From Ai Weiwei to Marcel Duchamp: Art For Art's Sake
Shin Gallery is pleased to present Art for Art’s Sake, a group exhibition of 20th and 21st century artists in open conversation, addressing the innumerable ways in which their respective works inform and transform the other. L’art pour l’art—the title phrase as it was conceived originally in French—has served as an artist’s creed since the early 19th century, emphasizing shape, form and color above all else. This show presents a collection of works that adopt this aesthetic principle, bringing together art that spans cultures and disciplines in search of a higher point of connection.
As Deleuze approaches the concept of the original and the simulacrum—not as a privileged hierarchy of Euro-American centrism, but as a mode of travel to an infinite number of new possibilities—this exhibition aims to disrupt the mode of looking that encourages comparison through division. Rather than separate these works into labels of “Eastern” and “Western” or “modern” and “contemporary,” we invite you to let instinct guide you through the works, traversing all of the aesthetic and cultural elements brought together in this space.
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Shin Gallery is pleased to present Art for Art’s Sake, a group exhibition of 20th and 21st century artists in open conversation, addressing the innumerable ways in which their respective works inform and transform the other. L’art pour l’art—the title phrase as it was conceived originally in French—has served as an artist’s creed since the early 19th century, emphasizing shape, form and color above all else. This show presents a collection of works that adopt this aesthetic principle, bringing together art that spans cultures and disciplines in search of a higher point of connection.
As Deleuze approaches the concept of the original and the simulacrum—not as a privileged hierarchy of Euro-American centrism, but as a mode of travel to an infinite number of new possibilities—this exhibition aims to disrupt the mode of looking that encourages comparison through division. Rather than separate these works into labels of “Eastern” and “Western” or “modern” and “contemporary,” we invite you to let instinct guide you through the works, traversing all of the aesthetic and cultural elements brought together in this space.