Gary Tatintsian Gallery

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Gary Tatintsian Gallery
Established1998 (1998)
LocationDubai, UAE
TypeArt gallery
FounderGary Tatintsian
Websitewww.tatintsian.com

Gary Tatintsian Gallery (Tatintsian Gallery) is a prominent private collection and art gallery dedicated to showcasing leading figures in international contemporary art scene.

In addition to exhibition management, the gallery works with private and public collections worldwide, collaborating with international museums and art institutions to present works by prominent contemporary artists such as Francis Bacon, George Condo, Damien Hirst, Peter Saul, Yoshitomo Nara, and others.

Founded and owned by art collector and dealer Gary Tatintsian.

History[edit]

First opened in Chelsea, New York (1998), and later in downtown Moscow (2005) and Dubai (2022), the gallery focuses on contemporary Western art, the avant-garde of the early 20th century, photography, and design.

In 1989, Gary Tatintsian launched his inaugural art venture, the “Tatunz” gallery in Berlin, a pivotal hub for contemporary art at the time. The gallery stood among the pioneers in showcasing the works of Russian avant-garde artists like Alexander Rodchenko, Boris Mikhailov, Vladimir Nemukhin, Eduard Steinberg, Ilya Kabakov and Evgeny Chubarov. It was also the first to exhibit the works by Zaha Hadid in 1991. Concurrently, the gallery initiated collaborations with promising Western artists, who would later become key figures in the Western art market.

In 1998, the Tatintsian Gallery relocated to Manhattan, New York, expanding its roster to include notable artists such as Frank Stella, George Sugarman, Judy Pfaff, Leon Tarasewicz, Esko Mannikko, and others.

The Moscow gallery, first opened in 2005 on Ilyinka Street next to Red Square, played a pioneering role in introducing Russian audiences to exhibitions by Western stars such as Peter Doig, Georg Baselitz, Christopher Wool, Tony Oursler, Cecily Brown, and Daniel Richter.

In 2013, the gallery expanded its space in the Kitay-Gorod district in Moscow city center. The gallery occupied 13,000 square feet (1,200 square meters) at the ArtHouse building, designed by architect Sergey Skuratov. It soon became one of the city’s largest private venues for international contemporary art, events, and public talks, highlighting iconic contemporary artists and trends in conceptual art. It was the first gallery in Moscow to exhibit works by George Condo, Peter Halley, Damien Hirst, Francis Bacon, Tony Matelli, Carroll Dunham, John Currin, Wim Delvoye, and other notable artists.[1]

In 2007, together with Multimedia Art Museum Moscow, the gallery organized the first exhibition by Vik Muniz in the Manege Central Exhibition Hall. In 2014, in parallel with a solo show by Wim Delvoye, the artist’s exhibition ‘Mimicry’ was presented at the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Art. In 2015, in collaboration with New York Pace Gallery, the gallery presented the first Moscow exhibition of renowned Korean minimalist Lee Ufan, whose work was later exhibited at The State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg in a dedicated ‘The Cane of Titan’ show. In 2021, the gallery presented the major exhibition in Russia by the legendary portrait painter Chuck Close, which became the artist’s last lifetime exhibition.

Works from the gallery collection, including paintings and sculptures by Evgeny Chubarov, Damien Hirst, Tony Matelli, Peter Saul, Wim Delvoye, John Miller, and Joel-Peter Witkin, were presented at exhibitions in major Russian museums for contemporary art, such as Moscow GARAGE Museum of Contemporary Art; Multimedia Art Museum Moscow (MAMM), National Centre for Contemporary Arts (NCCA), Moscow; and The State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, along with the leading museums and art institutions worldwide.

In 2022, the gallery expanded its international presence by relocating to Dubai, UAE, featuring the first solo exhibition in the region of the renowned YBA artist Mat Collishaw. Since then, the gallery's art projects have introduced the Dubai audience to works by Western contemporary masters such as Ron Arad, George Condo, Peter Saul, Malcolm Morley, Peter Halley, and Jenny Holzer.

