















Sirous Namazi
Jiri Geller
Type A
Goff and Rosenthal 
Mad Transit Artist Show” by SEEN
TUNNEL VISION

DUNK! is now ready with a new sparkling show.
DUNK! is happy to welcome a notorious artist-run initiative and space from Malmö.
DUNK! proudly present the fabulous group show TUNNEL VISION.
TUNNEL VISION is a group show with 12 artist from Sweden and Denmark.
TUNNEL VISION is totally fresh first class contemporary works of art.
TUNNEL VISION is the second and final show which completes an exhibition exchange between DUNK! and CirkulationsCentralen.
CirkulationsCentralen was founded by a group of artists in 2003, CirkulationsCentralen is an organization for the production and presentation of contemporary art and culture, located in Malmö, Sweden. The heart of CC is an artists’ cooperative consisting of twentyfour studios which hosts 27 artists in an 600m2 space, located in a former industrial building, also houses a workshop and a gallery showing Swedish and international contemporary art. Since opening CirkulationsCentralen have presented over 80 exhibitions, and have shown the work of member artists as well as of invited artists and collectives from Sweden and abroad, and have hosted seminars, screenings, concerts, and performances CirkulationsCentralen is a non-commercial artist-run space and maintains relationships with other artist-run and non-profit initiatives and artists working at CC are active both on the national as the international art scene.
Participating Artist:
Lennart Alves (SE), Stine Egeskov Berger (DK), Anna Brag (SE), Björn Carnemalm (SE), Timja Femling (SE), Andreas Kurtsson (SE), Kamilla Levring (DK), Madelene Oldeman (SE), Helena Persson (SE), Lisa Rydberg (SE), Joanna Thede (SE), Fredrik Weerasinghe (SE)
Dunk Dunk
Cirkulations Centralen
Skiny canvas & walls.
Melanie Schiff
Kavi Gupta Gallery is pleased to present a new series of photographs by Los Angeles-based artist Melanie Schiff. Her latest exhibition titled The Mirror presents the artist’s first solo exhibition in Chicago since her inclusion in the 2008 Whitney Biennial.
Melanie Schiff has become known for her constructed narrative photographs that are imbued with a poetic use of light to explore ideas of spirituality as well as personal and collective experience. Schiff’s previous photographs spanned classic genres of portraiture, still life and performance as they found their footing within multiple histories of photography. Often subtle references to youth culture and popular music came to the surface and objects like empty beer bottles, CD cases, and record covers became minimal forms which were arranged and manipulated placing them within a mystical happening.
The photographs that make up The Mirror maintain this spiritual aura that enveloped the previous work along with a personal anthropological study of ones’ surroundings but now from a more solitary perspective. An almost science fiction type quality is evoked by the lack of the figure and the alien landscape that ranges from a natural environment to depictions of manmade architecture. The photograph titled Mastodon shows a large field in which an odd fallen or uprooted tree eerily resembles the petrified body of this extinct mammal. Several photographs depict long corridors, canals and drain pipes covered in graffiti that lead to a white light or a geometric shape heading into another anonymous structure. The repetition of this motif references a narrative that involves a birthing story that may be a human birth, the beginning of the world or a new world altogether.
The mirror provides a personal reflection, albeit distorted, a semi-truth. This filter parallels that of the camera as a skewed lens. What can be contextualized by its surroundings is edited and disjointed by the act of cropping and matting. The photograph Cave Painting depicts a closed in view of a river wall. Scuffs, cracks, residue and debris create a minimal abstracted image reminiscent of a primitive painting. These marks, along with the recurrence of graffiti and the repetition of circles and triangles become symbols that feel as though they have been left for us to decipher.
Melanie Schiff (b. 1977) lives and works in Los Angeles. Upcoming museum exhibitions include P.S. 1 MOMA, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Smart Museum of Art, Chicago, Indianapolis Museum of Art, and Seattle Museum of Art. Schiff has also exhibited at Aspen Museum of Art, Kemper Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art.
Grand Reopening
ZieherSmith is pleased to announce our Grand Reopening in a 3500 square foot, storefront gallery at 516 West 20th Street. Designed by Dufner Heighes Architects and constructed by BILT/DFI, the new space more than doubles the size of our previous location, expanding the ability to provide a visible and welcoming forum for contemporary art.
Grand Reopening features a selection of ZieherSmith’s represented artists including new, large-scale work by Wes Lang and Eddie Martinez, a kinetic installation and collage-work by Javier Piñón, paintings by Liz Markus and Chuck Webster, and sculpture by Rachel Owens and Mike Womack. Adorning the new façade is a Tucker Nichols’ banner, featured on the postcard, and inspired by an existing drawing by the artist and the following clause in the gallery’s new lease: Tenant shall not… install any banner, flag or the like on the exterior of the Building without the specific prior approval of Landlord other than any banner with the words “Grand Opening” or words of similar import, which banner shall be permitted during the first ninety (90) days of the Term only.
The gallery’s forthcoming schedule will include exhibitions by renowned French artist Stéphane Calais; the New York debut of British artist Matt Stokes’s these are the days, a video installation co-produced by ZieherSmith and Arthouse, Austin; and book launches for the Stokes catalogue as well as Wes Lang’s The Paradise Club and Scott Zieher’s Band of Bikers.













