Marlene McCarty – Into the Weeds: Sex & Death

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MARLENE MCCARTY INTO THE WEEDS: SEX & DEATH June 22 – July 30, 2021



MARLENE MCCARTY INTO THE WEEDS: SEX & DEATH June 22 – July 30, 2021

SIKKEMA JENKINS & CO. 530 WEST 22ND STREET

NEW YORK, NY 10011

WWW.SIKKEMAJENKINSCO.COM

TEL 212 929 2262



Using everyday materials such as graphite and ballpoint pen, McCarty’s work often focuses on representations of the female body and its position within familial and biological systems. Her subjects are depicted engaging in unorthodox or transgressive social formations, breaking down the traditional, accepted interactions among humans and other species, as well as between humans and nature. For Into the Weeds, McCarty turns to plants, and their complex ecocultural role within society to explore issues of reproductive health, physical autonomy, public space, and the symbiosis of growth and decay. Throughout history, certain plants and weeds have been foraged and cultivated for a wide range of purposes, both curative and toxic. The alkaloids of the deadly nightshade, for example, have also been used to treat fevers and inflammation, while mugwort has been used to regulate menstruation and induce abortion. Seedlings have been cultivated and installed alongside McCarty’s densely drawn compositions of plants, weeds, body parts, clothing, and abstract geometric forms. Meticulously shaded limbs and flowers interlace one another, mirroring each other’s shape with the curl of a finger or the droop of a petal. This interplay of human body and plant are disrupted by various symbols alluding to a hegemony of white western culture: a Civil War ball gown, cowboy hat, and fragments of Modernist architecture, including the honeycomb-esque Vessel at Hudson Yards. Within these chimerical gardens lies a contentious ecosystem, constantly negotiating the power dynamics across gender, race, health, and history. The external component of Into the Weeds features a garden installed in a low profile dumpster at the gallery’s entrance on West 22nd Street. As part of the original exhibition presented and organized by UB Arts Collaboratory, McCarty cultivated a composting site and permanent garden within the complex of decommissioned grain elevators at Silo City in Buffalo, NY. Like the paradoxical effects of botanical healthcare, the compost pile itself is a site of contradictions, fertilizing new life through decomposition. To take space for it in the public realm can be seen as a statement of reclamation, the recuperation of terrain in the name of local autonomy.

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Marlene McCarty (born 1957, Lexington, KY) studied at the University of Cincinnati, College of Design, Architecture and Art 1975-77 and Schule für Gestaltung, Basel Switzerland from 1978-83. Since the 1980s, McCarty has worked across a variety of mediums, though drawing with everyday materials such as graphite or a ballpoint pen has become central to her work. McCarty was a member of the AIDS activist collective Gran Fury and was the co-founder of the transdisciplinary design studio, Bureau, with Donald Moffett. A major survey exhibition, Hard-Keepers, was presented at the Royal Hibernian Academy in Dublin in 2013. In addition to the presentation organized by UB Arts Collaboratory at UB Art Galleries and Silo City (2019), other iterations of Into the Weeds were presented at Kunsthaus Baselland in Basel, Switzerland and Last Tango in Zurich, both in 2020. Her work is in the collection of major institutions including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Brooklyn Museum; and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.

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WEED: Modern Masters Lower Chakras Bound (Achilea millefolium), 2020-21 Graphite and ballpoint pen on paper, in artist frame 53 x 38 inches (134.6 x 96.5 cm)

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WEED: Entropic Anticipation, 2020-21 Graphite and ballpoint pen on paper, in artist frame 53 x 38 inches (134.6 x 96.5 cm)

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WEED: Our Lady of the Flowers (Aconitum), 2020-21 Graphite and ballpoint pen on paper, in artist frame 53 x 38 inches (134.6 x 96.5 cm)

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HOT BOX PROTOTYPE SERIES A: Master Bloviator Upended, Song of the Cetacea, 2021 Rift sawn Kentucky Red Oak, indoor compost concoction, graphite and ballpoint pen on paper Overall: 72 x 22 x 16 inches (182.9 x 55.9 x 40.6 cm) Drawing: 17 x 13 inches (43.2 x 33 cm)

