Whitney Bedford: Sunsetting | Jared McGriff: The Stakes are Myself
1700 S Santa Fe Ave #101, Los Angeles, CA 90021
Saturday, May 17 at 4:00 PM 6:00 PM
Ends Jun 28, 2025
Vielmetter Los Angeles is excited to announce Whitney Bedford’s solo exhibition, Sunsetting, opening May 17th through June 28th, 2025. In Sunsetting, Bedford’s paintings continue her Veduta series–interpretations of historical landscape paintings–shifting her focus to turn-of-the-century sunset and moonlight paintings. Primarily referencing paintings by Edvard Munch and Félix Vallotton, Bedford’s works situate the historic landscape within an architectural stage-like space alongside contemporary flora and fauna, looking outward as if observing landscapes past. Approaching these scenes of nature through a temporal lens, Bedford’s works tap into the emotional potential of the sunset genre, drawing on the symbolism of endings, beginnings, rebirth, and renewal. Painted in vivid and vibrant hues, each sunset offers a meditation on the passage of time and its cyclical nature. For Bedford, the sunsets are particularly poignant at this moment–politically and environmentally–as signifiers of the end of an era or harbingers of change. For Munch and Vallotton, the emotional charge of the sunsets symbolized the anxiety of their time and the drastic societal changes spurred by the Industrial Revolution at the turn of the century, leading up to the First World War. Bedford’s return to these themes draws comparisons a century later to our current moment, offering a visual allegory for the inevitability of change. In several paintings, Bedford includes palm trees–quintessentially Californian trees–some of which were damaged by fire. These trees were drawn from images Bedford took of the devastation in her neighborhood in the Palisades after the recent wildfires. The wildfires, which took place midway through the production for her exhibition, dramatically underscore the symbolism of the sunsets. Her Veduta paintings, already expressing the despair of witnessing climate change, are now permeated by the trauma of the recent devastation. Bedford’s works are both cautionary and hopeful. The transformative beauty of the sunsets is eclipsed by the anxiety of a new era approaching. With every end, there is a beginning, and with every beginning, there is grief for what once was. Bedford’s works occupy this space of in-betweenness and revel in the sublime power and ultimate hope of nature. About the artist Whitney Bedford received her MFA from the University of California, Los Angeles in 2003. She won the 2001 UCLA Hammer Museum Drawing Biennale and received a Fulbright Graduate Fellowship from Hochschule der Kuenste, Berlin in 1999. Bedford recently had a solo exhibition last year at The San Luis Obispo Museum of Art titled “The Window,” curated by Emma Saperstein. She has been included in group exhibitions at the Pizzuti Collection, Columbus, OH; the Jewish Museum, New York; Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, North Adams; and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Denver. Bedford’s work is included in the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara, CA; the Legion of Honor, San Francisco, CA; the Jumex Collection, Mexico City, Mexico; the De La Cruz Collection, Miami, Florida, USA; The Saatchi Collection, London, England; the Francois Pinault Collection, Paris, France; the Eric Decelle Collection, Brussels, Belgium; and the Collection Ginette Moulin/Guillaume Houze, Paris, France. The gallery is located at 1700 S Santa Fe Avenue, south of the 10 freeway. Parking is available on the south parking lot adjacent to the building. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 am to 6 pm and by appointment. For further information and press inquiries, please contact Olivia Gauthier at Olivia@vielmetter.com. Image: Whitney Bedford, “Veduta (Vallotton Yellow Green Sunset),” 2025, Ink and oil on nylinen on panel, 36" x 48" x 2" [HxWxD], Photo credit: Evan Bedford ____ Vielmetter Los Angeles is pleased to announce Miami-based artist Jared McGriff’s second solo exhibition at the gallery, The Stakes Are Myself, on view from May 17th through June 28th, 2025. The exhibition’s title alludes to the late Beat poet Diane di Prima’s poems from the “Revolutionary Letters” series. Written between 1968 and 1971, these letters were produced during a time of political and cultural upheaval in America, emphasizing the necessity of taking risks as a means of survival in an oppressive world. Honoring di Prima’s work and using it as a guide to respond to today’s political turmoil, McGriff draws inspiration from “Revolutionary Letter #1,” which opens with this powerful statement: “I have just realized that the stakes are myself, I have no other ransom money, nothing to break or barter but my life.” Each of McGriff’s new paintings in the exhibition illustrates a scene of “risk-taking” in everyday life–gambling, horse racing, fishing–activities that are woven into our social fabric and serve as a potent metaphor for chance, probability, and luck throughout the show. For McGriff, these scenes represent a microcosm of the existential risks of existence, shedding light on how we navigate uncertainty in life and how we harness or mitigate it. In the painting The Inherent Risk of Surviving Infancy, in Trio (2025), three men engaged in a game of dice are captured mid-play. The moment is frozen in drama, creating a nearly Renaissance-like composition, though the actual dice remain just out of sight. By concentrating on the figures and their expressions and gestures, McGriff emphasizes the emotional and psychological dynamics of the players instead of the game's outcome. Consequently, the game itself transforms into a theatrical stage for catharsis and serves as a powerful metaphor for chance, probability, and luck. In the paintings A Conduit of Trust (2025) and An Engine of Instinct and Intuition (2025), McGriff depicts dramatically cropped portraits of a croupier and a gambler against pitch-black backgrounds. The gambler, with eyes cast down and a cigarette in his mouth, coolly contemplates his next move, the darkness of the background enhancing the melodrama of the moment before he plays his next card. The croupier is caught mid-move, shifting the chips either toward or away from the unseen figure at the other end of the table – a card turned face down contrasts with her palm facing up, signaling the potential for action and opportunity. About the artist Jared McGriff (Los Angeles, 1977) received his BA in architecture from the College of Environmental Design at the University of California, Berkeley in 1999 and his MBA from New York University in 2008. Solo exhibitions include Alone, Together (2019) and Only Touching the Ground to Jump (2020) at Spinello Projects, and a solo exhibition at Vielmetter Los Angeles, On Being a Wild Dream (2023). His work has been featured in solo booth presentations at NADA Miami (2020), Expo Chicago (2022), The Armory Show (2022), 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair - New York (2023, 2024). In 2021, McGriff had his debut museum solo exhibition, Where We Are You, at NSU Art Museum, curated by Bonnie Clearwater. He has been featured in museum group exhibitions at ICA Miami, Orlando Museum of Art, The Norton Museum of Art, and El Espacio 23.
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