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Retrospective

First Major US Museum Retrospective of Paul Thek at the Whitney, October 21, 2010–January 9, 2011

text: Whitney Museum press release

NEW YORK, August 6, 2010. An artist who defies classification, Paul Thek (1933–1988), the sculptor, painter, and creator of radical installations who was hailed for his work in the 1960s and early 70s, then nearly eclipsed within his own short lifetime, is the subject of an upcoming retrospective co-organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art and Carnegie Museum of Art. Paul Thek: Diver, A Retrospective, the first major exhibition in the United States to explore the work of the legendary American artist, debuts in the Whitney’s fourth-floor Emily Fisher Landau Galleries, from October 21, 2010 to January 9, 2011; it travels to Carnegie Museum of Art, from February 5 to May 1, 2011, and then to the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, from May 22 to September 4, 2011.


Kim Jones: A Retrospective has travelled to the Luckman Gallery. Up through May 19, 2007.

Kim Jones in a 1983 work in Washington, D.C.: Kim Jones: A Retrospective is on view at Luckman Gallery through May 19, 2006. The exhibition originated in Buffalo, New York, at the UB Art Gallery. A publication edited by Sandra Q. Firmin and Julie Joyce is available through MIT Press ($20).Kim Jones in a 1983 work in Washington, D.C.: Kim Jones: A Retrospective is on view at Luckman Gallery through May 19, 2006. The exhibition originated in Buffalo, New York, at the UB Art Gallery. A publication edited by Sandra Q. Firmin and Julie Joyce is available through MIT Press ($20).Kim Jones: A Retrospective | The First Full Retrospective for the Artist. Exhibition originating at UB Art Gallery 10.19.06-12.17.06,


Kim Jones in a 1983 work in Washington, D.C.

Kim Jones in a 1983 work in Washington, D.C.

Kim Jones: A Retrospective is on view at Luckman Gallery through May 19, 2006. The exhibition originated in Buffalo, New York, at the UB Art Gallery. A publication edited by Sandra Q. Firmin and Julie Joyce is available through MIT Press ($20).


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