Marian Goodman Gallery opens its new headquarters in Tribeca on 26 October 2024 with Your patience is appreciated. An inaugural show. Featuring some 75 works across media, including both new and recent installations, sound and video work, sculpture, and painting, the group exhibition highlights the intellectual and artistic affinities that coalesce the 50 multi-generational and diverse artists and estates within the Gallery's program today. On view through 14 December 2024, Your patience is appreciated. An inaugural show is presented across three floors, with works activating both galleries and transitional spaces throughout the newly renovated and restored Grosvenor Building at 385 Broadway.
"The title of the exhibition addresses notions of expectations that come with moments of change and underlines the conceptual and temporal complexities of our artists' practices, implicitly requiring patience and purpose", stated Philipp Kaiser, President and Partner, who oversaw the exhibition's curation. "The exhibition's title, and indeed the exhibition itself, also reflects the Gallery's unwavering dedication to its program that has traced distinct threads of contemporary art across several decades and continents, privileging critical thought, poetic sensibility, and artistic integrity".
Added Rose Lord, Managing Partner, "The opening of our Tribeca space marks the first time in nearly a decade that the full spectrum of our artists is being presented at one time and provides an unusual opportunity to explore the points of personal, aesthetic, and creative connection that have flourished among them". Noted Managing Partner Emily-Jane Kirwan, "Our artists are at the heart of all that we do. Our new flagship building in New York, together with our galleries in Paris and Los Angeles, provide critical platforms for their international practices".
Your patience is appreciated. An inaugural show showcases the unique cosmos of artists represented by the Gallery and reflects the rigorous program that has defined the Gallery for nearly 50 years. Conceived as a dialogue of tectonic layers that enables a meaningful conversation between artists from disparate contexts, generations, geographic locations, and sensibilities, the exhibition pays tribute to the Gallery's programmatic focus and history-the Gallery's inaugural show in 1977 was dedicated to Marcel Broodthaers-as well as its many longstanding artist relationships. In addition, a range of film, video, sound, and installation works, as well as an activation, emphasize the unique breadth of the Gallery's enduring dedication to time-based, ephemeral, and radical works of art. Throughout the run of the exhibition, a film program will run continuously in one of the galleries, spotlighting five different works rotating on a daily basis.
The exhibition will include work by: Eija-Liisa Ahtila, Chantal Akerman, Giovanni Anselmo, Leonor Antunes, Nairy Baghramian, Lothar Baumgarten, Dara Birnbaum, Christian Boltanski, Daniel Boyd, Marcel Broodthaers, Maurizio Cattelan, James Coleman, Tony Cragg, Richard Deacon, Tacita Dean, Rineke Dijkstra, Cerith Wyn Evans, Andrea Fraser, Bernard Frize, Gerard & Kelly, Dan Graham, Pierre Huyghe, Cristina Iglesias, Amar Kanwar, Louise Lawler, An-My Lê, Steve McQueen, Julie Mehretu, Annette Messager, Delcy Morelos, Sabine Moritz, Maria Nordman, Gabriel Orozco, Giulio Paolini, Giuseppe Penone, Edi Rama, Anri Sala, Matt Saunders, Tino Sehgal, Paul Sietsema, Robert Smithson, Ettore Spalletti, Tavares Strachan, Thomas Struth, Niele Toroni, Adrián Villar Rojas, Danh Vo, James Welling, and Yang Fudong.