Open: Tue-Fri 11am-6pm, Sat 10am-6pm

475 Tenth Avenue, NY 10018, New York, United States
Open: Tue-Fri 11am-6pm, Sat 10am-6pm


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Ground Work (Field Revision)

Sean Kelly Gallery, New York

Fri 9 Jan 2026 to Sat 21 Feb 2026

475 Tenth Avenue, NY 10018 Ground Work (Field Revision)

Tue-Fri 11am-6pm, Sat 10am-6pm

Curated by Joey Lico

Adrián S. Bará, Julian Charrière, Sofía Fernández Díaz, Marcel Duchamp, Leslie Hewitt, Athena LaTocha, Harold Mendez, Sam Moyer, Nobuhito Nishigawara, Caleb Hahne Quintana and Jose de Jesus Rodriguez

Sean Kelly presents Ground Work (Field Revision) organized by Los Angeles-based curator and Executive Director of The Cultivist, Joey Lico. The exhibition brings together twelve artists whose practices consider how the earth is held, shaped, remembered, and reimagined. Rather than depicting landscape, the artists work within its materiality. Dust, pigment, metal, and glass function not as metaphors, but as witnesses. Through sculpture, photography, painting, and installation, the exhibition examines how material and psychological terrains shape one another, and how acts of construction, resistance, and renewal emerge from the strata of lived experience.

Artworks

Leslie Hewitt, Untitled (Maddened by Love), 2019

Digital chromogenic print in custom elm frame

© Leslie Hewitt. Courtesy the artist and Sean Kelly, New York
Adrián Bará, Echoes (NYT May 8 2025), 2025

News paper cut outs, acrylic paint, clear used poly sheeting, wood screen printing ink

72 × 58 in

© Adrián S. Bará. Courtesy the artist and Sean Kelly, New York
Julian Charriere, Thickens, pools, flows, rushes, slows, 2020

Obsidian

© Julian Charrière. Courtesy the artist and Sean Kelly, New York
Sofía Fernández Díaz, membrana, 2025

Cotton knit, beeswax with cochineal

© Sofía Fernández Díaz. Courtesy the artist and Sean Kelly, New York
Athena LaTocha, There Will Come a Soft Rain, 2025

Shellac ink, synthetic walnut ink, sand pigments, inkjet on paper

44 × 88 in

© Athena LaTocha. Courtesy the artist and Sean Kelly, New York
Athena LaTocha, The Night the Earth Caught Fire, 2024

Shellac ink, synthetic walnut ink, shellac, charcoal from burned and decayed New Hampshire trees on paper

88 × 216 in

© Athena LaTocha. Courtesy the artist and Sean Kelly, New York
Harold Mendez, On Midnight's Pall, 2025

Cotton, gesso, watercolor, toner, stipple and wax marking pencil mounted on Dibond in two panels

68 × 120 × 1 in

© Harold Mendez. Courtesy the artist and Sean Kelly, New York
Sam Moyer, Hard Message 2, 2023

Silver gelatin print, concrete frame with Long Island beach stone aggregate

29 × 37 × 3 in

© Sam Moyer. Courtesy the artist and Sean Kelly, New York
Nobuhito Nishigawara, Qualia #105, 2024

Recomposed rock with ceramic glaze and gold

6 × 6 × 5 in

© Nobuhito Nishigawara. Courtesy the artist and Sean Kelly, New York
Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray, Elevage de Poussière (Dust Breeding), 1964

Gelatin silver print

© Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray. Courtesy the artists and Sean Kelly, New York

Installation Views

Works by Adrián S. Bará, Sam Moyer, Leslie Hewitt, and Caleb Hahne Quintana address architectures, both literal and internal, through which memory and meaning take form. Bará’s precarious constructions echo the instability of the built environment. Moyer’s concrete-encased photographs collapse infrastructure and image into a single object, while Hewitt distills memory into spatial grammar, structuring stillness with photographic and sculptural restraint. Hahne Quintana’s atmospheric paintings trace displacement across emotional terrain, where figures dissolve into fields of color and distance.

Working across photography, assemblage, and material abstraction, Sofía Fernández Díaz, Marcel Duchamp, Jose de Jesus Rodriguez, and Harold Mendez question what lingers and remains. Fernández Díaz builds sculptural forms that balance between permanence and collapse, articulating presence through pressure. Rodriguez merges sand, lime, and pigment into vibrating geometries that feel simultaneously built and breathing. Mendez’s oxidized surfaces, water-worn wood, and stained textiles function as quiet excavations—objects that mourn disappearance while dignifying what remains. Duchamp’s inclusion reveals early fault lines in the language of material residue and abstraction.

Addressing the geologies of time, Julian Charrière exposes the sediment of human ambition, rendering planetary transformation through obsidian, heliography, and industrial remnants that glisten with both ruin and renewal. Athena LaTocha presses ash, soil, and industrial residue into sweeping works that collapse geological, historical, and personal timelines. Nobuhito Nishigawara recomposes fractured rock into sculptural acts of repair, in which gold-glazed seams carry ancestral memory and geological persistence forward.

Across these distinct practices, Ground Work (Field Revision) asks what it means to inhabit a ground—natural or constructed—that is continually shifting. The exhibition proposes that every surface holds the politics of its making, and that the materials closest to the earth’s memory, dust, stone, metal, pigment, are also the ones through which artists articulate resilience, rupture, and renewal.

Installation View of Ground Work (Field Revision), Curated by Joey Lico at Sean Kelly, New York, January 9 – February 21, 2026, Photography: Jason Wyche, New York, Courtesy: Sean Kelly, New York

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