LIZ LARNER et al.

Pollution, Policy, and Art (Panel discussion)
MOCA Grand Ave, Los Angeles
Thursday 14 April, 6.30pm (EDT)

offline
Image: Liz Larner, photo: Tim Power
Image: Liz Larner, photo: Tim Power

Liz Larner will join a panel discussion to discuss the multithreaded hydra that is plastics pollution and how we can get our hands around it. Other participants include Melissa Aguayo, Co-Founder and Co-Chair of the Reusable LA coalition and US Coordinator for Break Free From Plastic; artist Hugo McCloud; and Erica Montelongo, a local climate justice and youth advocate. Organised and facilitated by activist and organiser Calla Rose Ostrander, this event will take place at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles on Thursday 14 April, at 6.30pm (EDT).

MOCA

Image: Liz Larner, photo: Tim Power
Image: Liz Larner, photo: Tim Power

Additional:

LIZ LARNER

Liz Larner: below above (publication)
Published by Kunsthalle Zürich, 2022

Kunsthalle Zürich, design by Dan Solbach
Kunsthalle Zürich, design by Dan Solbach

Published on the occasion of the exhibition Liz Larner: below above, on view at Kunsthalle Zürich from 11 June to 18 September 2022, a pocket-sized publication containing a conversation between the artist and Daniel Baumann, as well as an essay by Tim Power, is now available for purchase.

Kunsthalle Zürich

Kunsthalle Zürich, design by Dan Solbach
Kunsthalle Zürich, design by Dan Solbach

LIZ LARNER

Don't Put It Back Like It Was, 2022 (publication)
Published by Dancing Foxes Press, SculptureCenter, and Walker Art Center
Edited by Karen Kelly and Barbara Schroeder

Don't Put It Back Like It Was is an illustrated catalogue published on the occasion of Liz Larner's largest survey exhibition since 2001, organised by SculptureCenter, New York, and Walker Art Center, Minneapolis. 

Reconsidering her enduring formal and material concerns alongside her relationship to a feminist sculptural position, this monograph offers an opportunity to survey the Los Angeles-based sculptor’s artistic project within today’s expanded discourses of embodiment, gender, and posthumanism.

Dancing Foxes Press


LIZ LARNER

Reef, 2019 (permanent installation)
Art Institute of Chicago

Liz Larner, Reef, 2019, ceramic, glaze, stones, minerals, 12.7 x 414 x 229.9 cm, 5 x 163 x 90 1/2 in., Art Institute of Chicago, Claire and Gordon Prussian Fund for Contemporary Art, 2020.61. © Liz Larner
Liz Larner, Reef, 2019, ceramic, glaze, stones, minerals, 12.7 x 414 x 229.9 cm, 5 x 163 x 90 1/2 in., Art Institute of Chicago, Claire and Gordon Prussian Fund for Contemporary Art, 2020.61. © Liz Larner

We are pleased to announce that Liz Larner's sculpture Reef from 2019 is now part of the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago. The work is also currently on view at the institution.

Art Institute of Chicago

Liz Larner, Reef, 2019, ceramic, glaze, stones, minerals, 12.7 x 414 x 229.9 cm, 5 x 163 x 90 1/2 in., Art Institute of Chicago, Claire and Gordon Prussian Fund for Contemporary Art, 2020.61. © Liz Larner
Liz Larner, Reef, 2019, ceramic, glaze, stones, minerals, 12.7 x 414 x 229.9 cm, 5 x 163 x 90 1/2 in., Art Institute of Chicago, Claire and Gordon Prussian Fund for Contemporary Art, 2020.61. © Liz Larner