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Gagosian is pleased to announce an exhibition by Christopher Wool at its Grosvenor Hill location in London. Featuring over fifty works on paper, sculptures, and prints from the most recent period of his career, this long-awaited exhibition is the most expansive presentation of Wool’s work in London for many years and his third with the gallery. As in his latest self-staged exhibitions—last year in New York and this year in Marfa, Texas—the London exhibition highlights the essential interconnectivity of the artist’s practices, in which he continues to engage with the limits of abstraction. For Wool, process and subject go hand in hand.

The range of processes employed in each of Wool’s multilayered works on paper reveals the extraordinary breadth of his artistic strategies. He began to silkscreen his own works in the 1990s, flattening an image and applying it to canvas before adding gestures of paint. This approach has become more complex over time, as the artist explores the effects of repetition, scale, rhythm, and different means of overpainting, such as the looping line of an industrial spray gun. Further to these expressive marks of paint, Wool drags turpentine-soaked rags over the painted surface to efface his images in a haze of gray mist. In contrast to the monochrome palette he is often associated with, at Gagosian Wool imbues various works with pastel hues. By erasing, collaging, overpainting, and digitally modifying imagery from previous works, he creates something vitally new through a process of self-replication.

The cursive line of Wool’s sculptures—shown initially in his landmark survey at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, in 2013–14—echoes the gestural marks of his paintings. Four intimate and two large-scale sculptures in copper-plated steel and bronze are on view here. Their genesis lies in the arid landscape of Texas, where Wool divides his time between Marfa and New York. Wool collected pieces of old fencing and hay-baling wire for years before realizing their sculptural potential. At times these remain as found, and at others they are transformed into new forms and reimagined on a dramatic scale. Wool purposefully leaves details of the processes visible, such as welded joints, to stress the handmade quality of his works.

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20 Grosvenor Hill
London W1K 3QD

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+44 20 7495 1500
london@gagosian.com

Hours: Tuesday–Saturday 10–6

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Mercedes Matter

Game Changer
Mercedes Matter

Lauren Mahony and Michael Tcheyan pay homage to the founder of the New York Studio School.

Christopher Wool: Part Two

Christopher Wool: Part Two

Gray turns to pink or his twenty-first century, much of it in Texas. Text by Richard Hell.

Christopher Wool: Part One

Christopher Wool: Part One

Christopher Wool and his unlikely heroes or conceptual or not? Text by Richard Hell.

Gagosian Quarterly Winter 2019

Now available
Gagosian Quarterly Winter 2019

The Winter 2019 issue of Gagosian Quarterly is now available, featuring a selection from Christopher Wool’s Westtexaspsychosculpture series on its cover.

Gagosian Quarterly Fall 2019

Now available
Gagosian Quarterly Fall 2019

The Fall 2019 issue of Gagosian Quarterly is now available, featuring a detail from Sinking (2019) by Nathaniel Mary Quinn on its cover.

Visions of the Self: Jenny Saville on Rembrandt

Visions of the Self: Jenny Saville on Rembrandt

Jenny Saville reveals the process behind her new self-portrait, painted in response to Rembrandt’s masterpiece Self-Portrait with Two Circles.

Free Arts NYC

The Bigger Picture
Free Arts NYC

Meredith Mendelsohn discusses the impact of Free Arts NYC and its mission to foster creativity in children and teens, on the occasion of its twenty-year anniversary.

Black Book

Book Corner
Black Book

Christopher Wool’s Black Book (1989) was selected by Douglas Flamm, a rare-book specialist at Gagosian, for a special focus. Text by Anna Heyward.

Painting Paintings (David Reed) 1975

Painting Paintings (David Reed) 1975

In this video, Christopher Wool, Katy Siegel, and David Reed discuss Reed’s paintings and memories of the New York arts scene in 1975.

New York, 1975

New York, 1975

Katy Siegel and Christopher Wool discuss David Reed’s paintings and the New York art scene in 1975.

Front cover of Christopher Wool: See Stop Run book

Christopher Wool

$65
Christopher Wool 2025 poster

Christopher Wool

$20
Front cover of the signed collector’s edition of Taschen’s Christopher Wool monograph

Christopher Wool

$3,500
Front cover of Christopher Wool 2006 book

Christopher Wool

$80
Cover of the book Christopher Wool: Roma Termini

Christopher Wool: Roma Termini

$40
Cover of the book To Bend the Ear of the Outer World

To Bend the Ear of the Outer World: Conversations on contemporary abstract painting

$125
Cover of the book Painting Paintings (David Reed) 1975

Painting Paintings (David Reed) 1975

$40
Cover of the book Albert Oehlen, published in 2012

Albert Oehlen

$60
Cover of the Winter 2019 issue of Gagosian Quarterly magazine, featuring artwork by Christopher Wool

Gagosian Quarterly: Winter 2019 Issue

$20