Tag: Andrew Kreps Gallery

Art Out and About — US

It’s an exciting art autumn in the US. Below, the 411 on several exhibitions worth visiting., coast to coast

Ruth Asawa: A Retrospective on view
Installation view of Ruth Asawa: A Retrospective on view at The Museum of Modern Art from October 19, 2025, through February 7, 2026. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Digital Image © 2025 The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Photo by Jonathan Dorado.

Ruth Asawa: Retrospective
Through February 7, 2026
Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53rd Street
New York, New York
https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/5768

An expansive retrospective of the eloquent work of Ruth Asawa has traveled to New York from San Francisco MoMA. The exhibition coincides with the artist’s 100 birthday, the exhibition includes some 300 objects that highlight the core values of experimentation and interconnectedness pervading all dimensions of Asawa’s practice. The retrospective spans 60 years of Asawa’s ambitious career, presenting a range of her work across mediums, including wire sculptures, bronze casts, paper folds, paintings, and a comprehensive body of works on paper. The artworks are accompanied by a rich array of archival materials—photographs, documents, and ephemera—that illuminate her public commissions, art advocacy, and meaningful, lasting relationships with members of her community.

Sheila Hicks, Rempart
Sheila Hicks, Rempart, 2016. Photo: Oliver Roura

New Work: Sheila Hicks
Through August 9, 2026
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
151 3rd Street
San Francisco, California
https://www.sfmoma.org/exhibition/new-work-sheila-hicks/

Still at SFMoMA is Sheila Hicks’s first solo exhibition there, a site-specific installation in the museum’s New Work gallery. According to the museum, the works are inspired by objects, textures, and patterns observed in her adopted city or in her migratory life. Each draws from places with personal significance, from the cobblestones of her courtyard to the towering lighthouses of the rocky island of Ouessant, France and its treacherous and rugged landscape.

Carina Yepez
Carina Yepez. Made in collaboration with Maricela Herrera (auntie) and Lula Yepez (mom) and in gratitude to Amalia Martínez from La Haciendita, Guanajuato, Mexico. Mujeres (Women), 2023. Collection of the artist.

On Loss and Absence: Textiles of Mourning and Survival
Through March 15, 2026
Art Institute of Chicago
159 East Monroe Street
Chicago, Illinois
https://www.artic.edu/exhibitions/9772/on-loss-and-absence-textiles-of-mourning-and-survival

In the center of the country is a themed exhibition at the Art Institute in Chicago. Drawn primarily from the museum’s collection, On Loss and Absence brings together over 100 objects from diverse cultures dating from antiquity to today to reveal the ways people use textiles to sustain spiritual beliefs, understand death, cope with grief, remember those who have passed, and heal from trauma, both personally and collectively.

Back on the East Coast, there are five exhibitions of interest — two in Connecticut, two in New York and one in New Jersey. 

Red, White and Baldwin
Red, White and Baldwin, 2016, Kenya Baleech Alkebu (quilt design), Maureen Kelleher (quilting)
from Stitching Time. Photo Maureen Kelleher. Fairfield University Art Musuem.

Stitching Time: The Social Justice Collaboration Quilts Project 
Through December 13, 2025
Fairfield University Art Museum
1073 Benson Road
Fairfield, Connecticut
https://www.fairfield.edu/museum/exhibitions/current-exhibitions

At the Fairfield University Art Museum, Stitching Time features 12 quilts created by men who are incarcerated in the Louisiana State Penitentiary, also known as Angola Prison. These works of art, and accompanying recorded interviews, tell the story of a unique inside-outside quilt collaboration. The exhibition focuses our attention on the quilt creators, people often forgotten by society when discussing the history of the US. criminal justice system. Also on view in the gallery will be Give Me Life, a selection of works from women artists presently or formerly incarcerated at York Correctional Institution, a maximum security state prison in Niantic, CT, courtesy of Community Partners in Action (CPA). 

