adam pendleton | ‘who owns geometry anyway?’

It is a bit of a cheek to ask who owns a circle, isn’t it? But for Adam Pendleton – the man currently occupying the high altar of American abstraction – it’s the only question worth asking. If you’ve spent any time in the world’s major galleries lately, you’ll know Pendleton as the architect of ‘Black Dada,’ a conceptual whirlwind of monochrome spray paint and layered history. 

Today marks the final curtain call for ‘Who Owns Geometry Anyway?’ at Friedman Benda gallery in New York. Since opening its doors on 7 November, this exhibition has seen Pendleton swap the frantic, spray-painted energy of his canvases for materials with significantly more gravity.

Speaking to the press, Pendleton revealed: “What is exciting and interesting about this exhibition is that the works being shown are ideas I had for a very long time, but had never given myself the agency to execute.”

Ranging from marble and onyx to granite and wood, these materials are transposed into what the gallery politely calls “functional forms,” though they feel more like altars than coffee tables. Take the aptly named ‘Boulder,’ a two-part marble work that doubles as a seat and a permanent tectonic shift.

This is also the artist’s first proper foray into furniture, and frankly, it makes a lot of contemporary design look a bit flimsy. Pendleton has taken the basic building blocks of the avant-garde – the triangle, the square and the circle – and realised them with a couturier’s obsessive eye. 

 

 

The ‘Extended Form’ series, rendered in both honey-hued onyx (‘Extended Form One’) and stark marble (‘Extended Form Two’ and ‘Three’), displays this perfectly. The detailing is exquisite: raised rims trace the edges of massive stone slabs, while legs taper into curves so precise they make the heavy black marble seem like it is levitating. 

There is a clever play on displacement too. In pieces like ‘Four Circles’ (crafted from granite) and ‘Split Form’ (marble), the geometry is punctuated by voids, as if he has simply reached into the stone and plucked the mass right out. It is not all cold stone, however; the ‘Two Circles’ (Studio Table) brings stained white oak into the mix, grounding the collection in something warmer, while ‘Drawn’ introduces a shock of modernity – a massive 180-inch loop of aluminium, silicone and LED light that cuts through the space.

Drawing on the philosophy of fellow American artist Isamu Noguchi (who famously said art should be “one with its surroundings”), Pendleton has turned the gallery itself into a ‘social form.’ Massive, hard-edged wall paintings, specifically ‘Black Triangle’ and ‘White Triangle,’ frame the installation creating an architectonic environment for the series of ‘Untitled’ glazed ceramic paintings that embellish the walls.

It has been a massive year for Pendleton. The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) recently acquired his entire 35-work ‘Who Is Queen?’ exhibition in one swoop and he is currently dominating the Hirshhorn in D.C. with a major survey. But this New York show offers something rarer: a chance to see a master of two dimensions figure out how to conquer the third.

Find out more here.

photography. courtesy of William Jess Laird (featured), Izzy Leung, Matthew Septimus (portrait)
words. Gennaro Costanzo