Following decades of representation of the renowned abstract artist Evgeny Chubarov, Tatintsian Gallery established the Evgeny Chubarov Foundation, which owns and promotes the legacy of over 200 significant paintings and drawings by the artist.[2]

Artists represented[edit]

List of exhibits[edit]

List of gallery exhibitions[8]
Date Name Artist(s)
14 Nov – 30 Dec 2022 'Tatintsian Gallery Selected' Ron Arad, George Condo, Evgeny Chubarov, Peter Halley, John Miller, Jenny Holzer
27 Sep – 30 Dec 2022 'The Machine Zone' Mat Collishaw
25 Feb – 25 June 2022 'The Machine Zone' Mat Collishaw
18 June – 27 Nov 2021 'Infinite' Chuck Close
15 Aug — 15 Dec 2019 'Naturally Naked' George Condo, John Currin, Carroll Dunham, Tony Matelli, Bjarne Melgaard, Yasumasa Morimura, Peter Saul
9 Nov 2018 — 9 Feb 2019 One man show Wim Delvoye
8 Jun — 8 Sep 2018 One man show Vik Muniz
2 Feb — 28 Apr 2018 'Albion' Mat Collishaw
28 Sep — 16 Dec 2017 'Land of Mirrors' Keiichi Tanaami
23 Jun — 10 Sep 2017 One man show Peter Halley
31 Mar — 1 Jun 2017 One man show Damien Hirst
18 Nov 2016 — 11 Mar 2017 One man show Ron Arad
22 Apr — 30 Sep 2016 'You Better Call Saul' Peter Saul
27 Nov 2015 — 2 Apr 2016 'Mutated Reality' Francis Bacon, Chuck Close, George Condo, Wim Delvoye, Carroll Dunham, KAWS (artist), Mike Kelley, Tony Matelli, Malcolm Morley and Peter Saul
3 Apr — 10 Nov 2015 One man show Evgeny Chubarov
14 Nov 2014–23 Mar 2015 One man show Lee Ufan
26 Jun — 1 Nov 2014 One man show Wim Delvoye
21 Mar — 15 Jun 2014 Group show John Miller, Tony Matelli, Olaf Breuning
13 Sep 2013–28 Feb 2014 'Electric Spirit' Anselm Reyle
21 Sep — 30 Dec 2010 One man show Peter Halley
28 Apr — 8 Aug 2010 One man show Stephan Balkenhol
1 Mar — 21 Apr 2010 'Persona Grata' George Condo, Robert Lucander, Stephan Balkenhol, Martin Maloney, Vik Muniz, Joel-Peter Witkin
23 Sep — 28 Dec 2009 'The Idiot' Tony Matelli
20 Jan — 10 Apr 2009 'Price of Oil' Kristin Calabrese, Vik Muniz, Tal R, Evgeny Chubarov, Martin Maloney, Robert Lucander, Lisa Ruyter
18 Sep — 30 Dec 2008 'Survival' Tony Matelli
15 May — 14 Aug 2008 'Artificial Realism' George Condo
15 Apr — 14 May 2008 'Bad Planet' George Condo, Anton Henning, David Lachapelle, Tony Matelli, Ryan McGinness, Jonathan Meese, John Miller, Sarah Morris, Roxy Paine
7 Feb — 10 Mar 2008 One man show Helmar Lerski
1 Nov 2007–30 Jan 2008 'Russian Project' Vik Muniz
25 Sep — 30 Oct 2007 'Up Close and Personal' Martin Maloney
22 Jun — 6 Aug 2007 One man show André Butzer
17 May — 20 Jun 2007 One man show Evgeny Chubarov
2 Mar — 24 Apr 2007 'Hunky Dory' Jonathan Meese, Peter Doig, Christopher Wool, Chris Ofili, Cecily Brown, Daniel Richter, Tal R, Dash Snow, Georg Baselitz, Norbert Schwontkowski
24 Jan — 1 Mar 2007 'Create Your Own Museum' Kazimir Malevich, Alexander Rodchenko, Evgeny Chubarov, Rémy Zaugg, Jake and Dinos Chapman, Daniel Richter, Stephan Balkenhol, László Moholy-Nagy, Dirk Skreber, Peter Halley, Vik Muniz, George Condo, Anton Henning
18 Oct — 30 Nov 2006 'One Artist's Theater' Yasumasa Morimura
17 May – 5 Aug 2006 One man show Peter Halley
12 Apr — 15 May 2006 'The Art of Chess' Maurizio Cattelan, Damien Hirst, Paul McCarthy, Jake and Dinos Chapman, Yayoi Kusama, Matthew Ronay, Tom Friedman, Tunga, Rachel Whiteread, Barbara Kruger
3 Feb – 10 Apr 2006 'House of Prince' Tal R
28 Oct 2005–30 Jan 2006 One man show Joel-Peter Witkin
21 Sep — 15 Nov 2005 One man show Weegee
25 May — 31 Aug 2005 'Fresh Kills' Alexis Rockman
10 Feb — 15 May 2005 'We Can Do It' Kristin Calabrese, Vik Muniz, Torben Giehler, Antony Gormley, Peter Halley, Stephan Balkenhol, Tony Matelli, Tony Oursler