Jeremy Frey
Jeremy Frey, Basket Within A Basket, 2012. Courtesy of the Bruce Museum

Jeremy Frey: Woven
Through October 26, 2025
The Bruce Museum
1 Museum Drive
Greenwich, Connecticut
https://brucemuseum.org/exhibitions/jeremy-frey-woven/?gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=19816342960&gbraid=0AAAAADFvx1CiuOUzWvTKKQPD8aRSirAut

You have just a few days to see the first major retrospective of Jeremy Frey’s work. Jeremy Frey: Woven presents a comprehensive survey — 50 baskets — from 20 years of Frey’s prolific career. A seventh-generation Passamaquoddy basket maker and one of the most celebrated Indigenous weavers in the country, Frey learned traditional Wabanaki weaving techniques from his mother and through apprenticeships at the Maine Indian Basketmakers Alliance. While Frey builds on these cultural foundations in his work, he also pushes the creative limits of his medium, producing conceptually ambitious and meticulously crafted baskets that reflect not only his technical skill as a weaver but also his profound ecological knowledge of and connection to the Passamaquoddy ancestral territory of the Northeastern Woodlands.

In New York City there are two opportunities to celebrate the work of remarkable artist Kay Sekimachi, who turned 99 last month. 

Kay Sekimachi: a personal archive
Kay Sekimachi: a personal archive installation, Andrew Kreps Gallery. Photo Tom Grotta

Kay Sekimachi: a personal archive
Through November 1, 2025
Andrew Kreps Gallery
394 Broadway
New York, New York
https://www.andrewkreps.com/exhibitions/kay-sekimachi2

This exhibition of works by the Berkeley-based artist Kay Sekimachi, was organized in collaboration with browngrotta arts. It includes rare, early works from Sekimachi’s personal archive — weavings and assemblages.  The exhibition is the first of the artist’s work in New York since 1970.

Lynn Hershman Leeson, Giggling Machine
Lynn Hershman Leeson, Giggling Machine, Self Portrait as Blonde, 1968. wax, wig, feathers, Plexiglass, wood, sensor, and sound, 16 1/2 × 16 1/2 × 13 in. (41.9 × 41.9 × 33 cm). Promised gift to Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH. © Lynn Hershman Leeson

Sixties Surreal
Through January 19, 2026
Whitney Museum of Art
99 Gansevoort Street
New York, New York 
https://whitney.org/exhibitions/sixties-surreal

One of Kay Sekimachi’s innovative and celebrated monofilament weavings is included in Sixties Surreal at the Whitney. Sixties Surreal  is an ambitious, scholarly reappraisal of American art from 1958 to 1972, encompassing the work of more than 100 artists. This revisionist survey looks beyond now canonical movements to focus instead on the era’s most fundamental, if underrecognized, aesthetic current—an efflorescence of psychosexual, fantastical, and revolutionary tendencies, undergirded by the imprint of historical Surrealism and its broad dissemination. The exhibition is accompanied by a comprehensive catalog and a playlist.

And in New Jersey …

Lenore Tawney Tapestry
Lenore Tawney, Morning Redness, 1974. Photo by Tom Grotta courtesy of the Grotta Collection.

Toshiko Takaezu: Dialogues in Clay
October 31, 2025 – July 5, 2026
Princeton University Art Museum
Princeton University Campus
Princeton, NJ
https://artmuseum.princeton.edu/exhibitions-events/exhibitions/toshiko-takaezu-dialogues-clay

The groundbreaking ceramic artist Toshiko Takaezu (1922–2011), who taught at Princeton University for almost three decades will be celebrated in Toshiko Takaezu: Dialogues in Clay beginning October 31st. Drawing from the Museum’s deep holdings of Takaezu’s ceramics, Dialogues in Clay explores the artist’s experimental practice, including her signature “closed” forms and painterly glazing. Placing Takaezu’s sculptures in conversation with the work of teachers and contemporaries who embarked on parallel pathways of innovation—including Helen Frankenthaler, Maija Grotell, Robert Motherwell, Isamu Noguchi, Lenore Tawney, and Peter Voulkos,— alongside reflections by her students, the exhibition positions Takaezu as one of the most important ceramic artists of the twentieth century.

Much to Enjoy!


Kay Sekimachi: New Heights at 99

Kay Sekimachi at the loom
Kay Sekimachi on loom in 2014. Photo by Tom Grotta

Kay Sekimachi has always had fans. She is known as a “weaver’s weaver” because of her technical mastery and extraordinary textile innovations. Her work has been recognized and exhibited widely since the 1960s, yet it has been 50 years since she has had a solo exhibition in New York. In 1969, Kay Sekimachi’s “‘sketchy’ and transparent” [ ] free-hanging, gossamer piece of nylon monofilament was included in the seminal Wall Hangings exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. In 1970, there was a solo exhibition of Sekimachi’s monofilaments at the Lee Nordness Gallery in New York.