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Decay, Water Hemlock, Glabrous Protuberance, Hair Loss, Queen Anne’s Lace, Modern Sculpture, Hirsutism and Multi-species Competition., 2019 Graphite and ballpoint pen on paper 94 x 70 1/2 inches (238.8 x 179.1 cm)

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Cicuta maculata Water hemlock Water hemlock is a trickster: it looks like parsley, tastes like wild parsnip and smells like a carrot. As the deadliest plant in North America and member of the parsley family, the weed has poisoned children who used the red-spotted stems for whistles, peashooters and snorkels. One of its names is children’s bane; another is cowbane (“bane” itself means “poison.”) The tuberous roots deceive animals, too. Just one bite can kill a cow. Each year water hemlock and other toxic weeds poison livestock across America. Found in marshy meadows, fields and parking lots, water hemlock is native to North America. The Cicuta genus contains cicutoxin, which paralyzes the central nervous system, causing vomiting, diarrhea, kidney failure, heart irregularities, seizures and death. Muscle convulsions are severe enough to dislocate bones. The very toxin that kills also prolongs life, fighting cancer with antileukemia and antitumor properties. Native Americans have long harnessed water hemlock’s potency. The Klamath of the Pacific Northwest tipped their hunting arrows in its juice. The Haudenosaunee used hemlock as a narcotic and disinfectant and elder trees’ bark as its antidote. To become sterile, Cherokee women chewed on its roots for four days in a row. Not only a contraceptive, the parsley family has been used for centuries to stifle male desire and prevent erections. As Ovid wrote, “Yet like as if cold hemlock I had drunk, / It mocked me, hung down the head and sunk.”

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Lenape, da Verrazzano, Patrician Sandal, New Amsterdam, Vessel, Wonderment, Rue, Mutagenic Growth, Hepatic Toxicity., 2019 Graphite and ballpoint pen on paper 94 x 70 1/2 inches (238.8 x 179.1 cm)

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Ruta graveolens Rue On their wedding day, Lithuanian brides receive a pot of rue from their mothers because of the herb’s contraceptive properties. European apothecaries once sold rue oil to “bringeth down the menses.” After colonists brought the herb to America, enslaved women used it. Their refusal to bear children hindered the economy of human capital, which depended on forced procreation. The name rue—from the Greek reuo, meaning “to set free”—suggests the plant’s power. Fern-like with yellow flowers, rue originates in the Balkan Peninsula. In gardens, the plant’s bitter scent deters unwanted insects and animals, though the shrub is more commonly found along roadsides and fields. Rutin is the glycoside responsible for its aroma and uterine effects. Rue can also be lethal – it’s all in the intention. As Ophelia proclaims, “There’s rue for you, and here’s some for me… O’ you must wear your rue with a difference.” This herb of grace—or witchbane, herbygrass and mother of herbs—was a poison antidote and ingredient in Four Thieves Vinegar, which criminals used to stave off the black death while stealing from the sick. The European basilisk, the giant mythological serpent whose breath alone wilted plants and cracked stones, had no effect on rue—perhaps a hint at rue’s effect on men. It immobilizes sperm and decreases libido. A contraceptive for all genders— freeing, but toxic to unrestrained masculinity.

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Monarch’s Meal, Asclepias syrica, Danaus plexippus, Hevea Brasiliensis, Mentha pulegium., 2020-21 Graphite and ballpoint pen on paper 94 x 70 1/2 inches (238.8 x 179.1 cm)

