• Exhibitions
    • Now
    • Future
    • Archive
  • Public Art
  • Fairs
  • News
  • About
    • Who?
    • Architecture
  • Shop
  • Menu

Primary.

  • Exhibitions
    • Now
    • Future
    • Archive
  • Public Art
  • Fairs
  • News
  • About
    • Who?
    • Architecture
  • Shop

Public Art at Miami World Center

November 24, 2022

Primary is proud to invite you to visit Miami World Center and view a collection of new artworks from Nina Chanel Abney, Franz Ackermann, Hernan Bas, Zadok Ben-David, Nick Cave, Woody De Othello, Viktor El-Saieh, Trenton Doyle Hancock, & Serge Toussaint. Open and viewable to the public, 24 hours a day at Miami World Center.

At inception, Primary knew that Miami needed to play a significant role in the narrative of this public exhibit, whether that be a geographical location, a history, or an identity. And with the world-class guidance of Jeffrey Deitch comes a focus on the human figure, an opportunity to recognize that the people, the city's inhabitants, define its greatness.

These ten works take the form of five site-specific murals, four life-sized sculptures, and a historic restoration that is now a part of our Miami landscape. Projects like this are why we work in contemporary art. They are fragile and precious, and to us, they are everything.

Public Art at Miami World Center could only come to fruition with the help of amazing artists and a group of hyper-talented people striving for a vision of excellence. First and foremost, we thank Nitin Motwani, Ben Feldman, Shaul Kuba, and Katya Hristova. We appreciate how you value the community by exhibiting exceptional works of art for the public to experience.

Much gratitude to our priceless advisory committee, Franklin Sirmans, Alex Gartenfeld, and Cecilia Alemani, who helped put our mission and narrative into greater perspective. A massive high five to Kathy Huang and Jennifer Estime for tireless hours being the glue and balance in every detail from concept to completion.

Thank you to all the galleries, photographers, and installers whose unmatched skills helped to see these pieces find their new home at Miami World Center. And to our PR Team, we appreciate your help getting out the good word; it's a pretty rad story to tell.

Finally, to the artists, thank you. Your involvement is a gift.

For more information and a map of locations, please visit us online at: http://miamiworldcenter.com/artworks

Woody De Othello

Forming Foundations w/ Wade Tullier

November 03, 2022
Forming Foundations w/ Wade Tullier

Forming Foundations: A peek into the studio of artist Wade Tullier.

Read More

TYPOE - Bronze Editions

July 05, 2022

PRIMARY and DIE FORM STUDIOS are proud to present the BRONZE EDITIONS. A limited-edition set of twenty-five bronze sculptures realized through four arrangements by the Miami-based artist TYPOE.

Various custom building blocks make up the artist's studio, each block contributing to Typoe's distinct language. In the spirit of endless combinations, these works are constantly in flux, built up only to be broken down until they have reached a final form.

Taking cue from Friedrich Fröbel and Bauhaus' Naef Toys. These stacked DIE FORMS pointedly reference the history of building blocks as groundbreaking educational tools that sought to foster the life-affirming creative instinct in children.

These blocks have had a surprising influence for generations, having been cited by prominent artists and architects as significant in their artistic development. Typoe's block sculptures resonate with children and adults, encouraging joy, play, and creativity while suggesting through such symbolic icons as skulls and ravens that life also has challenges.

These limited edition sculptures expand upon Typoe's symbolic vocabulary. Taking permanent shape in bronze, executed through a lost wax process, and finished with black patina. Typoe designs and refines his pictorial icons with great care to find the right balance between visual impact, clarity, and depth of meaning.

DROPPING Friday, July 8, 2022 - CLICK HERE

NADA Art Fair - Philip Smith - Booth 4.13 - Primary.

April 28, 2022

Philip Smith on Night Sky

April 15, 2022

Maake Interviews Wade Tullier

April 07, 2022

Can you tell us a bit about your background and how you became interested in becoming an artist? Who or what were some of your most important early influences?

