The Kasmin Gallery, formerly known as the Paul Kasmin Gallery, is a New York City fine art gallery, founded in SoHo in 1989.[1]
History
The gallery was founded by its namesake as the Paul Kasmin Gallery in 1989[2] and was initially housed at 74 Grand Street in SoHo, Manhattan.[3] Kasmin moved the gallery from SoHo to Chelsea at 297 10th Avenue in 2000.[4] The gallery's first exhibition featured a collection of abstract paintings by Peter Schuyff.[5]
In 2007, Kasmin Gallery gave the first New York exhibition in nearly 30 years to the furniture-sculpture of the French artists Claude and François-Xavier Lalanne; he went on to show designers like Ron Arad, Mattia Bonetti, David Wiseman and Jasper Morrison.[5] Along with Michael Shvo, he also curated the 2014 exhibition Les Lalanne: The Poetry of Sculpture at the S|2 Gallery of Sotheby's Auction House 2in New York.[9] It included rare Lalanne sculptures in a midnight garden setting.[10]
In October 2018, the gallery officially became known as the "Kasmin Gallery,"[11] and unveiled a new 3,000 square-foot space at 509 West 27th Street in Chelsea. The new location was designed by architect Markus Dochantschi of StudioMDA,[12] and features 28 skylights and a 5,000 square-foot rooftop sculpture garden situated parallel to the High Line park. The first exhibition held in the rooftop garden contained sculptures by Joel Shapiro.[11] The inaugural exhibition inside the new gallery space featured a series of watercolors by Walton Ford.[12]
At one point, the gallery operated four exhibition spaces along one block of West 27th Street near 10th Avenue.[13]
In 2019, Kasmin Gallery closed one of its leased spaces at 515 West 27th Street. That same year, it was scheduled to open a new venue at 514 West 28th Street again designed by StudioMDA, with 3,400 square feet (320 square metres) of private viewing room and office space and 460 square feet (43 square metres) of public exhibition space.[14]
Paul Kasmin died on March 23, 2020, at the age of 60 following a long illness.[15] He was the son of the noted British art dealer John Kasmin.[16] Kasmin is credited with helping build New York City's Chelsea gallery scene.[17]
Artists
Kasmin Gallery represents numerous living artists, including: