Now Open

Illuminations

Ben Cauchi, James Cherry, Ryan Driscoll, Garry Fabian Miller, Timo Fahler, Shawn Huckins, Nova Jiang, Brad Kahlhamer, Mia Kokkoni, Danielle Kosann, Angela Lane, Enrique Martinez Celaya, Kayla Risko, Barbara Takenaga, Dannielle Tegeder

Jun 26 – Aug 7

Anat Ebgi Gallery - NY
Gallery

Anat Ebgi Gallery - NY

372 Broadway, New York City, NY 10013

Tue–Sat 11am–6pm

Admission

🎁

Free Admission

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About

NEW YORK — Anat Ebgi is pleased to announce _Illuminations_, a group exhibition curated by [Angela Lane](https://anatebgi.com/artists/angela-lane/). On view at 372 Broadway in Tribeca from June 26 through August 7, with an opening reception Saturday, June 26 from 6-8 pm. **Ben Cauchi ****James Cherry ****Ryan Driscoll ****Garry Fabian Miller ****Timo Fahler ****Shawn Huckins ****Nova Jiang ****Brad Kahlhamer ****Mia Kokkoni ****Danielle Kosann ****Angela Lane ****Enrique Martinez Celaya ****Kayla Risko ****Barbara Takenaga Dannielle Tegeder** _Illuminations_ presents 15 artists who treat light as material—visible energy, luminosity, and color—as well as artists who explore light as a metaphor for truth, knowledge, hope, and safety. Light reaches far beyond the material world; it is a marvelous force and mystery. Scientific knowledge can measure light with remarkable accuracy, yet the quantum reality it reveals remains far stranger than everyday experience suggests. While we can understand how the brain processes electrical signals, how physical light translates into our subjective, conscious experience of color and vision remains an unsolved enigma. This sentiment echoes Emily Dickinson’s evocation in her poem “A Light Exists in Spring” of an illumination of color pressing on the body and the landscape, emphasizing subjective sensation over scientific confirmation. _A Light stands abroad __On Solitary Fields __That Science cannot overtake __But Human Nature feels._ The same photons measured by physicists have been revered by artists and theologians for millennia as charged symbols. Inspired from life as well as imagination, the artworks highlight the intimate relationship between seeing and creating. In Genesis, the world begins when the light is divided from the darkness, bringing order and knowledge to the world, producing purpose from chaos. From this primal division emerge fundamental conditions of existence: shape, color, the passage of time, and perception itself. Bridging light’s elusive metaphysical meanings with its pastoral, celestial, and cosmic sublime, this exhibition aims to challenge viewers to reconsider how light shapes human consciousness and our understanding of reality by focusing on works that weave together scientific enquiry, spiritual symbolism, and artistic practices that harness light.

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