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Asclepias syriaca Common milkweed The female monarch butterfly lays her eggs exclusively on milkweed. The plant is the only food the caterpillars will eat. Immune to the plant’s toxic, sticky, white sap, they accumulate the poison in their bodies, protecting them from predators. Over the last two decades though, the Eastern monarch population has plummeted by 90% due to mega-farm herbicide spraying and development. Together they’ve destroyed some 165 million acres of milkweed breeding habitat in the United States. The only species of butterfly to make a round-trip migration akin to birds, it flies up to 3000 miles to twelve mountaintops in Mexico. Along the entire migration route, milkweed has disappeared. In Mexico, logging and avocado crops threaten their habitat. In January 2020 Mexican monarch conservationist, Homero Gómez González went missing. His body was found two weeks later, a further setback to the butterfly’s preservation. During World War II, milkweed was adopted for the war effort. “Pick a Weed Save a Life” became the milkweed’s motto. Posters boasted its benefits as the tufted seeds were used to stuff life preservers. An entire industry sprang up in one Michigan county where children harvested the seedpods. Just under two pounds of milkweed down could keep a 150-pound person afloat. First Nations peoples have used milkweed for millennia. Centuries before the Swedish botanist Linnaeus named the milkweed genus for the Greek god of medicine, more than 500 unique names already existed for the plant in the Americas. From the Mayan site of Copan in Honduras to ancient Mound Builders sites in the north, archeologists have found milkweed. In present-day Ohio remnants of a milkweed fiber fishing net were found at a prehistoric site dating to 300 BCE. Mound Builders used the rot-resistant fibers for weaving mats, tying moccasins, stringing pearls, hunting lures, and making flutes and bird whistles as well as a red dye. Milkweed’s powerful plant medicine has been used for centuries. The Cherokee, Creek, Seminole, Choctaw and Chitimacha inhaled the vapors to relieve asthma and respiratory ailments. Rappahannock and Schaghticoke tribes pounded the roots as a remedy for snakebites, bee stings and spider bites. Contraceptives have combined milkweed roots with jack in the pulpit. Different species of the asclepias genus worldwide exhibit similar medicinal properties. The roots of asclepias tomentosa and the milkweed tree asclepias procera contain potent abortifacients. From the Sudan and the African peoples of Sukuma, Mkalama, and the Maasai to Ghana, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic as well as North America, women and healers have recognized the milkweed plant as a powerful natural gift permitting women to control their own bodies.

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HOT BOX PROTOTYPE SERIES A: Master Bloviator Subdued, Vitex agnus, 2021 Rift sawn Kentucky Red Oak, indoor compost concoction, graphite and ballpoint pen on paper Overall: 72 x 22 x 16 inches (182.9 x 55.9 x 40.6 cm) Drawing: 17 x 13 inches (43.2 x 33 cm)






Spare Tire, Sputter, Slinger, Spurt, Chasteberry, Monk’s Pepper, Yee Haw., 2019 Graphite and ballpoint pen on paper 94 x 70 1/2 inches (238.8 x 179.1 cm)

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Vitex agnus-castus Chaste tree Chaste tree is an antidote to toxic masculinity. For thousands of years, priests and monks prevented erections by eating its leaves, flowers and berries, dubbing it the monk’s pepper. As chastisement for unrestrained teen hormones, Spartans flogged adolescent boys with chaste tree twigs. The shrub’s potency is in its volatile oils, which stimulate the pituitary gland to increase progesterone thereby suppressing the male libido. A member of the verbena family, chaste tree is called vitex, wild lavender, chasteberry, Abraham’s balm, cloister pepper and hemp tree. Originating in the Mediterranean and Asia, this herb is not only a libido inhibitor, but also stops sperm from implanting. By regulating estrogen, progesterone and prolactin, chaste tree inhibits conception and causes abortion. Women have long used the aromatic shrub to control fertility. In the ancient festival of Demeter, women lounged on chaste tree branches. How fitting that a symbol of female sexuality quells unrestrained virility.

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Odor of Elephant Carrion, Penny Loafers, Larvae, Watteau, Civil War Ball gown, Colonization and Decomposition, Commercial Branding, Monk’s Pepper, Masculist Sculpture, Corpse Flower, Vitex agnus., 2019 Graphite and ballpoint pen on paper 94 x 70 1/2 inches (238.8 x 179.1 cm)

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White Man’s Footstep, Plantago major., 2020-21 Graphite and ballpoint pen on paper 94 x 70 1/2 inches (238.8 x 179.1 cm)

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Herbal text by Lune Ames, Jennifer Kabat, and Marlene McCarty, on the occasion of Into the Weeds: Sex & Death at Sikkema Jenkins & Co. from June 22 - July 30, 2021.


