Details:

This schematic-like work depicts a fictitious future environment in two-and-a-half dimensions. The geometric shapes and saturated fields of color represent particular aspects of a fantastically constructed space—landscape architecture, floor plans and shifting walls.
Framed: 37.0 x 29.0 x 2.2 in.

① Artwork:

Visualizing Retail Environments Choreographed to Create Different Levels of Drama

This schematic-like work depicts a fictitious future environment in two-and-a-half dimensions. The geometric shapes and saturated fields of color represent particular aspects of a fantastically constructed space—landscape architecture, floor plans and shifting walls. Although some of these forms appear to be reproduced with a blueprint or printmaking process, the artist hand-renders all these elements with colored pencils and crayons. The title of the work, inspired by museum layouts and postmodern authors, exemplifies the power dynamics of various office environments where the artist worked. Sokolow employs humor and skepticism in her works to hint at the frequently concealed social engineering and other agendas involved in the designing and use of corporate, institutional and domestic architecture.

Specs:

22 inches
30 inches
with frame
29 inches
37 inches
2.25 inches
37 inches

③ Artist:

Deb Sokolow

Deb Sokolow’s schematic-like drawings depict fictitious environments of the future. The artist’s two-and-a-half-dimensional pieces are rendered by hand and feature geometric shapes and saturated fields of color that represent landscape architecture, floor plans and shifting walls. Sokolow’s titles are inspired by both the layout of museum spaces and authors of postmodern literature—employing humor and skepticism to hint at the frequently concealed social engineering involved in the designs of corporate, institutional and domestic architecture.

BIO:

Deb Sokolow, born in Davis, California, is an artist and writer. She received an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in Illinois in 2004. 

Solo exhibitions of Sokolow’s work have taken place at: the Abrons Art Center in New York City; the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, Illinois; the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art in Kansas City, Kansas; the Institute of Visual Arts in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; and the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, in which Sokolow’s 2013 MATRIX exhibition, Some Concerns About the Candidate, was reviewed in The New York Times

Group exhibitions that have included Sokolow’s work have taken place at: the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, DC; The Drawing Center in New York City; the Museum für Gegenwartskunst Siegen in Germany; Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven, the Netherlands; and the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The artist’s work was included in the 4th Athens Biennale in Greece.

Sokolow’s work has been reproduced for Creative Time’s Comics project; in The Best American Comics 2017; in Swedish art magazine Paletten; in Vitamin D2, a survey on contemporary drawing; and in a several-page spread in the fall 2018 issue of BOMB Magazine. The artist’s 2019 solo show at Western Exhibitions was reviewed by Elizabeth Buhe in The Brooklyn Rail; John Yau reviewed the artist’s 2016 solo show in Hyperallergic

Sokolow’s work is in the permanent collections of: the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, DC; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in California; the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, Illinois; the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art in Hartford, Connecticut; the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art in Arizona; the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender, and Reproduction in Bloomington, Indiana; and the Thomas J Watson Library at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. 

Sokolow is a recipient of an Artadia award and residencies at Art Omi and Nordic Artists’ Centre in Norway.

Sokolow lives and works in Chicago, Illinois.

Deb Sokolow:
Visualizing Retail Environments Choreographed to Create Different Levels of Drama, 2021
Graphite, crayon, colored pencil, pastel and collage on paper
30.0 × 22.0 inches /
Deb Sokolow:
Visualizing Retail Environments Choreographed to Create Different Levels of Drama, 2021
Graphite, crayon, colored pencil, pastel and collage on paper
30.0 × 22.0 inches /