
Alex Israel: Noir
Sam Wasson brings his deep knowledge of cinema, Hollywood, and film noir to Alex Israel’s new paintings of Los Angeles.
Opening reception: Friday, June 12, 6–8pm
Gagosian is pleased to announce Upside Down, an exhibition of new fin sculptures by Alex Israel at the Davies Street gallery in London, opening June 12.
The four sculptures on view, enlarged versions of those found on surfboards, allude to both Southern California surf culture and postwar Los Angeles art history. Carved from Plexiglas and rendered in varying degrees of reflectivity and transparency, the works’ sleek production and emphasis on physical and perceptual experience invite dialogue with the region’s Finish Fetish and Light and Space movements of the 1960s. The sculptures’ pop-inflected colors evoke the commercial aesthetics employed by surf brands to convey the freedom and optimism long associated with Southern California’s coastal lifestyle. Each work is titled after a beloved pop song, adding to its aura of collective longing and nostalgia.
The new fins, related to those first exhibited at Gagosian Rome in 2023, are here inverted and suspended from the gallery ceiling. This unexpected positioning recalls surfers performing a “turtle roll,” going “over the falls” (being caught on the lip of a wave before plunging upside down), or simply the orientation of the fins beneath the water as board riders paddle out. The installation also lends the gallery, with its street-facing windows, a fish tank–like appearance, positioning viewers at an “underwater” vantage.
Gagosian
press@gagosian.com
Toby Kidd
tkidd@gagosian.com
+44 20 7495 1500
Laura Callendar
lcallendar@gagosian.com
+44 7393 464636
Bolton & Quinn
Daisy Taylor
daisy@boltonquinn.com
+44 20 7221 5000
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about this exhibition

Sam Wasson brings his deep knowledge of cinema, Hollywood, and film noir to Alex Israel’s new paintings of Los Angeles.

The exhibition Alex Israel: Freeway, presented at Fosun Foundation, Shanghai, is an in-depth survey of the artist’s practice. Curated by Jeffrey Deitch, the exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue featuring a conversation between Israel and Jenny Wang Jinyuan, as well as essays by the artist, Deitch, and cultural critic Sean Monahan. To celebrate the occasion, we are sharing Monahan’s essay, “Teenage Obsolescence.”
An animated, short video by Alex Israel takes viewers on a visual journey through the ideas and imagery behind his latest exhibition in Hong Kong.

Alex Israel speaks with curator and writer Venus Lau about New Waves, his latest exhibition in Hong Kong. Israel reveals his spirit animal, discusses his love of Duchamp, and tells Lau about the process behind his newest works.

Alex Israel discusses his feature-length film with Derek Blasberg.

Hans Ulrich Obrist interviews the artist and writer about their recent collaboration.

Diana Widmaier Picasso, curator of the exhibition Desire, reflects on the history of eroticism in art.