Amanda Ross-Ho

Born:
1975
Residence:
Los Angeles, California, USA
Nationality:
American
Trust:
APT Los Angeles
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PRESS & PUBLICATIONS

  • Mitchell-Innes & Nash will be hosting an exhibition “MY PEN IS HUGE” by artist Amanda Ross-Ho at the gallery’s New York location.

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  • Marc Spiegler, the global director of Art Basel, said Hong Kong has its galleries, while Miami is known for its private collections and Basel for its museums.

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  • Exhibitions

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  • One could argue that the buddy cop genre has been with us since well before In the Heat of the Night; that it’s among the prototypical literary genres.

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  • The New Art Dealers Alliance (NADA) opened its doors yesterday at Skylight Clarkson North for the sixth edition of NADA New York—and it was filled with fresh vibes.

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  • Praz-Delavallade is hosting an inaugural group exhibition for its new gallery space in Los Angeles. The exhibition titled “I Love L.A.” will run from

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  • Mary Mary Gallery is hosting a group show “Curve of a hill like the curve of a green shoulder” from January 28 through March 11, 2017.

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  • The artistic goliath we all know and love makes a triumphant return to London's Regent's Park this week – here, we pinpoint some of the most arresting works on view.

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  • THIS STORY BEGINS somewhere other than the beginning.  It’s a hot summer night in Los Angeles, and the artist D’Ette Nogle is onstage accompanied by two big, restless dogs. Nogle is recounting the plot of Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, a hardly obscure movie that has been playing in theaters all over the world for the past month. Her narration, or “shaggy-dog story” …

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  • In its first international exhibition, LAND (Los Angeles Nomadic Division) links a gilded Paris mansion on the Seine occupied by the Mona Bismarck American Center and Thaddeus Ropac’s industrial gallery space on the city outskirts with works from 14 L.A. artists.

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  • It’s no secret that the eastside of Los Angeles is gentrifying fast, and that most of us in the contemporary art community wring our hands in weak perplexity over the part that we play in the process. Nevertheless, many residents of Glassell Park were happy to see a new coffee shop open on Eagle Rock Boulevard in early 2015. Yelp reviewers have approved of the “clean and creative atmosphere.” (“Super chill place and the quality of people is very high as well,” wrote Anthony E.) Notwithstanding the “rude” servers, the clientele seems broadly to approve of the new establishment.

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  • L.A. Habitat is a weekly series that visits with 16 artists in their workspaces around the city. This week’s studio: Amanda Ross-Ho; Skid Row, Los Angeles.

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  • Looking at work by the artist Amanda Ross-Ho can feel a bit dizzying, and that might be something she’s going for. Since she moved to L.A., her art has become a lot about her studio practice, about creating a loop of the micro and macro aimed at giving viewers a sense of vertigo that makes them want to look closer, hyper-aware of their surroundings. Ross-Ho uses shifts in scale or material to jar us awake. Whitewall spoke with the artist—whose work is currently on view in group shows at the Walker Art Center and the Los Angeles Nomadic Division exhibition in Paris, “Wasteland”—about mining the intimacy of her studio.

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  • Mona Bismarck, named the “Best Dressed Woman in the World” in 1933, was born in Kentucky. She skirted her more or less humble roots by successively marrying rich men—her third husband apparently the richest in America. She lived in a regal townhouse on the Seine, blocks from the Eiffel Tower, for part of her life. When she died in 1983, her will designated her townhouse the Mona Bismarck American Center, a place for American art and culture in Paris. But it has held relatively few exhibitions over the years.

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  • There is a light that never goes out—and it’s Amanda Ross-Ho’s “check engine” light. Writ large in lurid yellow neon, in a dark room of wall-to-wall, wiry automobile carpeting, Ross-Ho’s Eternal Flame riffs on the many blinking indicator lights which once shone within the walls of “The Pit II,” a former garage. Eternal Flame’s deserted-nightclub glow transitions into the dimly-lit Madames Electrics, a group show at The Pit (I), curated by Shana Lutker.

