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Postcard Superheroes and other Contemplations 
Mark Mothersbaugh

02/28/2026 - 04/05/2026

About: 

 

"Hello! My name is Mark Mothersbaugh, and I consider myself a contemporary social scientist. At least, that was the term we came up with when we were starting Devo back in the early ’70s to avoid the moniker “artist”, though of course, we were. We wanted to distinguish ourselves from much of what passed for “art” at the time, which didn’t resonate with us.

 

I fell in love with printmaking in my first year at KSU, back in 1968. I printed for almost a decade before touring with Devo made it nearly impossible, but I reignited that love in the mid-’80s when I met Richard Duardo, who had a screen-printing company in the then-industrial wasteland known as Traction Ave, in downtown LA. Whenever I had free time, I would head over there to print my art, eventually building a large body of work, including the silkscreen prints in this current show.

This exhibition features two collections of screenprints created by Mark Mothersbaugh in the late 1980s and early 1990s at Richard Duardo’s Los Angeles printmaking studio. Included is the Postcard Superhero series, which began as 3.5 by 5 inch postcard sized collages constructed aboard Richard Branson’s boat in the 1970s and were later translated into large scale screenprints at Duardo’s studio. The series comprises six collages printed with three different inks, each revealing distinct messages depending on the light in which they are viewed. The works incorporate phosphorescent ink that glows in the dark, fluorescent ink visible under black light, and standard ink seen in daylight.

The second collection, produced around the same time, reflects Mothersbaugh’s personal contemplations, expressed through his distinctive visual language.​

 

Through this evolving body of work, Mothersbaugh invites viewers to join him in contemplating life’s fundamental mysteries, offering an evolving journey into the mind of one of today’s most innovative artists.

Torrente

James Reyes

02/28/26 - 03/05/26

Ki Smith Gallery presents Torrente, an exhibition of new paintings by James Reyes. Across this body of work, Reyes develops densely constructed compositions structured through compression, repetition, and directional movement. Human figures, animals, and hybrid forms interlock and overlap, extending laterally across the picture plane and resisting narrative resolution. The paintings are built through successive layers of paint, with visible revisions and shifts in opacity that register the accumulation of decisions over time.Color and line function as organizing principles within the compositions, establishing spatial tension and rhythmic continuity across the surface. Recurring motifs and chromatic structures generate movement and internal correspondence, producing images that remain open, unstable, and continuously in flux.Reyes’s practice advances a sustained investigation into the possibilities of painting as both material process and conceptual framework. Engaging with histories of figuration and abstraction while remaining firmly groundewd in the conditions of contemporary image-making, his work situates painting as an active, evolving form. James Reyes lives and works in New York. His work is held in private and institutional collections.

About James Reyes

James Reyes (b. 1991, Bronx, New York) is an American painter whose work explores the tension between figuration and abstraction through gesture-driven mark-making, incorporating moments of realism. Shaped by his cultural and social environment, Reyes develops compositions that balance immediacy and control, allowing figures and creatures to emerge, dissolve, and reassert themselves within dense, layered surfaces.Reyes received his BFA from the School of Visual Arts in 2014. Early in his career, he was involved in artist-led, experimental exhibition models that emphasized accessibility and public engagement, including unsanctioned installations at the Whitney Museum of American Art, MoMA PS1, and New York City subway stations. These formative experiences continue to inform his approach to painting, which embraces risk, physicality, and improvisation.Working across a range of scales and mediums, Reyes’s figures often appear simultaneously complete and fragmented, occupying a space between the recognizable and the surreal. This push and pull—between structure and collapse, image and gesture—serves as a throughline across his bodies of work.Reyes’s work has been shown nationally and internationally and is held in private and institutional collections.

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