Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Preview: “Mark Ryden: The Gay 90s: West” at Michael Kohn Gallery

Influential Pop Surrealist pioneer Mark Ryden has a solo show coming up on May 3 at Michael Kohn Gallery in LA. "The Gay 90s: West" is a continuation of Ryden's Gay 90s series (the works on paper from which were recently featured in Hi-Fructose Vol. 28). Full of double-entendres and subtly suggestive imagery, the ongoing body of work imaginatively focuses on the early 20th-century nostalgia for the 1890s (an uncanny parallel to today's fixation on the 1990s in the fashion industry). Ryden's account of the Gay 90s is by no means a historically-accurate one, filled with doll-like nymphs and bizarre happenings. The exhibition will include some of Ryden's most famous work from the past few years, including Incarnation (the piece that depicts a character donning the meat dress that inspired Lady Gaga's infamous one) and The Parlor (Allegory of Magic, Quintessence and Divine Mystery), which we saw at Michael Kohn's booth at Art Basel.

Influential Pop Surrealist pioneer Mark Ryden has a solo show coming up on May 3 at Michael Kohn Gallery in LA. “The Gay 90s: West” is a continuation of Ryden’s Gay 90s series (the works on paper from which were recently featured in Hi-Fructose Vol. 28). Full of double-entendres and subtly suggestive imagery, the ongoing body of work imaginatively focuses on the early 20th-century nostalgia for the 1890s (an uncanny parallel to today’s fixation on the 1990s in the fashion industry). Ryden’s account of the Gay 90s is by no means a historically-accurate one, filled with doll-like nymphs and bizarre happenings. The exhibition will include some of Ryden’s most famous work from the past few years, including Incarnation (the piece that depicts a character donning the meat dress that inspired Lady Gaga’s infamous one) and The Parlor (Allegory of Magic, Quintessence and Divine Mystery), which we saw at Michael Kohn’s booth at Art Basel.

Mark Ryden’s “The Gay 90s: West” will be on view May 3 through June 28. Take a look at our early preview of the show below.

Meta
Topics
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
“Creating new characters is a way for me to collect ‘things’ without having to collect actual physical things. Read the full article on Matt Furie by clicking above!
James Lipnickas has used horror tropes for a long time. But his works were once much more linear. That used to mean monsters, aliens, and isolated landscapes that had something haunted about them. A giant worm pouring its effluence into a cabin. A force within exploding the cabin. The horror has changed. Click above to read the full article.
Peter Ferguson creates scenes filled with intriguing characters often caught in very strange situations. His people quite often exist in darkly humorous fantasy realms where elements like vintage fashion and the occasional nod to pop culture connect their reality to ours. Read the full article by clicking above!
Katie Heck has built an immense body of work that crosses disciplines, from painting to sculpture to film. Read the full article on the artist by clicking above!

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List