I grew up in a very small town called Pigeon in southern Louisiana. Needless to say, there isn’t any art happening there but there is a ton of nature. During that time, I would draw nonstop, trees, animals, and these small characters on the packaging, video games, etc. It was seen as a hobby by my parents so I wasn’t really exposed to art or the possibility of being an artist until I was in college. I think in my third year of college, I finally signed up for a basic drawing course and was assigned to learn about Alberto Giacometti, which turned out to be amazing for me. I didn’t know I could do something like be an artist but that really set me onto the course I am today. Shortly, after I began stumbling across and finding artists like Kiki Smith, Thomas Houseago, Jenny Saville, Martin Puryear, Lucy Skaer, and plenty of others.

Where are you currently based and what initially attracted you to working in this place? Are there any aspects of this specific location or community that have inspired aspects of your work?

I am currently based in Detroit, Michigan. I began working in Detroit after having graduated from Cranbrook Academy of Art which is in nearby Bloomfield Hills. I chose to stay and work in Detroit because I had an art handling position right out of graduate school. It was also very easy to stay because a large group of my friends decided to stay as well.

Can you describe your studio space? What are some of the most crucial aspects of a studio that make it functional? Do any of these specific aspects directly affect your work?

My studio space is approximately 400sqft within a larger 1200sqft space that I share with other artists. I do everything in my studio! I have a photo booth set up, kilns, storage, power tools for crating, and of course everything I need to make clay sculptures. My work is definitely affected by my current studio setup–works need to be of a certain size to fit into the kiln, be photographed, etc. but I couldn’t imagine doing it any other way.

What is a typical day like? If you don't have a typical day, what is an ideal day?

On a typical day, I usually spend about 8 hours working in my studio. There is always some kind of paperwork or planning that needs to be done as well. I usually try to cut out as many distractions before I go to work which means doing planning for the day in the morning, running errands, gathering supplies, etc. to then have uninterrupted time later in the day.

What gets you in a creative mindset?

When I see how things and objects operate in the world–mechanical, symbolic, etc. often gets the creative juices flowing for me. I love to think in broad lateral strokes and how things can be applied to what I am doing from another field of study. I am often asking myself, “how can I do that?” and follow it up with drawings about the possibilities. This process I think enables me to then go into the studio and hash it out in clay.

What criteria do you follow for selecting materials? How long have you worked with this particular media or method?

I stick with one or two kinds of clay to work with. The one I use is very sandy and gritty and is made for sculptural works. Clay can vary so much in terms of its malleability, strength, and color that I have settled on only a few kinds to get somewhat predictable results. I’ve been working with this same style of clay for about 5 years now. Periodically, I will do several tests with other clays and glazes and have a bit of fun, but I usually don’t care for the results.

Can you walk us through your overall process? How long has this approach been a part of your practice?

Most of everything I create starts from a series of drawings. I continually sketch and redraw combinations of works to flush out the possibilities. This part of my process happens daily and I have hundreds of drawings that I reference when I am building in the studio. I only create about 10% of what is drawn, mostly due to a variety of technical challenges such as gravity and fragility.

Can you talk about some of the ongoing interests, imagery, and concepts that have informed your process and body of work over time? How do you anticipate your work progressing in the future?

All of the imagery within my work can be traced back to my daily encounters with wildlife, a history of natural disasters, human-made catastrophes, the stories I heard as a child, growing up in the American South, and occasionally my experience as a forensic sculptor and researcher. In the future, I am continuing this exploration of personal myth and storytelling. I’m working to introduce new forms and build upon the previous work to create larger sculptures. Some of the new imagery I am working on within drawings now includes festivals, celebrations, and potlucks.

Do you pursue any collaborations, projects, or careers in addition to your studio practice? If so, can you tell us more about those projects, and are there connections between your studio practice and these endeavors?

I typically do not pursue many collaborative projects but am always open to the idea. I like discussing the opportunity to see what each participant can bring to a collaboration. Two projects I’ve done in the past include making a small edition of sculptures for the online art platform Exhibition A and working with Drum Machine Editions and Rita Mookerjee to publish a collaborative book of drawings and poems.

As a result of the pandemic, many artists have experienced limited access to their studios or loss of exhibitions, income, or other opportunities. Has your way of working (or not working) shifted significantly during this time? Are there unexpected insights or particular challenges you’ve experienced?

