Cheim & Read is pleased to announce The Horizontal, a group exhibition exploring the poetics of the horizon in abstract art. The show will feature an intergenerational selection of 21 artists, from modern masters to emerging talent, with works dating from 1937 to today.

The Horizontal will showcase the work of Louise Bourgeois, Louise Fishman, Ron Gorchov, Al Held, Jenny Holzer, Bill Jensen, Ellsworth Kelly, Brice Marden, Agnes Martin, Prabhavathi Meppayil, Joan Mitchell, Jack Pierson, Serge Poliakoff, Tal R, Sean Scully, Richard Serra, David Smith, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Cy Twombly, Juan Uslé, and Matthew Wong. The exhibition was inspired by a quotation from Agnes Martin: “Anyone who can sit on a stone in a field awhile can see my painting. Nature is like parting a curtain you go into … as you would cross an empty beach to look at the ocean.”

Martin’s evocation of the ocean, with its stark division between sea and sky, encapsulates the uncanny ability of the horizontal line to reflect nature while retaining the non-referential essence of abstraction. In an Art in America interview with Joan Simon, she observed, “My paintings are certainly nonobjective. They’re just horizontal lines. There’s not a hint of nature. And still everybody responds, I think.”

The exhibition’s touchstone is a vertically oriented, untitled canvas that Martin painted in 1959. Divided into 12 white bands by 11 horizontal lines, it distills the landscape idea into absolute abstraction. Paradoxically, the vertical support of Martin’s painting, like many similarly oriented works in the show, is associated with the traditional “portrait” format, suggesting a realm from which both the figure and the landscape have been scrubbed. The painting thereby refers only to the ideas contained within its edges, yet it is capable of engendering countless associations for the viewer.

The Horizontal includes a number of unfamiliar works from well-known artists, including neargeometric compositions from Louise Bourgeois, Bill Jensen, and Louise Fishman; a densely tactile painting from the 1950s by Al Held; and minimal, gestural patterns from Cy Twombly, Jack Pierson, David Smith, and Joan Mitchell. Works by Juan Uslé, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Richard Serra, and Brice Marden explore a lustrous range of grays and blacks, while Sean Scully and Ellsworth Kelly tap into the emotional nuances of light and color, and Jenny Holzer and Tal R link abstraction to the political, personal, and social. And in the colorful bands of Serge Poliakoff and Matthew Wong, whose paintings from 1937 and 2017, respectively, traverse the modern and postmodern eras, the passage of time seems to vanish into the perpetual cycle of the new.