Thursday, April 25, 2024

Sam Lipp

Sam Lipp’s paintings draw from a wide range of found images, committing ready-made pictures and the artist’s own photographs to painstaking recreations using a unique process of additive color applied with steel wool. Encompassing directive street signs, Michael Jackson’s transformed face, sexual domination, and sites of civic ordinance, Lipp’s source material exists at the intersection of the body and power. In Lipp’s additive and highly tangible paint application, pin-sized dots of impasto accumulate to create nuanced hues, establishing concrete analogs to fugitive virtual signs. The resulting works are both highly tactile paintings and direct references to the mechanics of screen culture; at once obfuscated by a dappled fog and rigorously precise. Through these effects, the artist underscores the power of visual culture to govern our lived experience, linking pictures and control.

Sam Lipp (b. 1989, London) lives and works in New York. Recent and forthcoming solo exhibitions include Derosia, New York (2022; 2016; 2014); Bonny Poon, Paris (2019); Central Fine, Miami (2015) and Neochrome, Turin (2015). Group exhibitions include Derosia (2021); Cell Project Space, London (2019); Michael Jackson: On the Wall, National Portrait Gallery, London; traveled to Grand Palais, Paris; Bundeskunstalle, Bonn, Germany; and Espoo Museum of Modern Art, Espoo, Finland (2018—2019); Bonny Poon, Paris (2017); Night Gallery, Los Angeles (2016).

Sam Lipp Pollution twink, 2022 Oil on steel, screws 19 x 23 x .06 in (48.3 x 58.4 x .2 cm)
Sam Lipp
Pornocracy 2, 2022
Oil on steel
66 x 24 x .75 in (167.6 x 61 x 1.9 cm)
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1 COMMENT

  1. […] Sam Lipp joined us at the end of June 2022 to discuss, among other things, his recent exhibition at Derosia Gallery in NYC. The work in this show was a culmination of six or seven years of thought followed by over a year of physical labor on the actual exhibition. The work involved a lot of complex thought, which, in turn, demanded complex technique to bring it into the world. All of the work is made on steel – many of them on found pieces of steel – giving them unusual surface effects. To hear more about this and other aspects of Sam Lipp’s art and more, listen to the complete interview. […]

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