Everything for me exploded when the pandemic hit. I had been teaching, which totally changed overnight to a “remote” platform, which is mind-boggling in regards to ceramics. I lost that position at the end of the semester. In addition to this, I was a preparator and art handler at an art museum. That job also didn’t last long in the pandemic and I was forced to try to find work elsewhere. I did quite a lot of freelance art installation for private clients in the time after moving on from the museum but ultimately made a decision to try to focus on my art practice, which had temporarily moved into my basement during lockdown. In March, before lockdown, I traveled and installed a solo show in Columbus, Ohio, which never opened to the public. However, in the following months, I managed to secure several serious opportunities to show my work–mostly thanks to social media. Even with the good news, it was hard to focus while the world seemed to be melting down but it was really one of only a few things I could do to eel somewhat okay. And it was a serious challenge to want to make work. There is a ton of sculptures that I made during lockdown that no one has ever seen. I made them as a combination of habit, emotional support, and sheer will and they were necessary for me to process what was happening.

Can you share some of your recent influences? Are there specific works—from visual art, literature, film, or music—that are important to you?

The film, “Hard to Be a God” by Aleksei German is something I think about often and seems important to me even though I do not know why. It’s a really hard film to watch and is long and disorienting. But I think unfortunately it has a lot of connections to the present state of the world.

My influences come from my past and the experiences I continue to have. Apart from that, I really try to not be influenced by external voices so much- especially in visual art. Some important things to me are revisiting where I grew up, reintroducing myself to that culture, and continuing to hear the stories of the people who live there. Those are the things that drive my work into unexpected directions and self-discoveries.

Who are some contemporary artists you’re excited about? What are the best exhibitions you’ve seen in recent memory and why do they stand out?

‘Adam Pendleton: Who is Queen?’ at MoMA is easily one of the best exhibitions I’ve seen in years. The towering five-story structures supporting sculpture, painting, moving images, textiles, and sound sculptures were stunning. I was completely overwhelmed and engaged with his work. From multiple stories within the museum, you could view Pendleton’s works. It felt as if exploring the works from floor to floor was excavating memories and history.

‘Brie Ruais: Some Things I Know About Being A Body’ at albertz benda gallery was a very stunning recent show as well. Her work is so visceral and raw but transforms into these very beautiful bursts of glazed ceramic. The comparisons between the natural and human worlds as well as the mind and the body are really powerful connections that fascinate me endlessly.

Do you have any tips or advice that someone has shared with you that you have found particularly helpful?

Don’t compare yourself to others. Ever.

What are you working on in the studio right now? What’s coming up next for you?

Right now, I’m focusing on an upcoming solo show at The Sculpture Center in Cleveland. The exhibition will showcase some new dog-themed sculptures, so I’ve been making a ton of dogs, puppies, and dog toys–mostly balls. After that my focus will shift toward completing some large-scale commissions and various works for group shows.

————————————————>

BIO

Wade Tullier (b.1988, Baton Rouge, Louisiana) is a visual artist working primarily in ceramics and sculpture. His work and process are heavily influenced by storytelling, myth, and being raised within the landscape of southern Louisiana. He holds a BFA from Louisiana State University and an MFA from Cranbrook Academy of Art. Tullier has exhibited nationally and internationally with shows in Miami, Chicago, Detroit, Reykjavik, and Munich. He was also included in the influential ceramics exhibition, 'Clay Pop' at Jeffrey Deitch Gallery in New York.

ARTIST STATEMENT

Storytelling, the social and cultural activity of sharing stories, is an oral form of language, predating the written word, associated with the practices and values essential to developing one's identity. Much in how our ancestors pass down anecdotes to shape the community's morals and educate younger generations, Tullier's practice mimics these verbal processes. The repetition he puts forth develops into a physical myth, adding a multitude of layers to the dominant stories surrounding Tullier's work. "I make sculptures that depict animals, figures, phenomena, and everyday objects. They are always recognizable but become elusive as I continue to reinterpret each piece. In this way, my sculptures act as characters in oral history: they transform as they are retold. While these objects remain familiar and are easily identifiable, the combinations of works remain ambiguous. They echo the layered, nonlinear structure of memory as it is excavated through storytelling."

