship to space.”

HOPPER SHOW AT THE WHITNEY
And ICYMI, the Whitney’s big show on Hopper — Edward Hopper’s New York — has tickets up now. Through March 5.

 

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