Ken Price (1935–2012) wanted his ceramics to look like they were made out of color—and that was certainly the effect of those exhibited in the North Gallery of Hauser & Wirth’s impressive survey show…
Since 1986, Franklin Parrasch has owned six New York galleries, and the one he currently helms is on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. This January, Parrasch will expand his reach to include the…
Versatile, sensuous, malleable, as basic as mud and as old as art itself, clay is increasingly emerging as a material of choice for a wide range of contemporary artists
The L.A. artist Ken Price, mostly known for his ceramic sculptures, is in the spotlight in New York, where a retrospective of his sculptures opened this week at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (through…
Among the recipients are two shows featured in Art in America's March issue: museum exhibitions devoted toJay DeFeo and Ken Price. The Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles, at the center of…
A 600-seat auditorium was full with relatives, friends and fans of the sculptor, who, Barron pointed out, had a show at the Whitney Museum at the age of 34, but who remained less well known than his…
Ken Price, maker of clay cups, mounds, eggs, specimens, curio shrines and a protean species of iridescent biomorphic concretions, an oeuvre that rivals that of Arp and Miro, died on Feb. 24. He was…
The 12 new abstract sculptures that Ken Price recently installed at Matthew Marks’s 22nd Street space felt like an extended family, with three large-scale pieces in painted bronze composite displaye…