LINK | MAAKE

Hypebeast on Nina Chanel Abney for Miami World Center

April 06, 2022

Miami's Worldcenter Unveils $5 Million USD Art Initiative

Tapping Nina Chanel Abney as the first to create work for the space.

Worldcenter is a new sprawling multi-use complex in the heart of Miami that seeks to revitalize the downtown area through a range of shopping, dining and hotel attractions. Today, the group unveiled a $5m USD public art initiative that will bring world-class creatives to the burgeoning destination.

As the first artist to be enlisted, Nina Chanel Abney painted several murals that were inspired by the historically Black neighborhood of Overtown. “I created pictorial language to tell an imagined narrative that investigates community renewals and removals,” Abney said in a statement, adding, “The mural location, a tunnel formed by the dark passageway under the building, inspired me to consider the legacy of preserving sacred spaces with story. I hope to spark a dialogue around gentrification and encourage a curiosity amongst viewers to engage with and learn about the previous and adjacent neighborhoods.”

Located just across the street from the FTX Arena, the project was curated by gallerist Jeffrey Deitch and Miami-based art collective, Primary, the latter of which has produced a range of public projects with the likes of Hunter Potter and Derrick Adams, amongst many. “We believe the most successful public art must be visually engaging and dialogue with the immediate environment,” said Primary’s founding partner, Books Bischof, in an interview with ARTnews.

Worldcenter is currently under construction and is expected to open to the public later this year.

LINK | HYPEBEAST

ARTnews on Nina Chanel Abney for Miami World Center

March 31, 2022

A New Public Art Program Launches in Miami with Massive Nina Chanel Abney Mural

By Tessa Solomon

A new $5 million public art initiative will bring major commissions by world-class contemporary artists to downtown Miami. First up is a monumental mural by Nina Chanel Abney.

The work is a joyful mashup of graphic figures, bold color planes, and musical notes that was inspired by Overtown, a historic Black neighborhood in Miami. It spans the length of a passageway under a property within the mixed-used development called Worldcenter, a self-described “city within a city.”

“I created pictorial language to tell an imagined narrative that investigates community renewals and removals,” Abney said in a statement. “The mural location, a tunnel formed by the dark passageway under the building, inspired me to consider the legacy of preserving sacred spaces with story. I hope to spark a dialogue around gentrification and encourage a curiosity amongst viewers to engage with and learn about the previous and adjacent neighborhoods.”

To realize the program’s aesthetic vision, art dealer Jeffrey Deitch, who maintains gallery spaces in Los Angeles and New York, worked with the Miami-based curatorial collective Primary, which has spearheaded a mix of public projects and gallery exhibitions across Miami that center the city’s diverse history.

“We believe the most successful public art must be visually engaging and dialogue with the immediate environment,” Books Bischof, founding partner of Primary told ARTnews. “Historic Overtown is a stone’s throw from Nina Chanel Abney’s mural. Allowing this history to inform her art makes for the most significant public work.”

A wave of real estate construction is currently transforming Miami’s downtown, which had suffered for decades from a lack of local investment. The 27-acre, $4 billion Miami Worldcenter is the second largest of such multipurpose urban developments in the U.S., trailing only Manhattan’s slick commercial playground Hudson Yards.

As part of its commitment to the city, Worldcenter has stressed the importance of community involvement. It created an art advisory committee of cultural professionals that includes Franklin Sirmans, director of Pérez Art Museum Miami; Nicholas Baume, director, and chief curator of Public Art Fund; and Cecilia Alemani, director and chief curator of High Line Art in New York, as well as artistic director of the 2022 Venice Biennale.

In addition to Abney’s mural, Worldcenter has also commissioned designer, sculptor, and performance artist Nick Cave, Miami-based painter Viktor El-Saieh, and Texas-based artist Trenton Doyle Hancock to create new work for the site so far. Worldcenter expects to unveil two more large-scale artworks this year, with more details forthcoming.

Bischof added, “It’s magic to see [Abney’s mural] come to fruition; for the program at Miami World Center, this is only the beginning.”