MARLENE MCCARTY

American, b. 1957 Lives and works in New York

1988-95 Member of Gran Fury 1989-2001 Co-founder of Bureau

EDUCATION 1975-77 1978-83

University of Cincinnati, College of Design, Architecture, and Art Schule für Gestaltung, Basel, Switzerland

SOLO EXHIBITIONS

2021 Into the Weeds: Sex & Death, Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York, NY, June 22 – July 30, 2021 2020 Marlene McCarty: Into the Weeds, Kunsthaus Baselland, Basel, Switzerland, January 24 – July 5, 2020 2019 Marlene McCarty: Into the Weeds, a two-part installation presented by UB Arts Collaboratory at UB Art Gallery, Center for the Arts, Buffalo, NY, October 3, 2019 – February 2, 2020; and Silo City, October 5, 2019-ongoing 2018 The Enormity of Time, Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York, NY, September 6 – October 13, 2018 2013 Hard-Keepers, Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin, Ireland, September 5 – October 20, 2013 2010 i’m into you now: some work from 1980-2010, 80WSE, NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York, NY, November 2 – December 18, 2010 2008 CANDY.CRY.STINKER.HUG. (some drawings concerning absorption, reflection, inversion, and progression), Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York, NY, April 5 – May 2, 2008 2005 Mapping New Territories – Swiss Media Art, Neue Kunsthalle St. Gallen, St. Gallen, Switzerland, January 30 – March 27, 2005 2004 Young Americans, Part 2, Neue Kunsthalle St. Gallen, St. Gallen, Switzerland, March 6 – April 25, 2004 Brent Sikkema, New York, NY, January 17 – February 21, 2004 BAD BLOOD Stage One, Plug-In, Basel, Switzerland 2003 Marlene Olive - June 21, 1975, Istanbul Biennial, Istanbul, Turkey, September 20 – November 16, 2003 2002 Poltergeist, Girls at Home, American Fine Arts, New York, NY Young Americans, Part 2, Bronwyn Keenan Gallery, New York, NY 2001 Young Americans, Sandroni.Rey, Venice, CA, December 8, 2001 – January 19, 2002 1993 Marlene McCarty, Metro Pictures, New York, NY, February 27 – March 27, 1993 1992 Mund Verkehr: In die Hose gegangen, Marlene McCarty, Neue Gesellschaft für Bildende Kunst, Berlin, Germany, June 6 – July 12, 1992 1991 Crash and Burn, Metro Pictures, New York, NY, April 13 – May 11, 1991

GROUP EXHIBITIONS

2020 Never Done: 100 Years of Women in Politics and Beyond, The Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY, September 17, 2020 – June 6, 2021 Can I Borrow Your Hole: Marlene McCarty & Rasmus Myrup, Last Tango, Zurich, Switzerland, September 11 – December 19, 2020 There Will Come Soft Rain, Gallery Candice Madey, New York, NY, September 10 – November 5, 2020 55