List of publications[edit]

  • Mat Collishaw – The Machine Zone, 2022, ISBN 978-5-9909730-5-3
  • Chuck Close – Infinite, 2021, ISBN 978-5-9909730-4-6
  • Peter Halley, 2017, ISBN 978-5-9909730-1-5
  • Ron Arad, 2017, ISBN 978-5-9909730-0-8
  • Evgeny Chubarov – Osthaus Museum Hagen, 2016, ISBN 978-3-946688-05-1
  • Peter Saul, 2016, ISBN 978-5-9906881-9-3
  • Mystifyers, 2016, ISBN 978-5-94620-113-1
  • Mutated Reality, 2016, ISBN 978-5-9906881-3-1
  • Evgeny Chubarov, 2015, ISBN 978-5-9906881-2-4
  • Lee Ufan, 2015, ISBN 978-5-9906881-1-7
  • Peter Halley, 2015, ISBN 978-5-9906881-0-0
  • Wim Delvoye, 2014, ISBN 978-5-9906881-5-5
  • Olaf Breuning, Tony Matelli, John Miller, 2014, ISBN 978-5-9906881-4-8
  • Anselm Reyle – Electric Spirit, 2014, ISBN 978-5-9906881-6-2
  • Stephan Balkenhol, 2010
  • Tony Matelli – Survival Part 1; Part 2, 2008
  • George Condo – Artificial Realism, 2008, ISBN 978-5-9906881-7-9
  • Vik Muniz, 2007, ISBN 978-5-9906881-8-6
  • Martin Maloney – Up Close and Personal, 2007
  • André Butzer, 2007
  • Hunky Dory, 2007
  • Yasumasa Morimura – One Artist's Theater, 2006
  • Peter Halley, 2006
  • The Art of Chess, 2006
  • Joel-Peter Witkin, 2005
  • Alexis Rockman – Fresh Kills, 2005
  • We Can Do It, 2005[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Past | Gary Tatintsian Gallery, Inc". tatintsian.com. Retrieved 2024-04-11.
  2. ^ "Evgeny Chubarov Foundation". chubarov.art. Retrieved 2024-04-11.
  3. ^ "Peter Halley - Exhibition View | Gary Tatintsian Gallery, Inc". tatintsian.com. Retrieved 2024-04-11.
  4. ^ "Chuck Close - Exhibition view | Gary Tatintsian Gallery, Inc". tatintsian.com. Retrieved 2024-04-11.
  5. ^ "Mutated Reality - Exhibition View | Gary Tatintsian Gallery, Inc". tatintsian.com. Retrieved 2024-04-11.
  6. ^ "Lee Ufan - Exhibition view | Gary Tatintsian Gallery, Inc". tatintsian.com. Retrieved 2024-04-11.
  7. ^ "Artists". Gary Tatintsian Gallery, Inc. Retrieved 2024-04-11.
  8. ^ "Gary Tatintsian Gallery, Inc". tatintsian.com. Retrieved 2024-04-11.
  9. ^ "Publications". tatintsian.com. Gary Tatintsian Gallery, Inc. Retrieved 2024-04-11.

External links[edit]