LINK | ARTNEWS

A large-scale mural inspired by Overtown, a historic Black neighborhood in Miami, at Miami Worldcenter. The mural was made by artist Nina Chanel Abney. Photography by Oriol Tarridas.

Jeffrey Deitch & Primary Curate Miami World Center

March 29, 2022

‘A gift to the city.’ This $4 billion development
is creating an outdoor museum in Miami

BY AMANDA ROSA


At first glance, Miami Worldcenter, a sprawling multi-use complex in the heart of downtown, seems like South Florida’s premier spot to spend, spend, spend.

Worldcenter has been unveiling one attraction after another: an open-air “high street retail” center, a 60-story luxury condo that changes colors and an infinity sky pool overlooking the city. Its latest addition, though, is completely free.

Miami Worldcenter is announcing a $5 million public art program to display museum-quality works at the complex to attract art-loving locals and tourists. The program, which cements Worldcenter’s place in Miami’s growing and profitable arts scene, has already completed its first public artwork: a massive mural inspired by nearby Overtown by artist Nina Chanel Abney.

A large-scale mural inspired by Overtown, a historic Black neighborhood in Miami, at Miami Worldcenter. The mural was made by artist Nina Chanel Abney. Photography by Oriol Tarridas.

“The art was something that had to be here,” said Benjamin Feldman, the executive vice president of Miami Worldcenter Associates, the development team behind the project. “It was integral to the project.”

Worldcenter joins the likes of the Design District and Aventura Mall to implement a robust public art program alongside luxury and trendy stores. The program was spearheaded by prolific curator and art dealer Jeffrey Deitch and the team at Primary, a Miami-based curatorial collective that focuses on public art.

So far, Worldcenter has commissioned five artists for the project, including Viktor El-Saieh, a Miami-raised painter of Haitian and Palestinian heritage, and Woody De Othello, a Miami-born sculptor known for infusing his art with a sense of humor. Two to three new artworks will be unveiled this year, and agreements with more artists are in the works.

The idea for the program was years in the making. Miami Worldcenter — a 27-acre, $4 billion site dedicated to hotels, condos, offices, and retail space — is one of the largest private real-estate developments in the United States. Developers seek to construct Miami’s version of New York City’s Hudson Yards, a flashy, up-scale mixed-use space in Manhattan.

Developers had kept in contact with Primary, which had a gallery in that area before plans for Worldcenter came to fruition, Feldman said. As new buildings were erected, Worldcenter wanted to embrace art as part of the development, not abandon it, he said. “The art is just one of those things that bring people who might not find a unit, they might not buy something at the store, they might not stay in hotels,” Feldman said. “But it fosters a community.”

Worldcenter also created an art advisory committee of renowned curators and museum directors to help shape the program. The committee includes Franklin Sirmans, director of Pérez Art Museum Miami; Alex Gartenfeld, artistic director at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami; Nicholas Baume, director and chief curator of Public Art Fund; and Cecilia Alemani, director and chief curator of High Line Art in New York.

Primary and Deitch were the perfect fit to curate the program, Feldman said.

Deitch’s vision for the project was to create an “outdoor museum” that focused on figuration, or art that depicts people. Normally, he explained, public art tends to be non-controversial abstract designs. For Worldcenter, he wanted pieces about people, especially Miami’s people, like Abney’s mural.

“The public wants to see art about their lives,” Deitch said.

Abney’s colorful mural, which spans the entirety of a tunnel, is one of the most ambitious works she has done, she said. The work was inspired by Overtown, a historic Black neighborhood in Miami a short drive from Worldcenter. Abney said that she wants the mural to encourage viewers to learn more about neighborhoods like Overtown and to start a dialogue around gentrification.

“I used this project as an opportunity to think about the unfortunate legacies of gentrification that erase the rich histories of vibrant Black and Brown communities,” Abney wrote in an email. “The mural location, a tunnel formed by the dark passageway under the building, inspired me to consider the recognition of sacred spaces with story.”

Deitch said he was especially excited for people to see Abney’s work.

