Matthew Marks worked for the Pace Gallery in New York City and Anthony d'Offay in London prior to opening his own gallery.[2] After working for three years at d'Offay, Marks moved back to New York City to open his own gallery, a 1,000 square feet (93 m2) space on Madison Avenue.[3] The Matthew Marks Gallery had its first exhibition, Artists' Sketchbooks, in February 1991, including Louise Bourgeois, Francesco Clemente, Jackson Pollock, and Cy Twombly.[4]
Matthew Marks Gallery opened its first space in Chelsea — a converted single-story garage with skylights at 522 West 22nd Street[5] — in 1994, with a show of Ellsworth Kelly.[6] In 1996, the gallery teamed up with two other galleries – Gladstone Gallery and Metro Pictures – to acquire and divide up a 29,000 sq ft (2,700 m2) warehouse at 515 West 24th Street.[7] By 1997, the gallery closed its space on Madison Avenue. Over the following years, two more spaces in Chelsea were added.[8] Since 1998, Matthew Marks Gallery and another gallery—first Pat Hearn Gallery (1998), later Greene Naftali Gallery (2008, 2018)—have organized "Painting: Now and Forever", a large-scale, ongoing survey of contemporary painting, every 10 years.[9]
In 1994, the Gramercy International Art Fair, now called The Armory Show, made its debut in New York's Gramercy Park Hotel.[11] Four dealers and gallerists, Pat Hearn, Colin de Land, Matthew Marks and Paul Morris, worked together to bring in a younger generation of downtown artists who were working through the recession that plagued the 1980s.[12]Mark Dion's Lemonade Stand (1996), Andrea Fraser’sMuseum Highlights: A Gallery Talk (1989), May I Help You (1991), and Renée Green’sThe Pigskin Library (1990) debuted at the art fair.[13]
Artists
Matthew Marks represents living artists, including:
^Shnayerson, Michael (May 21, 2019). Boom : mad money, mega dealers, and the rise of contemporary art (First ed.). New York. ISBN9781610398411. OCLC1055566751.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Eric Konigsberg, "Marks Nabs Johns: How gallerist Matthew Marks bagged the flag man and became the new Leo Castelli," New York Magazine, May 21, 2005.
^Shnayerson, Michael (2019). Boom : mad money, mega dealers, and the rise of contemporary art (First ed.). New York: Hachette. p. 158. ISBN9781610398404. OCLC1054266745.