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AMANDA ROSS-HO GONE TOMORROW

AMANDA ROSS-HO
GONE TOMORROW
2013
Aluminum and steel plated in gold and brass
52 by 48 in.  132.1 by 121.9 cm.
 

AMANDA ROSS-HO BLACK RAGS (I HATE TUESDAYS)

AMANDA ROSS-HO
BLACK RAGS (I HATE TUESDAYS)
2013
Dyed jersey and rib, thread
97 by 44 in.  246.4 by 111.8 cm.

 AMANDA ROSS-HO

AMANDA ROSS-HO
BLACK RAGS (I HATE FRIDAYS)
2013
Dyed jersey and rib, thread
83 by 44 in.  210.8 by 111.8 cm.

 AMANDA ROSS-HO

AMANDA ROSS-HO
BLACK RAGS (I HATE MONDAYS)
2013
Dyed jersey and rib, thread
82 by 44 in.  208.3 by 111.8 cm.

 AMANDA ROSS-HO

AMANDA ROSS-HO
BLACK RAGS (I HATE SATURDAYS)
2013
Dyed jersey and rib, thread
76 by 44 in.  193 by 111.8 cm.

 AMANDA ROSS-HO

AMANDA ROSS-HO
Untitled Still Life (I HATE MONDAYS)
2013
Sheetrock, latex paint, staples, acrylic paint, graphite, linen tape, laser prints, single goldtone earrings, aluminum thumbtacks, white maptack, black maptack

AMANDA ROSS-HO Untitled Still Life (I STILL HATE MONDAYS)

AMANDA ROSS-HO
Untitled Still Life (I STILL HATE MONDAYS)
2013
Sheetrock, latex paint, staples, acrylic paint, graphite, linen tape, laser prints, single earrings, aluminum thumbtacks, black maptacks
41 by 32 in.&nb

Press Release

Mitchell-Innes & Nash is pleased to present our second solo exhibition of Los Angeles artist Amanda Ross-Ho. Ross-Ho has exhibited widely in museums and galleries worldwide. Her recent solo exhibition at the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art was accompanied by a comprehensive catalogue. Her work has been included in exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Orange County Museum of Art, Newport Beach; Pomona College Museum of  Art; Henry Art Gallery, Seattle; and in the 2008 Whitney Biennial, among many other institutions. The Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago will present a major outdoor project later this year, THE CHARACTER AND SHAPE OF ILLUMINATED THINGS. Ross-Ho was born in Chicago, and lives and works in Los Angeles.

GONE TOMORROW presents an evolution of specific terms within Ross-Ho’s personal language. Translations of textiles, jewelry, and found images that have featured prominently in her work now loop back in transmuted forms. GONE TOMORROW continues to scramble and hybridize the genetic code that forms her work.