Rick Simpson came to the door at 7:45 with our two papers. We had arranged to have him bring us to the train station and you’d think we would have been the ones to be in a hurry but Rick said, “Let’s get cracking’.” Rick dropped us off at the train station before we had a chance to finish our coffee so it was an especially dreamy ride across along the Erie Canal and then down the Hudson into the city where we hooked up with our nephew Andrew who’s going to Columbia Law School.
We met at the Gagosian Gallery uptown on Madison Avenue near 77th where where they were showing five sensational paintings by the Russian Avant-garde Suprematist master, Kazmir Malevich. Andrew said he had done a paper on Malevich during his undergraduate days at Penn and had coincidentally finished the assignment in Rochester while visiting.
How does this business model work for Gagosian? Free admission to their gallery on three floors in a high rent district where none of the work is for sale? I’m guessing he represents some of the other artists in the show, “Malevich and the American Legacy”. Maybe Ellsworth Kelly or Richard Serra? Two beautiful black and white pieces by Kelly paid tribute to the master here as did work by Agnes Martin, Barnett Newman, Mark Rothko and Ed Ruscha reinforcing how powerful the Malevich pieces are still one hundred years after they were created.
We watched a guy pick lint off his black jacket as he stood in front of a Dan Flavin black light piece.
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