MATTHEW RITCHIE
Dawn of the Gods, 2023
Oil and ink on canvas
56 x 74 in.
142.2 x 188 cm
JCG15868
Installation view, Matthew Ritchie: A Garden in the Flood, Frist Art Museum, Nashville, TN, 2022. Image courtesy of Frist Art Museum, Nashville. Photo: John Schweikert.
Installation view, Matthew Ritchie: A Garden in the Flood, Frist Art Museum, Nashville, TN, 2022. Image courtesy of Frist Art Museum, Nashville. Photo: John Schweikert.
Installation view, Matthew Ritchie: A Garden in the Flood, Frist Art Museum, Nashville, TN, 2022. Image courtesy of Frist Art Museum, Nashville. Photo: John Schweikert.
Installation View, Matthew Ritchie, Shadow Garden, University of North Texas, College of Visual Arts and Design Building, 2022.
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Shadow Drawing, 2022
Powder coated steel and organic plant material
129.6 x 192 x 120 in.
329.2 x 487.7 x 304.8 cm
JCG12444
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Shadow Drawing, 2022
Alternate view
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Harbinger, 2022
Signed on verso
Oil and ink on canvas
58 x 72 x 1 1/2 in.
147.3 x 182.9 x 3.8 cm
JCG13774
MATTHEW RITCHIE
An Illustrated Lecture, 2022
Signed on verso
Oil and ink on canvas
56 x 74 x 1 1/2 in.
142.2 x 188 x 3.8 cm
JCG13780
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Vermilion Sands, 2022
Signed on verso
Oil and ink on canvas
66 x 76 x 1 1/4 in.
167.6 x 193 x 3.2 cm.
JCG13771
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Leaves, 2022
Ink, wax and graphite on paper
14 x 11 in.
35.6 x 27.9 cm.
JCG13797
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Leaves, 2022
Ink, wax and graphite on paper
14 x 11 in.
35.6 x 27.9 cm.
JCG13795
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Leaves, 2022
Ink, wax and graphite on paper
14 x 11 in.
35.6 x 27.9 cm.
JCG13788
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Leaves, 2022
Ink, wax and graphite on paper
14 x 11 in.
35.6 x 27.9 cm.
JCG13785
MATTHEW RITCHIE
The Ninth Wave, 2019
Oil, ink, and wax on canvas, with vinyl decal
Framed: 50 x 54 in. (127 x 137.2 cm)
Overall with vinyl: dimensions variable
JCG11122
MATTHEW RITCHIE
The Last Sorcerer, 2017
Oil, ink, and wax on canvas
50 x 54 in.
127 x 137.2 cm
JCG9733
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Object, 2020
Oil, ink and wax on canvas
25 x 27 1/2 in
63.5 x 69.8 cm
JCG11405
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Wave, 2020
Oil, ink and wax on canvas
25 x 27 1/2 in
63.5 x 69.8 cm
JCG11406
MATTHEW RITCHIE
The Black Arrow, 2014-2017
Oil, ink, and wax on canvas
58 x 78 in.
147.3 x 198.1 cm
JCG9740
MATTHEW RITCHIE
The Red and the Red, 2014
Oil and ink on canvas
82 x 120 x 2 1/2 in.
208.3 x 304.8 x 6.4 cm
JCG12019
MATTHEW RITCHIE
A bridge, a gate, an ocean, 2014
Oil and ink on canvas
Framed: 94 x 120 x 2 1/2 in.
238.8 x 304.8 x 6.3 cm
JCG11437
MATTHEW RITCHIE
The Office of Completion (Alpha), 2011 - 2013
Oil and ink on linen with vinyl decal
Framed: 74 x 56 in. (188 x 142.2 cm)
Overall: 74 x 109 in. (188 x 276.9 cm)
JCG12018
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Landscape, 2019
Oil, ink, and wax on canvas
25 x 27 1/2 in.
63.5 x 69.8 cm
Framed: 26 1/4 x 28 3/4 x 2 1/4 in.
66.7 x 73 x 5.7 cm
JCG10316
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Queen, 2019
Oil, ink, and wax on canvas
25 x 27 1/2 in.
63.5 x 69.8 cm
Framed: 26 1/4 x 28 3/4 x 2 1/4 in.
66.7 x 73 x 5.7 cm
JCG10318
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Gravity, 2019
Oil, ink, and wax on canvas
25 x 27 1/2 in.
63.5 x 69.8 cm
Framed: 26 1/4 x 28 3/4 x 2 1/4 in.
66.7 x 73 x 5.7 cm
JCG10315
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Occidental King (S), 2018
Mobile screen with UV printing on acrylic
85 x 55 1/4 x 37 in.
215.9 x 140.3 x 94 cm
Unique screen from Edition 1/1 + 1 AP
JCG10259
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Boundless Informant (S), 2018
Mobile screen with UV printing on acrylic
85 x 55 1/4 x 37 in.