A large-scale mural inspired by Overtown, a historic Black neighborhood in Miami, at Miami Worldcenter. The mural was made by artist Nina Chanel Abney. Photography by BEN FELDMAN

“It’s just remarkable,” he said. ”This is one of the major public murals in the United States right now.”

For Primary, now based in Little River, the opportunity is a “homecoming,” said co-founder Books Bischof. The group has deep roots in Miami’s public art scene. In 2007, as Art Basel Miami Beach grew in popularity, Bischof and his partners invited muralists and graffiti artists from around the world to flood Wynwood with its now-celebrated murals. Bischof, who stressed the importance of accessible art, said he looks forward to people revisiting Worldcenter to discover new works as they roll out over time, just as visitors would return to Wynwood every year to see new murals. “It’s romantic. It’s exciting,” he said. “It’s like giving a gift to the city.”

LINK | MIAMI HERALD

Chana Budgazad Sheldon on Philip Smith for Curator

February 25, 2022

MOCA North Miami Director Chana Budgazad Sheldon speaks with artist Philip Smith on the occasion of his latest exhibition, Night Sky at Primary in Little River, Miami.

“As Director of MOCA, one of the benefits of my work is that I have the opportunity to meet and speak with artists, curators, and collectors. Over the past decade, I have enjoyed many conversations and studio visits with Philip Smith. On the occasion of his most recent exhibition Night Sky at Primary in Miami, I thought it was the perfect time to sit down and talk about the vision behind his latest work as well as his background as a PICTURES artist and working with Andy Warhol.”

— Chana Budgazad Sheldon

Chana Budgazad Sheldon: As a young artist, your first New York exhibition was the PICTURES show curated by Douglas Crimp along with artists Robert Longo, Sherrie Levine, Troy Brauntuch, and Jack Goldstein. Can you tell us a bit about that important moment in time?

Philip Smith: Even though we were all so young, I think we all felt we were creating something important that needed to be seen. None of the galleries were showing work like ours. Minimalism and conceptualism were the reigning art movements of the day.  Image-based work was nowhere to be found.  It was Douglas Crimp’s genius that he saw a new form of art on the horizon. Don’t forget this was pre-digital so images from television, magazines, and movies were immutable. However, we felt that there was meaning behind the meaning that no one was seeing. We felt there more to the culture than what was being shown to this.  On many levels, we were engaged in dissecting fundamental notions about our culture.

Many of the PICTURES artists seemed focused on contemporary culture, film, television, irony, and social concerns. Your work became increasingly concerned with metaphysical issues as opposed to irony. What influenced this?

I had an unusual upbringing. Back in the sixties, my father, a designer and artist, suddenly discovered that he could talk to the dead and heal the sick. Overnight, our house became like Lourdes with my father performing miraculous cures on people that the medical profession said there was no hope and were left to die. Talking spirits and inexplicable cures were part of my daily life. I witnessed so many events that I still can’t explain. It was this experience of metaphysics that eventually became paramount in my work.

Your incredible life story is captured in your memoir, Walking Through Walls—the true story of growing up with a father who discovers he has supernatural powers. It is quite a talent to be so successful visually and through language. How did your success as a writer impact your visual arts practice?

That’s an interesting question that I’ve never been asked. Actually, the writing and the painting have constantly influenced each other. Early on, I couldn’t figure out how to make a living so I started writing art criticism for ARTS Magazine. I interviewed everyone from Bob Rauschenberg to Roy Lichtenstein.  And, the paintings are a pictographic language with their own visual vocabulary. Possibly because of that, I tend to be a very visual writer. From the moment the book came out people were saying, “this should be a movie” because the writing is so visual. Hopefully, that is about to happen as the book has been optioned for television. In many ways, Walking Through Walls is the Rosetta Stone for the paintings. Warhol once said, “If you want to know all about Andy Warhol, just look at the surface of my paintings…” In my case, if you want to know about Philip Smith, read Walking Through Walls, it’s all there.

Shortly after the PICTURES show you started writing for Andy Warhol’s Interview Magazine. Tell us about your friendship with Andy.

