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EVENT DETAILS |
INTERchange, an ongoing series focusing on artists working at the intersection of physical & virtual spaces. Through artist talks, discussions, & media we explore how new technologies inform & extend creative practice. We live in a world increasingly stratified by virtual layers of social, political, & economic culture. INTERchange hopes to understand how virtual & physical spaces are synthesized into new cultural forms.
Ethan Greenbaum is a New York based artist. He creates sculptural works centered around building materials & other commonplace objects. Finding beauty in the mundane such as concrete, cinderblocks, & other elements of urban decay, he uses a range of techniques & processes to create his work, some analog & some digital such as 3D scanning & printing.
Greenbaum has exhibited at KANSAS, New York; Derek Eller Gallery, New York; Hauser & Wirth, New York; Marlborough Chelsea, New York, Higher Pictures, New York; Marianne Boesky, New York, Circus Gallery, Los Angeles; Steve Turner, Los Angeles; The Suburban, Chicago; Michael Jon & Alan, Miami, The Aldrich Museum, Connecticut; Socrates Sculpture Park; Long Island City & Stems Gallery, Brussels
Recent projects include a solo presentation with Lyles & King at the 2017 Armory Show & solo exhibitions at & Galerie Pact, Paris & Super Dakota, Brussels. Forthcoming projects include a solo exhibition with Lyles & King, New York.
His work has been discussed in The New York Times, Modern Painters, Artforum, BOMB Magazine, ArtReview & Interview Magazine, among others.
Ethan is a cofounder & editor of the thehighlights.org & his writings have appeared in the Brooklyn Rail, Wax Magazine, BOMB, Paper Monument & others. He has also curated & co-curated multiple exhibitions at venues including The Suburban, Chicago; Lyles & King, New York & Super Dakota, Brussels.
Greenbaum is the recipient of Dieu Donne's Workspace Residency, LMCC's Workspace Program, The Robert Blackburn SIP Fellowship, The Socrates EAF Fellowship, The Edward Albee Foundation Residency & The Barry Schactman Painting Prize. He received an MFA in Painting from Yale School of Art.
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