Kasmin Gallery
Skip to main content
  • Menu
  • Home
  • Artists
  • Exhibitions
  • Fairs
  • News
  • The Kasmin Review
    • In Conversation
    • Weekend Long Reads
    • Storyboard
    • Studio Visits
    • Screenings
    • All
  • Books
  • About
Menu

James Rosenquist

  • Biography
  • Works
  • Exhibitions
  • News
  • Publications
  • Contact Form
  • Biography
    View works. James Rosenquist, Super Mega Universes, 2012
    Super Mega Universes, 2012
    View works
    Born in Grand Forks, North Dakota, 1933
    Died in New York, New York, 2017
    Download Selected Press (PDF, opens in a new tab.)
    Download Artist CV (PDF, opens in a new tab.)
  • "There's no scale in the brain. An image of the most colossal monument and the tiniest ant can rest side by side in your mind. The mundane and the bizarre can fuse into a language of images that float to the surface when you least expect it."
    —James Rosenquist
  • One of the most important painters of post-war American art, James Rosenquist established a reputation as a founding member of...

    One of the most important painters of post-war American art, James Rosenquist established a reputation as a founding member of the Pop art generation, radically altering the face of graphic culture and the art world. Having sharpened his expert visual communication skills through early commercial and billboard work, Rosenquist came to prominence creating high-impact paintings charged with cultural commentary, examining themes from the social, scientific and political, to the romantic, cosmic and existential. His work was described by the late American curator Walter Hopps as “visual poetry.”

    Realized over the course of six decades, the work of James Rosenquist spans painting, sculpture, drawing, collage, and printmaking, and remains searingly immediate and relevant today. Pulsing with the political tenor of the 1960s, Rosenquist’s work began to critique a growing sense of mass consciousness pitched against the calamitous backdrop of the Vietnam War. Portraits of politicians collide with images of middle-class wealth and consumerism, asking us to question the impact of the dominant narratives encouraging dogmatic conformity in the U.S.

  • Born in Grand Forks, North Dakota, Rosenquist studied painting at the University of Minnesota with Cameron Booth. In 1955, he... Born in Grand Forks, North Dakota, Rosenquist studied painting at the University of Minnesota with Cameron Booth. In 1955, he... Born in Grand Forks, North Dakota, Rosenquist studied painting at the University of Minnesota with Cameron Booth. In 1955, he...

    Born in Grand Forks, North Dakota, Rosenquist studied painting at the University of Minnesota with Cameron Booth. In 1955, he moved to New York having won a scholarship to the Art Students League, where he studied with Will Barnet, Edwin Dickinson and Robert Beverly Hale, among others. In 1957, he took a job painting billboards, working on scaffolds in Brooklyn and, a year later, high above Times Square. By 1960, Rosenquist had stopped painting commercial advertisements and rented a small studio space in Lower Manhattan where his neighbors included artists Robert Indiana, Ellsworth Kelly, and Jack Youngerman. During this period, Rosenquist, working against the prevailing tide of Abstract Expressionism, developed his own brand of New Realism—a style soon to be called Pop art. Rosenquist’s first solo exhibition at the Green Gallery in 1962 sold out and, in 1965, after working a year on the painting, Rosenquist exhibited his iconic fifty-nine panel F-111 at Leo Castelli Gallery. The 86 foot-long work, one of Rosenquist’s most explicitly political, is now in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York.

    In the 1970s, after a move to south Florida, Rosenquist began an ongoing series inspired by the vibrant tropical flora surrounding his studio. This interest in ecology develops in the artist’s Water Planet series of the late 1980s that pushes further into new modes of abstraction and addresses the fragility of life on earth. These themes are fully-realized in his Speed of Light (2000) and his Multiverse series (2011), in which Rosenquist expands his visual language into the extraterrestrial to present themes of perception and non-objectivity. Curator Sarah Bancroft has described this instinct as such: “The artist’s grand and global narratives comment on the failures and foibles of humankind. Yet the very fierceness of these critical commentaries convey a sense of hopeful optimism about the survival of humans, their colonies, and social environments."

  • In 2017, the Museum Ludwig, Cologne organized Rosenquist’s most recent retrospective, James Rosenquist: Painting as Immersion, which traveled to the ARoS Aarhus Art Museum, Denmark. He has also been the subject of major retrospectives at the Whitney Museum of American Art (1972) and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (2003-04). In 2022, Kasmin mounted a major solo exhibition of works realized between 1989 and 1992. In 2019, Kasmin staged Two Paintings, an exhibition of monumental work by James Rosenquist, reflecting his lifelong fascination with space, real and imagined. 

    James Rosenquist’s work is included in major private and public collections worldwide, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York and Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, Spain; Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Tate Gallery, London; Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam; and Moderna Museet, Stockholm, among many others.

    © 2023 James Rosenquist, Inc. / Licensed by Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY. Used by permission.  All rights reserved.

