Charles LeDray: workworkworkworkwork
Nov 18, 2010–Feb 13, 2011
Over the past twenty years, New York-based sculptor Charles LeDray (b. 1960, Seattle) has created a highly distinctive and powerful body of work using such materials as sewn cloth, carved human bone, and glazed ceramics. This major survey, which includes works from the 1980s to the present, celebrates both the artist’s virtuosity with materials and his uncanny manipulation of scale to create seemingly familiar objects that engage the collective memory. His techniques of sewing, carving bone, and throwing clay pots find precedents in the traditions of folk art and visionary art, yet rise to a level of unprecedented virtuosity and artistic invention. The exhibition is curated by Randi Hopkins for the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston. Its Whitney installation will be overseen by curator Carter Foster.
Events
View all-
Member Preview Day: Charles LeDray: workworkworkworkwork
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
12:30–6 pm -
Opening Reception: Charles LeDray: workworkworkworkwork
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
7–9 pm -
Members-only Morning Viewing Hours
Sunday, November 21, 2010
9–11 am -
Whitney Wees: Hats Off! Clothing as Costume
Saturday, December 4, 2010
10:30–11:30 am
Exhibition Catalogue
The most comprehensive review of a remarkable contemporary artist’s work in an extraordinary package designed by Sagmeister, Inc. Since the early 1990s, New York–based artist Charles LeDray has become known for his miniaturized sculptures of hand-stitched clothing, carved human bone, and thimble-sized ceramics. Their intimate scale and materials poignantly evoke allusions to childhood memory, gender and class stereotypes, and wonder in the everyday
This catalogue is no longer available at the Museum Shop
Explore works from this exhibition
in the Whitney's collection
View 1 work
In the News
Review: “His magical retrospective … is dumbfounding. That one man could have singlehandedly created all these things defies credibility.”
—The New York Times
Review: “Some of the richest, most touching and witty art I have seen in a long while”
—The Financial Times
Review: "The artist uses tiny scale to monumental effect."
--Time Out New York
"Men’s Suits emerges from the darkness like a vivid dream."
--T Magazine/The New York Times
"Every element in his work is created practically from scratch by hand--artificially aged fabrics, tiny metal and plastic hangers, doll-sized ladders, and miniature porcelain pots."
--Artnet
The Approval Matrix: “minature-vintage-clothing art”
—New York
“With his sometimes diminutive, meticulously made objects . . . the New York artist Charles LeDray thinks giant thoughts.”
—The New York Times
“you might just think you stumbled onto the set for Gulliver’s Travels.”
—The Village Voice
“Charles LeDray’s incredible miniatures hold big interest for kids.”
—Time Out New York Kids
“an enthralling, meticulous solo show”
—WNYC Culture Blog