CADOGAN GALLERY LAUNCH ANNOUNCEMENT | ARTICLE | ARTNET

Artnet, June 28, 2024

Cadogan Gallery Inaugurates New London Flagship With a Show of Contemporary Abstraction

The exhibition in October will be a wide-ranging group show highlighting the gallery's ethos and aesthetic.

 

 

What You Need to Know: This week, Cadogan Gallery announced the opening of its new flagship space in the London neighborhood of Belgravia just steps from Hyde Park. A bastion of the London contemporary art scene since its founding in 1980, the announcement comes on the heels of the gallery’s international expansion in Milan last year. The inaugural exhibition, which opens October 4, 2024, and will remain on view through February 8, 2025, will be an expansive group exhibition comprised of both established and emerging artists, illustrating gallery’s artist-forward approach and commitment to contemporary abstraction. Helmed by Managing Director Freddie Burness and Director Katie Burness, along with their father and gallery Founder and Owner Christopher Burness, the new London flagship location is designed in partnership with studio Jake Lai, and feature more than 400 square meters and two distinct exhibition spaces and promises to catalyze further evolution and growth for the long-standing gallery.

 

Why We Like It: Cadogan Gallery’s focus and support of artists at various points in their career and, more specifically, the specialization in contemporary abstract art has resulted in a distinctive and refined roster of artists as well as exhibition program. The forthcoming move to a new space in Belgravia and the debut of a multifaceted group show will comprehensively introduce those new to the gallery to its singular ethos, and long-term followers a glimpse into the gallery’s forward trajectory. Featuring a diverse range of mediums, from a broader art historical perspective, the exhibition will offer a look at the state of abstraction today.

Pieces by artists like Laurence Leenaert foreground experimental and multimedia approaches to contemporary abstraction, juxtaposed with work by artists such as Tycjan Knut highlight continuing, indelible threads of exploration into the core tenets of color and form. Ramón Enrich’s work conversely shows the possibilities of abstraction within the realm of representation. Together, the exhibition will make manifest the gallery’s singularity within both the local and international fine art landscape.

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