2019 Art After Stonewall, 1969 – 1989, Grey Art Gallery / Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art, New York, NY, April 19 – July 21, 2019; will travel to The Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum, Miami, FL, September 14, 2019 – January 6, 2020; Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus, OH, March 6 – October 4, 2020 In a Few Words, Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York, NY, January 24 – February 23, 2019 Drawn Together Again, The FLAG Art Foundation, New York, NY, February 23 – May 18, 2018 2018 The Conditions of Being Art: Pat Hearn Gallery & American Fine Arts, Co. (1983-2004), Center for Curatorial Studies and Hessel Museum of Art, Bard College (CCS Bard), Annandale-on Hudson, NY, June 23 – December 2018 Queering Space, Fosdick-Nelson Gallery, Alfred University, Alfred, NY, February 2 – March 31, 2018 2017 Beyond Suffrage: A Century of New York Women in Politics, Museum of the City of New York, New York, NY, October 11, 2017 – July 22, 2018 An Incomplete History of Protest: Selections from the Whitney’s Collection, 1940–2017, (Gran Fury) Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY, August 18, 2017 – August 27, 2018 How Posters Work, Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee, WI, March 31 – June 25, 2017 Divided States of America, LGBT Community Center, New York, NY, January 26 – March 10, 2017 2016 Cock, Paper, Scissors, ONE Archives at the USC Libraries, West Hollywood, CA, April 2 – July 10, 2016 Schinkel Klause, Schinkel Pavillon, Berlin, Germany, March 23 – May 15, 2016 2015 Agitprop! (Gran Fury) Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY, December 11, 2015 – August 7, 2016 Rabenmutter / Mother of the Year, LENTOS Art Museum, Linz, Austria, October 23, 2015 – February 21, 2016 No Man’s Land: Women Artists from the Rubell Family Collection, Rubell Family Collection, Miami, FL, December 2, 2015 – May 28, 2016; traveled to: National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC, September 24, 2016 – January 15, 2017 Art AIDS America, Tacoma Art Museum, Tacoma, WA, October 3, 2015 – January 10, 2016; Zuckerman Museum of Art, Kennesaw, GA, February 20 – May 22, 2016; Bronx Museum of the Arts, Bronx, NY, June 23 – September 11, 2016 2014 Works on Paper, Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York, NY, September 2 – October 4, 2014 Pictures, Before and After: An Exhibition for Douglas Crimp, (Gran Fury), Galerie Buchholz, Berlin, Germany, August 28 – November 8, 2014 Eating Peanuts, Offsite Projects, New York, NY, July 29 – August 19, 2014 2013 Keep Your Timber Limber (Works on Paper), Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, UK, June 19 – September 8, 2013 NYC1993: Experimental Jet Set, Trash and No Star, The New Museum, New York, NY, February 13 – May 26, 2013 She, Kathleen Cullen, New York, NY, January 10 – February 9, 2013 2012 Typical Frankenstein, Laurel Gitlin Gallery, New York, NY, November 30 – December 23, 2012 It’s Always Summer on the Inside, curated by Dan McCarthy, Anton Kern Gallery, New York, NY, July 10 – August 24, 2012 Data Trash, curated by Chris Dorland, I-20 Gallery, New York, NY, May 24 – July 20, 2012

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Herstory Inventory. 100 Feminist Drawings by 100 Artists, curated by Ulrike Muller, Kunsthaus Bregenz, Bregenz, Austria and Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY, April 21 – June 24, 2012 It’s a Small, Small World, curated by Hennessey Youngman, Family Business, New York, NY, March 2012 This Will Have Been: Art, Love & Politics in the 1980s, curated by Helen Molesworth, MCA Chicago, Chicago, IL; traveled to: Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN, February 11 – June 3, 2012 Gran Fury: Read My Lips, 80WSE, NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York, NY, January 31 – March 17, 2012 2011 Absentee Landlord, curated by John Waters, Walker Arts Center, Minneapolis, MN, June 11, 2011 – July 29, 2012 Inconscients! Les artistes et la psychanalyse, curated by Aude LaMorelle, Galerie ALFA, Paris, France, June 9 – August 10, 2011 And All You Suck in is Oil, Tang Museum, Saratoga Springs, NY, May 28 – September 4, 2011 2010 Time Capsule, Age 13 to 21: The Contemporary Art Collection of Jason Rubell, Rubell Family Collection, Miami, FL, December 1, 2010 – August 26, 2011 Act Up New York: Activism, Art, and the AIDS Crisis, 1987 – 1993, and the Act Up Oral History Project, White Columns, New York, NY, September 9 – October 23, 2010 Power Play, The Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY, February 6 – April 26, 2010 Text Messages, The Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY, May 1 – 23, 2010 2009 Act Up New York: Activism, Art, and the AIDS Crisis, 1987 – 1993, curated by Helen Molesworth, Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, October 15 – December 23, 2009; White Columns, New York, NY, September 9 – October 23, 2010 Hydra School Projects 10, curated by Dimitrios Antonitsis, Hydra, Greece, July 4 – September 30, 2009 The Pain Game, curated by Ellen Blumenstein, Nosbaum & Reding Art Contemporain, Luxembourg, May 14 – July 4, 2009 UN-SCR-1325, curated by Jan Van Woensel, Chelsea Art Museum, New York, NY, March 6 – April 11, 2009 2008 Expenditure, Busan Biennale 2008, Curators: Michael Cohen, Nancy Barton, Tom Morton, Francine Méoule, Azumaya Takashi, Busan, Korea, September 6 – November 15, 2008 Dark Continents, curated by Ruba Katrib, Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami, FL, September 26 – November 9, 2008 Just Different! Cobra Museum of Modern Art, Amstelveen, Netherlands, June 14 – September 21, 2008 2007 Silicone Valley, MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY, February 11 – April 9, 2007 zwischen zwei toden / between two deaths, ZKM | Center for Art and Media, Karlsruhe, Germany, May 12- August 19, 2007 she was born to be my unicorn, curated by Amy Kellner, Amy Smith Stewart Gallery, New York, NY, June 28 – July 28, 2007 Eliminate, curated by John Waters, Albert Merola Gallery, Provincetown, MA, June 15 – July 5, 2007

