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Image of INGRID CALAME's From #265 Drawing (Tracings from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the L.A. River), 2007

INGRID CALAME From #265 Drawing (Tracings from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the L.A. River), 2007 Enamel on aluminum 60 X 36 inches

the sun rising behind a tree

BILL VIOLA Old Oak (Study), 2005 Color high definition on LCD panel mounted on wall 14 X 24 3/4 inches Edition of 12

the dawn sky reflecting over a lake

WIM WENDERS Lake Galilee before Sunrise, 2000 C-print 72 9/16 X 178 7/16 X 2 inches (framed) Edition of 6

Image of HIROSHI SUGIMOTO's Joe (2050), 2004

HIROSHI SUGIMOTO Joe (2050), 2004 gelatin silver print 58 3/4 X 47 inches Edition of 5

Image of ROXY PAINE's PMU #12, 2003

ROXY PAINE PMU #12, 2003 Acrylic on canvas 36 X 59 X 4 inches

Image of HIRAKI SAWA's Hidden Tree, 2007

HIRAKI SAWA Hidden Tree, 2007 Video with sound Edition of 8

Image of YINKA SHONIBARE, MBE's La Méduse, 2008

YINKA SHONIBARE, MBE La Méduse, 2008 C-print mounted on sintra board 40 X 52 inches Edition of 10

Press Release

James Cohan Gallery Shanghai is pleased to present, Mining Nature, the inaugural exhibition of the new gallery in Shanghai, opening July 10th and running through August 30th. This exhibition is a thematic group show of work by international artists that makes inquiries into the meaning of nature in contemporary life. As the American transcend-entalist writer, Ralph Waldo Emerson asked, "Let us inquire, to what end is nature?"

Man's relationship to the natural world has shifted over the last two centuries. In contrast to the reverential landscape painters of the nineteenth century, today's contemporary artists are not passive observers. Nature itself has evolved through global changes in the environment, the more pronounced role of human-engineered science, and the reflection of social and political unrest on the landscape. Out of the chaos of man's confrontation with his surroundings has emerged a possibility for artists to have a renewed dialogue with nature. Many have developed an expressive language with which to consider such issues as the force of entropy, the politicization of the landscape, and the sublime in nature.

This expansive exhibition will include works by nine artists from six countries and will explore the issues raised in a variety of mediums including painting, drawing, print, photography, video, and sculpture. The meditative portrait of an a tree bathed in light from dawn to dusk Old Oak (Study), 2005, by American video master Bill Viola, will be shown alongside the lyrical musings of Japanese artist Hiraki Sawa in his photo series Going Places Sitting Down, 2007. Chinese expatriate Yun-Fei Ji uses traditional methods of ink painting to expose a landscape dramatically altered by development in his On High Branches, 2006, while American painter Ingrid Calame traces the detritus left on city streets in her map-like drawing series Tracings from the LA River, 2007. American conceptualist Roxy Paine takes as subject nature verses industry and explores it from many angles as in his PMU painting and Scumak sculpture, both made by machines of the artist's design and his Pokeweed 1, 2006, a meticulous recreation of the toxic weed. In the mediation garden adjacent to the gallery, English artist Richard Long's Vermont Georgia South Carolina Wyoming Circle, 1987, will be installed. It is a circular shaped sculpture divided into four segments; each quadrant is made up of rocks found in the four states named in the title. Other artists included in the exhibition are American sculptor Jeff Koons; Nigerian-born conceptualist Yinka Shonibare MBE; Japanese photographer Hiroshi Sugimoto; and German film director and photographer Wim Wenders.

To contact James Cohan Gallery Shanghai director, Arthur Solway, please write to asolway@jamescohan.com or telephone +86 21 54660825

For further information, please contact Jane Cohan at jane@jamescohan.com or telephone 212-714-9500.

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