Uri Aran, The Good Route, 2024. Mixed media, dimensions variable. Approx. 32 x 36 x 10 in. (81.3 x 91.44 x 25.4 cm). Courtesy the artist; Sadie Coles, London; and Matthew Brown, LA
Uri Aran
Uri Aran's work is at once deeply idiosyncratic and oddly familiar: to follow it is to tinker alongside the artist, to be let in on an invention, or perhaps a shorthand between friends.
Drawing on the stuff of everyday life—doodles, passport photos, kitschy keepsakes, the materials of a workshop—he turns a private vocabulary public, addressed to a room of strangers. Through repetition and arrangement, quotation and misalignment, ordinary things take on the air of personas, or characters, acquiring an artifice of meaning that is tender and elusive, or, in the artist's words, “sentimental despite myself.” Aran’s first major institutional solo exhibition in the United States gathers a new body of work: annotated panels that hover between quick line drawing and painting, welded sculptures that pose like equations, bulbous forms worked by hand in plasticene and foam, and a mass of piled-up googly eyes—the most elementary form of affect and animation—tragicomically raised to the scale of an earthwork.
Uri Aran lives and works in New York. He studied at Bezalel Academy and Cooper Union and received an MFA from Columbia University.Recent institutional exhibitions include Madre Museo d’arte contemporanea Donnaregina, Naples, IT (2025); The Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin (2023); Kölnischer Kunstverein, Cologne (2016); South London Gallery (2013); and Kunsthalle Zürich (2013). Aran’s work is included in the public collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Walker Art Center; ICA Miami; Dallas Museum of Art; and RISD Museum, among others.
Sponsors
Exhibitions at the List Center are made possible with the support of Audrey & James Foster, Lucy Moon-Lim & Richard Lim, Cynthia & John Reed, and Idee German Schoenheimer.
General operating support is provided by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; the Council for the Arts at MIT; Keeril Makan, Vice Provost for the Arts at MIT; Dean Hashim Sarkis and the MIT School of Architecture + Planning; the Mass Cultural Council; and many generous individual donors. The Advisory Board Members of the List Visual Arts Center are gratefully acknowledged.