My first interview for Interview was with Jasper Johns in his studio. That is an afternoon you don’t forget.  For most people, Warhol was about celebrity and glamour. His public persona was very much about the rich and famous and their flaws. But I saw a different side. Andy was always very kind to me. I would drop by the Factory from time to time. We would chat while he was applying colored backgrounds for his paintings using a kitchen sponge mop. Often, I would join one of the many group lunches held around a big, old wooden conference table. You never knew who you would be sitting next to. The lunches were often tape-recorded and ended up in Interview. 

When he had just finished the collaborative paintings with Basquiat, I went up to look at them. They were magnificent. He offered to sell me one for $5000. At the time, I lived on that amount of money for an entire year. In many ways, Andy was a Zen master. One day I was up at the Factory to photograph Andy. He started sneezing and I lowered my camera until he finished. He immediately said, “Don’t stop, these are the best photographs.” That was a huge lesson for me, that every moment is important and every moment is interesting. On Saturdays, Andy would call me to chit-chat. Later on, Andy asked me to be the Editor-in-Chief of Interview. I turned him down because I felt that I would get caught up in the Studio 54 crowd and no one would take me seriously as a painter. 

Your work is always rich with multiple pictographs. It is its own visual language. Tell us about that.

As a kid, I wanted to be an archaeologist and would devour books on Egyptology. The idea of multiple images probably emerged from looking at this type of early pictographic work. In preliterate days, the churches and governments would use visual devices for communicating their ideology. I also think experiencing different dimensions with my father made me want to represent in some way all these different realities and energies that are always around us.

You have just opened an exhibition of new paintings called Night Sky at Primary Gallery in Miami. Having followed your work, this body of paintings seems to have evolved. Can you share some of the thinking behind this body of work?

I agree, this body of work is related but also somewhat different than all my other work. In some ways, I was thinking about thankgas, which are paintings of Buddha created by monks in Tibet. These are not just illustrations of Buddha’s life but are energetically alive. They impart teachings, bestow blessings, and answer prayers. These paintings are a conduit to a higher power—a very active form of art. Given all the training I had under my father, I wanted to produce art that provided an energetic benefit for the viewer. 

What do you hope to accomplish with these new works?

Open people’s hearts and minds. Whether you’re a bus driver or a scientist, an artist or gardener, we all have a responsibility to make this world a better place. In Judaism, there is the concept of Tikkun Olam which means to “repair the world.” I can’t think of a more important job that any of us have right now, other than Tikkun Olam. We can all find a way to make a difference. For now, these paintings are my contribution. All of us can make contributions and they are cumulative. They make a difference. Everybody pitching in is how we get to a better place.

I love this. It connects to this moment of time so beautifully and it is a lovely way to end.

LINK | CURATOR

Untitled (Night Sky No. 2) : Photography by Oriol Tarridas - Courtesy of Primary.

Art in America on Philip Smith at Primary.

February 24, 2022

ASTRAL PLANES: PHILIP SMITH AT PRIMARY
By Gean Moreno

Philip Smith has always seemed the oddball of the “Pictures” generation. In theory, he worked with all the right ingredients: a generic sign system of illustrations resembling those of instruction manuals, a way of painting that ironically highlights mark-making and the medium itself, and compositions that mimic diagrams, charts, and other pedagogical tools. And yet, the results always turned out a little too quirky. No matter what he tried—building up surfaces until the pigment felt like silly-putty and then gouging out generic forms, or scratching schematic imagery onto monochrome fields—every gesture toward depersonalization further accentuated an edge of weirdness. He’s like a folksy Matt Mullican, but harder to pin down.

The quirkiness, we finally came to learn, has a specific source. Smith published a memoir in 2008, Walking Through Walls, that tracks his father’s 1960s mutation from a successful interior designer to a psychic healer, astral traveler, ashram visitor, exorcist, and macrobiotic pioneer. Characters in direct contact with the realms of the dead and the extraterrestrial fill the book. As his father masters his powers, young Philip, too, becomes aware of his own, often waking up in the middle of the night hovering above his bed.