215.9 x 140.3 x 94 cm
Unique screen from Edition 1/1 + 1 AP
JCG10263
MATTHEW RITCHIE
The Temptation of the Diagram, 2012-2017
Printed phototext
Installation view, Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, CA, 2017.
MATTHEW RITCHIE
The Temptation of the Diagram, 2012-2017
Installation view, Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, CA, 2017.
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Everything that Rises Must Converge, 2017
Resin, glass, and ink
Permanent site-specific commission
Installation view, Bloomberg Center, Cornell Tech, Roosevelt Island, New York, NY
MATTHEW RITCHIE
The Temptation of the Diagram, 2014-2015
Printed phototext
Dimensions variable
JCG10041
MATTHEW RITCHIE
The Temptation of the Diagram, 2014-2015
Printed phototext
Dimensions variable
JCG10041
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Intelligent Designer, 2017
Oil, ink, and wax on canvas
50 x 54 in.
127 x 137.2 cm
JCG9731
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Hermaneutic Blanket, 2017
Oil, ink, and wax on canvas
50 x 54 in.
127 x 137.2 cm
JCG9732
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Remanence: Remonstrance, 2014
Acrylic paint, Phototex, vinyl, Max/Msp and Jitter, computer, speakers, cameras,
and digital media accessed via wireless mobile device
324 x 1152 in.
823 x 2895 cm
Installation view, Matthew Ritchie: Remanence/Remonstrance, Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston, Boston, MA, February 28, 2014 - March 1, 2015
MATTHEW RITCHE
Remanence: Salt and Light (Part II), 2014
Acrylic on wall
Site-specific commission
Rose Kennedy Greenway, Boston, MA
MATTHEW RITCHIE
This Garden at This Hour, 2014
Aluminum, steel, polyester, composite stone and plants
Food and Drug Administration, White Oak, MD
MATTHEW RITCHIE
This Garden at This Hour, 2014
Aluminum, steel, polyester, composite stone and plants
Food and Drug Administration, White Oak, MD
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Monstrance, 2014
Single-channel video installation
Duration: 20 mins.
Dimensions variable with installation
Edition of 3 plus one artist's proof
JCG10677
MATTHEW RITCHIE
with AARON and BRYCE DESSNER
Installation view, Matthew Ritchie with Aaron and Bryce Dessner, The Long Count, performance at the Barbican Centre, London, UK, February 2-4, 2021.
Performer: Kelley Deal.
MATTHEW RITCHIE
with BRYCE DESSNER and SHARA WORDEN
Monstrance: A Performance in Two Parts
Venice Beach, CA. November 2, 2011
Pesented in conjunction with the exhibition
MONSTRANCE, L&M Arts, Los Angeles, CA
Photo: Joshua White
MATTHEW RITCHIE
The Dawn Line, 2008-2013
Aluminum structural units & epoxy coating
Commissioned by Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary
Installation view, Architectural Environments for Tomorrow, Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, Japan, 2011
MATTHEW RITCHIE
with LISA RANDALL and HÈCTOR PARRA
Hypermusic: Ascension
Installation view, Matthew Ritchie, Contemplating the Void: Interventions, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY, March 11, 2010
MATTHEW RITCHIE
with LISA RANDALL and HÈCTOR PARRA
Hypermusic: Ascension
Installation view, Matthew Ritchie, Contemplating the Void: Interventions, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY, March 11, 2010
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Remonstrance, 2009
Digital animation with sound
Duration: 22:21 min, loop
Female Narrator: Joanna Adler
Male Narrator: Frank Wood
Animation: Nick Roth
Editing: James Case
Music: 'Propolis, (part II)' by Bryce Dessner & Evan Ziporyn
JCG10655
MATTHEW RITCHIE
with AARON and BRYCE DESSNER
Installation view, The Long Count, Brooklyn Academy of Music, Brooklyn, NY, October 28 - 31, 2009
Performer: Shara Worden
MATTHEW RITCHIE
with AARON and BRYCE DESSNER
Installation view, The Long Count, Brooklyn Academy of Music, Brooklyn, NY, October 28 - 31, 2009
Performer: Shara Worden
MATTHEW RITCHIE
The Morning Line, 2008-2013
Aluminum and epoxy coating
Commissioned by Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary
Installation view, Istanbul, Turkey, 2009
JCG11440
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Augur, 2008
Patinated bronze
19 1/2 x 19 1/2 x 20 3/4 in.