Fast forward to 2025, and Kay Sekimachi’s work is featured in a solo exhibition Kay Sekimachi: a personal archive at the Andrew Kreps Gallery (394 Broadway, New York, NY, through November 1, 2025, in conjunction with browngrotta arts). Kay’s work is also on exhibit at MoMA in Woven Histories: Textiles and Modern Abstraction (through September 13, 2025). And, as of September 24th, Sekimachi’s remarkable monofilament weavings are a part of Sixties Surrealan ambitious, scholarly reappraisal of American art from 1958 to 1972 (through January 19, 2026), at the Whitney Museum of Art in New York. 

 Kay Sekimachi: a personal archive at the Andrew Kreps Gallery
Kay Sekimachi’s work is featured in a solo exhibition Kay Sekimachi: a personal archive at the Andrew Kreps Gallery. Photo by Tom Grotta

It’s official — September 2025 is Kay Sekimachi month — feted in New York and in California where she will turn 99 years old!

Kay Sekimachi: Geometries
Kay Sekimachi: Geometries, May 28 – October 24, 2021; Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Photo: Impart Photography

It’s a fitting capstone to Kay’s string of one-person exhibitions in other locales. 2001 saw Intimate Eye: Paper & Fiber Forms of Kay Sekimachi at the Mingei Museum in San Diego. In 2002, it was Kay Sekimachi: Fiberworks at the Craft and Folk Museum in Los Angeles. In 2009, Kay Sekimachi: Fiber Artist opened at the Sonoma Art Museum. In 2016, the year of Kay’s 90th birthday, the Craft and Folk Art Museum presented Kay Sekimachi: Simple Complexity and the de Young Museum in San Francisco presented Kay Sekimachi: Student, Teacher, Artist. 2018 saw the opening of Kay Sekimachi, Master Weaver: Innovations in Forms and Materials at the Fresno Art Museum in California. In 2021, BAMPFA in Berkeley, California opened Kay Sekimachi: Geometries. In 2023 and 2024, a comprehensive survey of her work titled Kay Sekimachi: Weaving Traditions was presented at the SFO Museum. And right now, Kay Sekimachi: Ingenuity and Imagination is on exhibit at the San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles.

Kay Sekimachi, Master Weaver: Innovations in Forms and Materials; Fresno Art Museum's
Installation view of Kay Sekimachi, Master Weaver: Innovations in Forms and Materials; Fresno Art Museum’s Council of 100 Distinguished Woman Artist for 2018, Fresno, California, July 14, 2018-January 6, 2019, Courtesy of the Fresno Art Museum

In between, there were significant group and two-person exhibitions. In 1969, her work appeared alongside Anni Albers, Sheila Hicks, Doyle Lane, Lenore Tawney, Peter Voulkos, and others in Objects: USA, which traveled after opening at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington D.C. In 1971, there was Deliberate Entanglements at UCLA. In 1973, the 6th International Biennial of Tapestry in Lausanne, Switzerland. In 1986, FibeR/Evolution, Milwaukee Art Museum, Wisconsin. Then in 1993, the two-person exhibition, Marriage in Form: Bob Stocksdale and Kay Sekimachi  traveled from California to Arkansas, Missouri, Florida, DC, New York, and Rhode Island followed by In the Realm of Nature: Kay Sekimachi & Bob Stocksdale at the Mingei Museum in 2015. Then Woven Histories debuted in Los Angeles in 2023, traveling to Ottawa, Canada, Washington, D.C. and now New York, New York followed by Skilled, Subversive, Sublime: Fiber Art by Women at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in DC in 2024.

Skilled, Subversive, Sublime: Fiber Art by Women at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in DC
Skilled, Subversive, Sublime: Fiber Art by Women at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in DC in 2024. Photo by Tom Grotta

There is more well-deserved recognition to come — a major retrospective on Kay Sekimachi will open in the Summer of 2028 at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. 

Watch for it and in the meantime visit Kay Sekimachi: a personal archive in New York if you can. (Here’s a short video to pique your interest.)