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Past Exhibitions
Free for members, college students (with valid ID), those under 18
$8 general public $6 senior citizens (65 and older) $6 Ohio State faculty and staff (with BUCK ID)
All visitors are admitted to the exhibitions for free on Thursdays after 4 pm and on the first Sunday of each month; admission is also free with a ticket to any same-day Wexner Center event. The exhibitions are closed on Mondays.
Free gallery admission for military families this summer Memorial Day through Labor Day, active military personnel and their families can visit the Wex galleries for free as part of Blue Star Museums. Learn more about this nationwide program to support service members.
Please note: You will be asked to check backpacks, large purses and other large bags, and umbrellas before entering the galleries. Click here for full list of policies, including items prohibited in the galleries.
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"Dizzying and thrilling, demonstrating the complexity of female consciousness."—Sarah Rose Sharp, Delicious Line
This spring, see the vibrant world between black and white. Join us for Gray Matters, a multifaceted survey of 37 contemporary women artists who have explored the practice of grisaille—the French term for working in shades of gray. Ranging from emerging to well-established, these artists challenge an all-too-simplistic notion of colorless "neutrality" as they reveal the variegated spectrum of black, white, gray, and everything in between.
In uniting over 50 remarkable works across media, Gray Matters provides a clarifying, focused lens through which to see the world afresh. You'll encounter Roni Horn's Opposites of White (2006/15), substantial glass sculptures that appear as pools of water—at once transparent and reflective, both mirrors and lenses. An artist typically associated with vividly colorful portraits of black women, Mickalene Thomas narrows her palette for Hair Portrait #20 (2014)—without relinquishing her celebratory use of rhinestones. The immense, sculptural graphite drawings of Nancy Rubins radiate the abundant energy expended in their making while begging reconsideration of the pencil's power. Featuring her signature veils of ink, Marlene Dumas's Betrayal (1994) offers blurred, indeterminate portraits of women: a meditation on sameness and difference, and on how time affects one's worldview. Julie Mehretu's six-panel print Epigraph, Damascus (2016) constructs what she has described as “story maps of dislocation,” here providing a portrait of the war-torn Syrian city. Mary Reid Kelley's arresting, award-winning video This is Offal (2015–16) contemplates mortality and abandonment through a dialogue between a deceased woman and her organs. And the earliest work in the exhibition, Vija Celmins's 1964 painting Heater, sets the glowing red center of an electric space heater amid a field of deep grays—reminding us of the constant, ever-shifting dialogue between hot and cool, color and shadow.
Gray Matters is the first exhibition organized by Michael Goodson since he assumed the role of Senior Curator of Exhibitions at the Wex, and the survey enriches a calendar year of programming in which every artist featured in our galleries is a woman.
Organized by the Wexner Center for the Arts.
Support for this exhibition is provided by Mike and Paige Crane and Neil K. Rector.
ARTISTS IN THE EXHIBITION
Tauba Auerbach • Carol Bove • Gisele Camargo • Vija Celmins • Bethany Collins • Marsha Cottrell • Tacita Dean • Tara Donovan • Marlene Dumas • Michelle Grabner • Josephine Halvorson • Mona Hatoum • Roni Horn • Cristina Iglesias • Jennie C. Jones • Toba Khedoori • Laura Lisbon • Suzanne McClelland • Julie Mehretu • Katie Paterson • Joyce Pensato • Amalia Pica • Mary Reid Kelley • Michal Rovner • Nancy Rubins • Arlene Shechet • Erin Shirreff • Amy Sillman • Xaviera Simmons • Diane Simpson • Lorna Simpson • Avery Singer • Michelle Stuart • Mickalene Thomas • Kara Walker • Rachel Whiteread • Carmen Winant
Katie Paterson, Totality, 2016. Mixed media, 32.7 in. diameter. Courtesy of the James Zang Collection, London, and James Cohan, New York. Artwork © Katie Paterson. Image courtesy of James Cohan, New York. Photo: Christopher Burke
Nancy Rubins, Drawing, 2005. Graphite pencil on paper, 134 x 379 x 12 in. © Nancy Rubins. Courtesy of the artist and Gagosian Gallery.
Left to right: Roni Horn, Opposites of White, 2006–7. Rachel Whiteread, Untitled (Cast Iron Floor), 2001. Michelle Stuart, Serpent Mound, Ohio, 1978–79. Installation view at the Wexner Center for the Arts.
Left to right: Toba Khedoori, Untitled (Grey Window), 2000; oil and wax on paper; collection of Adam Sender. Mona Hatoum, Pom Pom City, 2002; natural wool, The Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston; gift of Barbara Lee, The Barbara Lee Collection of Art by Women. Tauba Auerbach, Shadow Weave–Façade Split Wave II, 2013, and Shadow Weave (interlock, structure), 2011. Michelle Grabner, Untitled, 2017. Installation view at the Wexner Center for the Arts.
Left to right: Julie Mehretu, Epigraph, Damascus, 2016. Avery Singer, Society of Realist Wanderers, 2014. Installation view at the Wexner Center for the Arts.
Foreground: Arlene Shechet, Building, 2003. Background: Carmen Winant, The Answer is Matriarchy, 2016. Installation view at the Wexner Center for the Arts.
Left to right: Joyce Pensato, Holy Blackout Batman, 2015. Carol Bove, Untitled, 2014. Suzanne McClelland, Rank (Billionaires), 2017. Installation view at the Wexner Center for the Arts.
Vija Celmins Heater, 1964. Oil on canvas. 47 9/16 x 48 in. Artwork © Vija Celmins Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Purchase, with funds from the Contemporary Painting and Sculpture Committee, 95.19. Digital image © Whitney Museum, NY.
Julie Mehretu, Epigraph, Damascus, 2016. Photogravure, sugar-lift aquatint, spit-bite aquatint, open bite, and Hahnemühle Bütten 350 gr., 97 5/8 x 226 in. Collection of Noel Kirnon. Installation view at BORCH Gallery, Berlin, 2016. Artwork © Julie Mehretu. Image courtesy BORCH Gallery and Editions.
Marlene Dumas, Betrayal, 1994. Ink on paper, 29 sheets, 24 x 19 3/4 in. (61 x 50.2 cm) each. © Marlene Dumas. Private collection. Courtesy of David Zwirner, New York.
SUPPORT FOR GRAY MATTERS
Paige and Mike Crane
Neil K. Rector
SUPPORT FOR FREE AND LOW-COST PROGRAMS
Huntington Bank
Cardinal Health Foundation
GENERAL OPERATING SUPPORT FOR THE WEXNER CENTER
Greater Columbus Arts Council
Ohio Arts Council
The Columbus Foundation
Nationwide Foundation
Gray Matters