Marianne Boesky Gallery
Locations
On the eve of its 30th anniversary, Marianne Boesky Gallery reaffirms its legacy as a champion of visionary voices in contemporary art. Based in New York—with a longstanding presence in Aspen and a forthcoming outpost in Paris—the gallery has been instrumental in developing the careers of some of the most influential artists working today.
Marianne Boesky founded her eponymous gallery in 1996; that year, the gallery presented solo exhibitions with Lisa Yuskavage, Polly Apfelbaum, and Diti Almog. By 1998, Sarah Sze, Yoshitomo Nara, and Takashi Murakami had joined the gallery’s growing roster. From its inception, the mission of the gallery was clear: to support artists’ developing practices while cultivating meaningful relationships with arts institutions and private collectors. For three decades, this thoughtful, artist-centric approach has helped to realize museum exhibitions, public art projects, and commissions for the gallery’s artists across the U.S., Europe, and Asia.
In 2007, Marianne Boesky Gallery opened its flagship space in Chelsea; in the following years, Boesky experimented with a curatorial laboratory on the Upper East Side and a project space on the Lower East Side, and established a presence in Aspen. The gallery’s program evolved to welcome such critically acclaimed artists as Ghada Amer, Sanford Biggers, the Haas Brothers, Frank Stella, and Donald Moffett while also reintroducing Pier Paolo Calzolari to international audiences.
Today, Marianne Boesky Gallery continues in the same tradition in which it was founded, fostering emerging and established talent while strengthening ties with individual and institutional collectors. In recent years, the gallery has welcomed a host of innovative, emerging artists to the program, including Gabriel Chaile, Thalita Hamaoui, Danielle Mckinney, Dora Jeridi, and Michaela Yearwood-Dan, and coming to represent two under-ppreciated figures in American art, Jennifer Bartlett and Mary Lovelace O’Neal.
Marianne Boesky founded her eponymous gallery in 1996; that year, the gallery presented solo exhibitions with Lisa Yuskavage, Polly Apfelbaum, and Diti Almog. By 1998, Sarah Sze, Yoshitomo Nara, and Takashi Murakami had joined the gallery’s growing roster. From its inception, the mission of the gallery was clear: to support artists’ developing practices while cultivating meaningful relationships with arts institutions and private collectors. For three decades, this thoughtful, artist-centric approach has helped to realize museum exhibitions, public art projects, and commissions for the gallery’s artists across the U.S., Europe, and Asia.
In 2007, Marianne Boesky Gallery opened its flagship space in Chelsea; in the following years, Boesky experimented with a curatorial laboratory on the Upper East Side and a project space on the Lower East Side, and established a presence in Aspen. The gallery’s program evolved to welcome such critically acclaimed artists as Ghada Amer, Sanford Biggers, the Haas Brothers, Frank Stella, and Donald Moffett while also reintroducing Pier Paolo Calzolari to international audiences.
Today, Marianne Boesky Gallery continues in the same tradition in which it was founded, fostering emerging and established talent while strengthening ties with individual and institutional collectors. In recent years, the gallery has welcomed a host of innovative, emerging artists to the program, including Gabriel Chaile, Thalita Hamaoui, Danielle Mckinney, Dora Jeridi, and Michaela Yearwood-Dan, and coming to represent two under-ppreciated figures in American art, Jennifer Bartlett and Mary Lovelace O’Neal.
Artists
- Ghada Amer
- Jennifer Bartlett
- Gina Beavers
- Sanford Biggers
- Björn Braun
- Pier Paolo Calzolari
- Gabriel Chaile
- Martyn Cross
- Sue de Beer
- Svenja Deininger
- Barnaby Furnas
- Kwamé Azure Gomez
- The Haas Brothers
- Thalita Hamaoui
- Allison Janae Hamilton
- Jay Heikes
- Jammie Holmes
- Nathalie Khayat
- Aubrey Levinthal
- Dora Jeridi
- Dashiell Manley
- Suzanne McClelland
- Danielle Mckinney
- Sarah Meyohas
- Serge Alain Nitegeka
- Anthony Pearson
- Celeste Rapone
- Frank Stella
- Hannah van Bart
- John Waters
- Claudia Wieser
- Michaela Yearwood-Dan
- Tianyue Zhong