In the past couple of years, Smith has opened up his work to these astral and spiritual forces, which freed him from the need to clearly outline and organize his symbols. In his latest exhibition, at Primary in Miami, it’s clear that Smith is still working with a limited set of signs, even if it is increasingly beholden to that of occultist traditions. Untitled (Night Sky No. 2), 2022, features various outlines—spoked and swirly wheels, marked hands, medicinal plants, cellular models, and what could be divination and numerological charts—all held together by the double helix of a DNA molecule that snakes throughout the nearly eight-foot painting. Smith draws these outlines with oil pastel and then vigorously smears them. The process rhymes with his other strategies, such as grattage and inscription, but activates the paintings in a different way. The lines, embracing a vital irregularity, come alive, and the forms start to blend. Colors, spread in a range of densities, become complex structures of varying values. In Untitled (Night Sky No. 2), the blue Smith employs alludes, at once, to cyanotypes, architectural plans, and Delft pottery, while in the equally large and vibrant Untitled (Night Sky No. 1), the black background and smeared white outlines take us back to the constellated firmament suggested in its title. The ground in these new paintings, too, now picking up pigment that comes off the outlines, carries the prickly, all-over energy of static electricity.

Untitled (Night Sky No. 1) : Photography by Oriol Tarridas - Courtesy of Primary.

Whatever it was that convinced Smith to align his pictorial practice to his everyday one of healing and taking dictation from the spirits, it has yielded interesting results—not because the paintings have gone New Agey, but because they have grown pictorially more complex and dynamic. They demand more of the viewer, in part because they offer so much information to digest and because the information is no longer presented in the schematic arrangements of earlier works, where an interpretation was already implied. The more Smith aligns his canvases to the stars, the more his compositions activate potentials that are anything but otherworldly. The potentials arise, instead, from a more interesting handling of material factors—pigments, surface, scale. Rather than suggesting portals to somewhere else, the paintings emanate an intense and vibrational here-and-nowness.

Installation View : Photography by Oriol Tarridas - Courtesy of Primary.

LINK | ART IN AMERICA

NADA Art Fair - Wade Tullier - Booth 10.06 - Primary.

November 28, 2021
Prev / Next

Words.

Weaving spiders come not here.


Featured Posts

Featured
Aug 25, 2025
Philip Smith on Magnetic Fields at MOCA North Miami
Aug 25, 2025
Aug 25, 2025
Aug 23, 2025
Adam Curtis - HyperNormalisation
Aug 23, 2025
Aug 23, 2025
May 18, 2025
Terence Riley on Charlie Rose
May 18, 2025
May 18, 2025
Mar 3, 2025
Typoe Gran & Allison Glenn | We should talk. - No. 001
Mar 3, 2025
Mar 3, 2025
Feb 17, 2025
We should talk.
Feb 17, 2025
Feb 17, 2025
Oct 15, 2024
Dustin Emory & Kathryn Kampovsky - VIDEO
Oct 15, 2024
Oct 15, 2024
Sep 30, 2023
Modern Luxury on Primary.
Sep 30, 2023
Sep 30, 2023
Jun 9, 2023
Wade Tullier in Clay Pop from Rizzoli
Jun 9, 2023
Jun 9, 2023
May 30, 2023
Artburst on Avery Pack
May 30, 2023
May 30, 2023
May 29, 2023
Harper's Bazaar on TYPOE
May 29, 2023
May 29, 2023
May 8, 2023
Miami New Times on Spring at Primary.
May 8, 2023
May 8, 2023
Jan 14, 2023
Typoe for the Underline
Jan 14, 2023
Jan 14, 2023
Nov 24, 2022
Public Art at Miami World Center
Nov 24, 2022
Nov 24, 2022
Nov 3, 2022
Forming Foundations w/ Wade Tullier
Nov 3, 2022
Nov 3, 2022
Jul 5, 2022
TYPOE - Bronze Editions
Jul 5, 2022
Jul 5, 2022
Primary Projects Logo
Instagram Email

7410 NW Miami Court
Miami FL, 33150
1.954.296.1675

Visiting Hours :
Thursday & Friday : 11 - 6 PM
Saturday : Noon - 4 PM
Sunday - Wednesday : by appointment

Sign Up For Our Mailing List

We respect your privacy.

Thank you!