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2007 Gegen den Strich, Kuenstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin, Germany, June 22 – July 15, 2007 2006 The Eigth Square: Gender, Life and Desire in the Arts since 1960, Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany, August 19 – November 12, 2006 The Message is the Medium, Jim Kempner Fine Arts, New York, NY September 9 – 30, 2006 Die Jugend von Heute, curated by Matthias Ulrich, Schirn Kunsthaller, Frankfurt, Germany 2005 Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York, NY, September 17 – October 22, 2005 Kritische Gesellschaften (Critical Societies), Badischer Kunstverein, Karlsruhe, Germany Mapping New Territories, Neue Kunst Halle St. Gallen, St. Gallen, Switzerland, January 30 – March 27, 2005 2004 Premaculture, Secondary School, Hydra, July 3 – September 6, 2004 Other Aristocrats: John Ahearn, Philip Akkerman, Matthew Benedict, Marlene McCarty, Barry McGee, Rigoberto Torres, Alexander and Bonin, New York, NY, April 10 – May 15, 2004 When I think about you I touch myself: An Exhibition on the Sociability of Artworks, curated by David Humphrey, The New York Academy of Art, New York, NY, April 9 – May 10, 2004 Indigestible Correctness I, curated by Rita Ackermann and Liz Bougatsos, Participant Inc., New York, NY 2003 Le Rayon Noir, curated by Mai-Thui Perret, Circuit, Lausanne, Switzerland Fast Forward, White Columns, New York, NY, November 1 – December 7, 2003 Influence, Anxiety and Gratitude, MIT List Visual Arts Center, Boston, MA, May 8 – July 6, 2003 2002 Violence the True Way, curated by Rita Ackerman, Liz Bougatsos and Chloe Sevigny, Galerie Peter Kilchmann, Zürich, Switzerland, November 27 – December 21, 2002 2001 Stand Fast Dick & Jane, The Project, Dublin, Ireland, June 29 – July 28, 2001 Spiritual America, Audiello Fine Art, New York, NY, May 11 – June 16, 2001 Dear Dead Person, curated by Banks Violette, Momenta Art, New York, NY, April 29 – June 4, 2001 Desire and Pursuit of the Whole, Pro Arte Contemporary Art Institute, St. Petersburg, Russia 2000 Death Race 2000, Thread Waxing Space, New York, NY, December 2, 2000 – January 13, 2001 1999 Dope, American Fine Arts, New York, NY Billboard, MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA (Gran Fury contribution) 1998 Where is Your Rupture? curated by Annette Schindler and Liz Kotz, The Swiss Institute, New York, NY, September 10 – November 1, 1998 Wahlverwandtschaften, curated by Annette Schindler, Appenzell, Switzerland Portrait-Human Figure, Galerie Peter Kilchmann, Zürich, Switzerland, March 28 – May 9,1998 The 34th Annual Exhibition of Art on Paper, curated by Amy Cappellazzo, Weatherspoon Art Gallery, University of North Carolina, Greensboro, NC, 1998 1996 Mixing Messages: Graphic Design in Contemporary Culture, Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum, New York, NY, September 17, 1996 – February 16, 1997 Sexual Politics: Judy Chicago’s Dinner Party and Feminists in Art History, UCLA Armand Hammer Gallery, Los Angeles, CA, April 24 – August 18, 1996 Real Fake, Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase College State University of New York, Purchase, NY 1995 In a Different Light, University Art Museum, Berkeley, CA, January 11 – April 9, 1995 Word for Word, The Art Gallery, Beaver College, Glenside, PA 1994 Don’t Look Now, Thread Waxing Space, New York, NY, January 22 – February 26, 1994 Bad Girls West, UCLA Wight Art Gallery, Los Angeles, CA, January 25 – March 20, 1994 58