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  • f@#K… just had baby just sunk 4000 into this car not mention the 2000 to buy the car and 500 in body work to get on the road…. now 5 days after purchase engine light is on for good.. no problem still zippy lil car and working perfect until 4 months very minimal back and forth driving notlong distances overall … now sputtters and almost dies around turn take about40 seconds just to get up to 35km/h ……. scary when trying to get thru round abouts and to hospital to see my son i went dealerships one said misfirebegged em to hook up to comuter main guy comes out asks whos hyundia out fronnt i say mie he said move it now … and had to leave appearntly a chev dealership cant even help a person out like sorry ur the closest auto shop figured have up to date mechanics and equipment that could multi read different models as most b and c gradde shops would have a reader that could identify atleast problem maybe not fix but atleast an idea .. ,,other said coil other said try this sh*t in ur gas tank .. none could hook a computer up before my time was due back at hospitalso had pur sh*t in gas tank and hope for best no my baby momma is drivin to hospital so i can try get some answers as we do not have really another 1000 for this car engine light constantly constantly FLASHING REPEDEATITIVLY !! sorry misspellling so upset worried n no answers elsewere!! AHHH i cant afford all this we just had kid worsdt possible time for car to go kaputs…..and b stranded and not able to get there every few hours ..such complicated stiutaton i wanna cry ….

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  • The “Check Engine” light: Is there a more loathsome illumination? The dread increases exponentially for a citizen of Los Angeles, someone who, more than many, relies upon the transporting powers of the automobile.

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  • An untitled 1976 graphite drawing in “The Pleasure of Play” depicts a buff, smirking man literally fucking the world.

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  • “Image Objects,” on view through November 20, brings digital culture to City Hall Park in New York.

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  • Yesterday, 73 University of Southern California MFA alumni signed a letter of support for the seven first-year MFA students who dropped out of USC’s Roski School of Art and Design a month ago.

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  • For her first solo show at Praz-Delavallade Gallery in Paris, Amanda Ross-Ho has gathered a selection of fifteen new works: sculptures, wall-pieces, textiles and site-specific gestures.

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  • Some readers may recall that at last year’s edition of NADA’s Miami Beach art fair, no less than three exhibitors showed up with artworks that took the form of oversized articles of clothing—a fleece jacket by James Viscardi at The Sunday Painter, a sporty polo by Jose Lerma at Roberto Paradise, and an ink-splattered glove by Amanda Ross-Ho at Shane Campbell.

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  • Brand New

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  • In this article we bring you a selection of 10 opening exhibitions around the world. Our list includes an exhibition at Pace New York of Ilya and Emilia Kabakov’s recent paintings and installation work, there is Regarding the Forces of Nature: From Alma Thomas to Yayoi Kusama, an installation that features works by contemporary women artists at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art, a project called An Unkindness by Mia Feuer that explores the relationships between human infrastructure and nature at the Corcoran Gallery of Art, the exhibition Turner in Brighton at the Brighton Museum & Art Gallery centering on the recent acquisition of JMW Turner’s Brighthelmston, Sussex, and finally Julie Nord’s watercolor illustrations are up at the Nordjyllands Kunstmuseum in Aalborg, Denmark.

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  • From Rob Churm in Glasgow to Young British Art in London, Skye Sherwin and Robert Clark find out what's happening in art around the country

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  • 10 Opening Exhibitions to Watch

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  • With an ever-growing number of galleries scattered around New York, it's easy to feel overwhelmed. Where to begin? Here at A.i.A., we are always

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  • The title of Amanda Ross-Ho’s recent solo show at the Pomona College Museum of Art, “The Cheshire Cat Principle,” is a clear tip-off that

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  • MOCA shot itself out of an artistic canon Saturday night as it celebrated it's entry into its fourth decade in a happening masterminded artist Doug Aitken.

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  • Amanda Ross-Ho makes art that engages in nonstop translation — ephemeral drawings morph into solid rooms, miniature sizes balloon into maximum magnitudes, magazine advertisements turn into gold-finished jewelry, childhood scribbles change into grown-up philosophical musings. She's the Babel fish of contemporary art.

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BIOGRAPHY

Amanda Ross-Ho holds a BFA from the School of the Art institute of Chicago and an MFA from the University of Southern California. She has exhibited widely, both nationally and internationally. 

Solo exhibitions include Cherry and Martin, Los Angeles, Hoet Bekaert, Belgium,The Pomona Museum of Art, Mitchell-Innes and Nash New York, The Visual Arts Center, Austin, TX, Shane Campbell Gallery, The Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles, The Approach, London, and Praz-Delavallade, Paris.

Group exhibitions include Artists Space, New York, The Henry Art Gallery, Seattle, The Orange County Museum of Art, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, The Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, The New Museum, New York, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, and the 2008 Whitney Biennial. In 2013 she debuted her first large-scale commissioned public work at The Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, and 2015, she presented a new large-scale sculpture commission in City Hall Park, New York City through the Public Art Fund.

Ross-Ho's work has been featured in Artforum, The New York Times, ArtReview, Modern Painters, Art in America, Flash Art, Art + Auction, and Frieze among others. She lives and works in Los Angeles.


For additional information about this artist, visit Mutual Art