John Gibson Gallery

The John Gibson Gallery was an art gallery in New York City founded in 1967 by John Gibson (Born 1933, Hinsdale, IL), in New York. The gallery was closed in 2001. John Gibson died on March 1, 2019.

Artists

The gallery is primarily known for the Minimalist , land art, arte povera, conceptual artists and European artists it has represented and whose careers it helped launch.

Invitation to contemporary art exhibition in New York
Invitation to contemporary art exhibition in New York

Such artists include: Carl Andre, John Armleder, Arman, Jennifer Bartlett, Joseph Beuys, Bill Beckley , Ford Beckman, Eberhard Bosslet, Daniel Buren, Beth Brenner, James Carpenter, Saint Clair Cemin, William Childress, Tony Cragg, Christo, Abraham David Christian, Jan Dibbets, John Dogg, Christian Eckart, Andrew Ethier , Suzan Etkin, Peter Fend, Joel Fisher, Dan Graham, Peter Halley, Noel Harding, Peter Hutchinson, Eva Hesse, Will Insley, Allan Kaprow, Leandro Katz, Samm Kunce, Bertrand Lavier, Ange Leccia, Bill Lundberg, Richard Long, Robert Morris, Gordon Matta-Clark, Mario Merz, Olivier Mosset, Thom Merrick, Bruce Nauman, Claes Oldenburg, Dennis Oppenheim, Joel Otterson, Panamarenko, Steven Parrino, Stephen Poser, Lucio Pozzi, Holt Quentel, Daniel Reiser, Janet Rifkin, Robert Ryman, Richard Serra, Salvatore Scarpitta, Bill Schwarz, Keith Sonnier, Mark di Suvero, Robert Smithson, Mark Stahl, Haim Steinbach, Richard Tuttle, Valentin Tatransky, Not Vital, Wallace & Donohue, Michael Zwack, Meg Webster, and Lawrence Weiner.

History

John Gibson was the first director of Park Place Gallery in 1963, and later opened his own gallery in 1967. By 1966, SoHo had a growing artist community, and had revolutionized what was possible for young artists. The original gallery members[1] were all of the cutting edge. Attracting funding from the Lannan Foundation and private collectors, and with John Gibson and later Paula Cooper as directors, Park Place became a center of attention for the downtown art scene.

  • 1967-1971 John Gibson Gallery - Projects for Commissions, 27 East 67th Street, NY 10021
  • 1972-1980 John Gibson Gallery. 392 West Broadway, NY 10012
  • 1981-1984 John Gibson Gallery. 205 East 78th Street, NY 10021
  • 1984-2001 John Gibson Gallery. 568 Broadway at Prince, NY 10012

Art fairs

  • Art Basel (1972, 75, 76, 78, 79, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91),
  • Art Cologne Art Cologne (1974, 75)

Notes

  1. Mark di Suvero, Frosty Myers, Robert Grosvenor, Ed Ruda, Dean Fleming, Leo Valledor, Peter Forakis, Tamara Melcher, Tony Magar and later David Novros, John Baldwin and Gay Glading
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