Untitled Miami: Duke Riley & Jean Shin

November 28 – December 3
Praise Shadows Art Gallery is thrilled to present a two-person exhibition by New York–based artists Duke Riley and Jean Shin. Both artists are celebrated for their commitment to public art practices, and working with materials – synthetic or organic – salvaged from natural habitats. This is the first time the two artists have exhibited together. 
 
The works featured have prominent exhibition histories. Riley's works were previously exhibited at MOCA Cleveland, and the 23rd Biennale of Sydney (2022); Shin's works on view have been featured in her solo exhibitions at the National Academy of Design, the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and more.
 
This presentation aligns with Riley's current solo exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum, DEATH TO THE LIVING, Long Live Trash, and Shin's current and recent exhibitions at the Laumeier Sculpture ParkPhiladelphia Contemporary, and Olana State Historic Site.
  • Duke Riley
    Photo by Edward Boches

    Duke Riley

    Duke Riley received his BFA from Rhode Island School of Design and his MFA from Pratt Institute. Riley is fascinated by maritime history and events around urban waterways.  His signature style interweaves historical and contemporary events with elements of fiction and myth to create allegorical histories.  His re-imagined narratives comment on a range of issues from the cultural impact of over development and environmental destruction of waterfront communities to contradictions within political ideologies and the role of the artist in society.  
     
    "My work addresses the tension between individual and collective behavior, independent spaces within all-encompassing societies, and the conflict with institutional power. I examinetransgression zonesand their inhabitants through drawing, printmaking, mosaic, sculpture, performative interventions, infiltrations, and video structured as complex multimedia installations. I combine populist myths and historical obscurities with contemporary social and environmental dilemmas, connecting past and present, drawing attention to unsolved issues. Throughout my projects I profile the space where water meets the land, traditionally marking the periphery of urban society, what lies beyond rigid moral constructs, a sense of danger and possibility."
  • Artwork on View

    • Duke Riley Echelon of Uncertainty, 2022
      Duke Riley
      Echelon of Uncertainty, 2022
    • Duke Riley Monument to Five Thousand Years of Temptation and Deception X, 2022
      Duke Riley
      Monument to Five Thousand Years of Temptation and Deception X, 2022
    • Duke Riley Lubberdise Lost, 2010
      Duke Riley
      Lubberdise Lost, 2010
  • To inquire about additional available works by Duke Riley, please contact gallery@praiseshadows.com.
  • Jean Shin

    Known for her large-scale installations and public sculptures, artist Jean Shin transforms accumulations of discarded objects into powerful monuments that interrogate our complex relationship between material consumption, collective identity and community engagement. Often working cooperatively within a community or region, Shin amasses vast collections of an everyday object or material—Mountain Dew soda bottles, mobile phones, 35mm slides—while researching its history of use, circulation and environmental impact. Distinguished by this labor-intensive and participatory process, Shin’s poetic yet epic creations become catalysts for communities to confront social and ecological challenges. As such, her body of work includes several permanent public artworks commissioned by major agencies and municipalities, most recently a landmark commission for the MTA’s Second Ave Subway in NYC.
     
    Born in Seoul, South Korea, and raised in the US, Shin works in Brooklyn and Hudson Valley, New York. She is a tenured Adjunct Professor at Pratt Institute and holds an honorary doctorate from New York Academy of Art. Shin’s work has been widely exhibited and collected in over 150 major museums and cultural institutions, including solo exhibitions at The Museum of Modern Art in New York, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington DC, and Asian Art Museum in San Francisco, where in 2020 she was the first Korean-American woman artist featured in a solo exhibition. Shin has received numerous awards, including the Frederic Church Award for her contributions to American art and culture. Her works have been highlighted in The New York Times and Sculpture Magazine, among others. 
    Jean Shin
    Photo by Daniel Terna
  • Artwork on View

    • Jean Shin E-Bundle (Red G. Q.), 2019
      Jean Shin
      E-Bundle (Red G. Q.), 2019
    • Jean Shin E-Bundle (Yellow L.M and S.M.), 2019
      Jean Shin
      E-Bundle (Yellow L.M and S.M.), 2019
    • Jean Shin S.O.S. #9, 2022
      Jean Shin
      S.O.S. #9, 2022
    • Jean Shin S.O.S. #10, 2022
      Jean Shin
      S.O.S. #10, 2022
    • Jean Shin S.O.S #11, 2022
      Jean Shin
      S.O.S #11, 2022
    • Jean Shin S.O.S #12, 2022
      Jean Shin
      S.O.S #12, 2022
    • Jean Shin S.O.S #13, 2022
      Jean Shin
      S.O.S #13, 2022
    • Jean Shin Spring Collection (Look #8), 2016
      Jean Shin
      Spring Collection (Look #8), 2016
    • Jean Shin Spring Collection (Look #19), 2016
      Jean Shin
      Spring Collection (Look #19), 2016
    • Jean Shin Spring Collection (Look #20), 2016
      Jean Shin
      Spring Collection (Look #20), 2016
  • To inquire about additional available works by Jean Shin, please contact gallery@praiseshadows.com.