The Use of Pleasure, Terrain, San Francisco, CA Die Neunzigen, curated by Martin Prinzhorn, Wiener Secession, Vienna, Austria, March 22 – April 3, 1994 New Voices 94, Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH, April 23 – June 19, 1994 Cocido y Crudo, curated by Dan Cameron, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid, Spain, December 14, 1994 – March 6, 1995 1993 Four Walls Project: Small Talk, Postmasters Gallery, New York, NY In Transit, New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, NY, January 15 – April 11, 1993 1920. The Subtlety of Subversion. The Continuity of Intervention, Exit Art, New York, NY, March 6 – April 17, 1993 The Art of Self-Defense and Revenge, Momenta Art, New York, NY Open Air, Bremen, Germany Serial, Michelle Nicol, Zürich, Switzerland 1992 How It Is, organized by Jonathan Seliger, Tony Shafrazi Gallery, New York, NY, February 1 - 29, 1992 Between the Sheets, PPOW, New York, NY Object Choice, Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center, Buffalo, NY, November 7, 1992 – December 12, 1992 Dissent Difference and the Body Politic, Portland Art Museum, Portland OR, August 20 – October 29, 1992; Otis School of Art, Los Angeles, CA, February 20 – March 25, 1993 1991 John Lindell / Marlene McCarty, Simon Watson Gallery, New York, NY Something Pithier or More Psychological, Simon Watson Gallery, New York, NY, September 10 – October 5, 1991 Whitney Biennial 1991, Group Material: AIDS Timeline installation, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY, April 2 – June 30, 1991 1990 White Room, White Columns, New York, NY, October 19 – November 11, 1990 Selections 50, The Drawing Center, New York, NY, September 22 – November 2, 1990 Shut Up! You Shut Up! Wessel O’Connor Gallery, New York, NY, June – July 1990 Eros/Thanatos - Desire and Death, Tom Cugliani Gallery, New York, NY Aperto, 1990 Vienice Biennale, Gran Fury contribution

HONORS, AWARDS, GRANTS & RESIDENCIES

2014 Visual AIDS Vanguard Award 2004 The American Center Foundation Grant 2013 Foundation for Contemporary Art Grant Sitemapping Stupendium / Bundesamt The Haven Foundation Grant für Kultur Schweiz Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant 2002 Guggenheim Fellow The Gottlieb Foundation Grant 1993 Eidgenössischer Kunststipendium - Freie The Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant Kunst (Switzerland) New York Foundation for the Arts Grant 1990 Municipal Art Society of New York, 2011 Skowhegan Teaching Fellowship Brendon Gill Prize (Gran Fury) 2009 Richard C. Diebenkorn Teaching Fellowship, San Francisco Art Institute 2007 Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant 2006 Atlantic Center for the Arts Master Residence 59




SIKKEMA JENKINS & CO.

530 WEST 22ND STREET NEW YORK, NY 10011 TEL 212 929 2262 WWW.SIKKEMAJENKINSCO.COM


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