49.5 x 49.5 x 52.7 cm
MATTHEW RITCHIE
The Hierarchy Problem, 2003
Acrylic wall drawing, rubber and Tyvek carpet, photographic lightbox, and oil and marker painting
Installation view, Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY, 2007
JCG10728
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Iron City, 2007
Single-channel video installation, animation
Duration: 16 min
Narrator: Frank Wood
Animation & editing: Nick Roth
Music: Piesni Zalobne by Miasto Nie Spalo
Installation view, Mathew Ritchie, Iron City, St. Louis Art Museum, MO, June 29 – November 30, 2017
Installation view, Matthew Ritchie: Proposition Player, MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA, April 10, 2004 – February 20, 2005
MATTHEW RITCHIE
Games of Chance and Skill, 2002
Installation view, Zesiger Sports and Fitness Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, MA, permanent installation
MATTHEW RITCHIE
M Theory, 2000
Oil and marker on canvas
81 3/4 x 109 3/4 in.
207.6 x 278.8 cm
Since the early 1990s, Matthew Ritchie has developed an installation and painting practice drawing from the vocabularies of science, sociology, anthropology, mythology and the history of art. In his paintings, installations, wall drawings, light boxes, sculptures, projections, artists books and performances, Ritchie describes the generation of systems, ideas, and their subsequent interpretations in a kind of cerebral web, concretizing ephemeral and intangible theories of information and time in a unique and recognizable gestural form that emphasizes the human trace.
In 1997, Ritchie began a series of paintings and installations titled The Main Sequence, which aimed to represent visually a theory of everything through a fragmented narrative. Each painting in the series developed as part of an interactive game that attempted to summarize an entire field of knowledge, such as physics and biology, into a multi-layered and immersive story. The central question of The Main Sequence, whether any one person can see and represent the entire universe, evolved into projects and collaborations in film, theater, music, and architecture, working closely with physicists, musicians, architects, engineers, and theorists to explore the possibility of shared systems and aggregations in contexts as diverse as opera, contemporary music, architecture, horticulture, urban design, theology, and science, as well as frequently bridging the analog and digital worlds with interactive projects at ada-web, Eyebeam, SFMoMA and Rhizome.
Ritchie is also committed to ambitious public art projects that can project complex ideas into shared spaces. In Games of Chance and Skill (2002) a permanent installation commissioned by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Ritchie's works sprawl across three different surfaces habitually employed by the artist: opaque wall, translucent light panel, and transparent windows. A similar combination of media can be found in his most recent permanent work Everything That Rises Must Converge (2017) at Cornell Tech, which rises in a column of information over four floors. His multi-part installation The Hierarchy Problem (2003) incorporates a black latticework structure, a drawing in space, suspended above a colorful floor piece and flanked by light boxes, paintings and a large wall drawing. The Morning Line (2008) extends this concept of drawing in space to a vast series of tetrahedral architectural elements, which contain a collaborative interactive music and film database, while This Garden At This Hour (2014) integrates environmentally-scaled sculptures and over 10,000 plants to create a taxonomical and molecular garden.
Over the last several years, Ritchie also embarked on a project to chart a comprehensive visual history of the notational mark, or diagram. Divided into three parts, The Temptation of the Diagram, Surrender to the Diagram and The Demon in the Diagram, the ongoing project has thus far manifested in a series of paintings, performances, installations, and a publication that examines the influence on notational language on the systems and production of knowledge. Ritchie's newest body of work, Time Diagrams, an ambitious one-hundred part sequence of paintings, floor, wall and performance works, seeks to examine the structure and informational language of history, in the same way The Main Sequence examined the informational language and structure of space.
Matthew Ritchie (b. 1964) has exhibited internationally over the past two decades, including solo presentations at the CVAD Galleries at the University of North Texas (2021); Moody Center for the Arts at Rice University, Houston, TX (2018); Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, MA (2014); ZKM Karlsruhe (2012), Barbican Theatre, London, UK (2012); Brooklyn Academy of Music (2009), NY, St. Louis Art Museum, MO (2007); MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA (2004), Contemporary Art Museum, Houston, TX (2003); and Dallas Museum of Art, TX (2001). Matthew Ritchie: A Garden in the Flood, a major mid-career retrospective at the Frist Art Museum in Nashville, opened in November 2022. He was recently the 2018-21 Dasha Zhukova Distinguished Visiting Artist at MIT Center for Art, Science & Technology. Ritchie’s work was included in the 1997 Whitney Biennial, the 2002 Sydney Biennale, the 2004 Bienal de Sao Paulo, the 2008 Seville Bienal, the Havana Bienal, and the 11th International Architecture Biennial, Venice, Italy (2008) as well as major exhibitions at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY; Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, CA. His work is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, CA; and the MIT List Visual Arts Center, Boston, MA among others. Ritchie lives and works in New York.
Since the early 1990s, Matthew Ritchie has developed an installation and painting practice drawing from the vocabularies of science, sociology, anthropology, mythology and the history of art. In his paintings, installations, wall drawings, light boxes, sculptures, projections, artists books and performances, Ritchie describes the generation of systems, ideas, and their subsequent interpretations in a kind of cerebral web, concretizing ephemeral and intangible theories of information and time in a unique and recognizable gestural form that emphasizes the human trace.
Gallery Exhibition at 48 Walker St