  • Works
    James Rosenquist, Joystick, 2002

    James Rosenquist

    Joystick, 2002
    oil on canvas, with acrylic rod, rope, and mirrored Plexiglas
    205 x 552 inches
    520.7 x 1402.1 cm
    © 2019 Estate of James Rosenquist/Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
  • Exhibitions
    • Alain Jacquet & James Rosenquist

      Alain Jacquet & James Rosenquist

      Perrotin New York
      130 Orchard Street
      October 29 – December 21, 2024
      Kasmin is pleased to present Alain Jacquet & James Rosenquist, in collaboration with Perrotin New York and thanks to Sophie Matisse and Gaïa Jacquet-Matisse, Mimi Thompson and Lily Rosenquist. This sweeping exhibition elucidates the expressive work of Jacquet and Rosenquist. Most notably associated with the Pop Art movement, these two artists were contemporaries and friends who shared similar interests and practices. The gallery's first floor highlights the artists' interest in space, while the second floor features artwork from the 1960s.
      View More
    • James Rosenquist

      James Rosenquist

      April 28 – June 4, 2022 509 West 27th Street, New York
      Kasmin is thrilled to present an exhibition of paintings by James Rosenquist, staged in collaboration with the Estate of James Rosenquist, on view at 509 West 27th Street from April 28–June 4, 2022. Realized between 1989 and 1992, the works share several unique formal elements that combine in a compelling exploration of the rapidly changing world of the late 20th century. Blending abstract forms and figuration in a dynamic cacophony of imagery, the works probe both ecological and political themes and can be read as both celebrations of natural habitats as well as elegies to their desecration on a global and cosmic scale. Searingly relevant today, Rosenquist’s approach to image-making tests the possibilities of perception and asks us to consider forms of consumerism and consumption that affect our climate, our natural world, and the space our planet inhabits.
      View More
    • James Rosenquist: Two Paintings

      James Rosenquist: Two Paintings

      October 17 – November 16, 2019 509 West 27th Street, New York
      Kasmin in cooperation with the Estate of James Rosenquist and Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac (London, Paris, Salzburg), is pleased to announce an exhibition of two important paintings by James Rosenquist. On view at the gallery’s flagship 509 West 27th Street location, both works—Joystick (2002) and The Geometry of Fire (2011)—reflect Rosenquist’s lifelong fascination with space, real and imagined, and his turn in the last two decades of his career to a new kind of abstraction.
      View More
  • News
    • James Rosenquist at MoMA

      James Rosenquist at MoMA

      February 2024 View More
    • James Rosenquist at Restaurant Daniel

      James Rosenquist at Restaurant Daniel

      August 28, 2023 View More
    • Kasmin to represent the Estate of James Rosenquist

      Kasmin to represent the Estate of James Rosenquist

      June 25, 2021 View More
  • Publications
    • James Rosenquist

      James Rosenquist

      Essay by Kate Zambreno, 2022
      Exhibition Catalogue
      View More
  • contact_form

    Send me more information on James Rosenquist

    Please fill in the fields marked with an asterisk
    Receive newsletters *
    Send inquiry

    * denotes required fields

    In order to respond to your enquiry, we will process the personal data you have supplied in accordance with our privacy policy (available on request). You can unsubscribe or change your preferences at any time by clicking the link in our emails.

  • Explore
    • Diana Al-Hadid
    • Alma Allen
    • Theodora Allen
    • Sara Anstis
    • Ali Banisadr
    • Tina Barney
    • Judith Bernstein
    • JB Blunk
    • Mattia Bonetti
    • William N. Copley
    • Cynthia Daignault
    • Ian Davenport
    • Max Ernst
    • Liam Everett
    • Leonor Fini
    • Barry Flanagan
    • Walton Ford
    • Jane Freilicher
    • vanessa german
    • Daniel Gordon
    • Alexander Harrison
    • Elliott Hundley
    • Robert Indiana
    • Lee Krasner
    • Les Lalanne
    • Matvey Levenstein
    • Lyn Liu
    • Robert Motherwell
    • Jamie Nares
    • Nengi Omuku
    • Robert Polidori
    • Jackson Pollock
    • Elliott Puckette
    • Alexis Ralaivao
    • George Rickey
    • James Rosenquist
    • Mark Ryden
    • Jan-Ole Schiemann
    • Joel Shapiro
    • Bosco Sodi
    • Dorothea Tanning
    • Naama Tsabar
    • Bernar Venet

509 West 27th Street

New York
Tuesday–Saturday, 10am–6pm
+1 212 563 4474
info@kasmingallery.com

 

297 Tenth Avenue

New York
Tuesday–Saturday, 10am–6pm
+1 212 563 4474
info@kasmingallery.com

 

Kasmin Sculpture Garden

New York
On view from The High Line at 27th Street
Monday–Sunday, 7am-11pm
+1 212 563 4474
info@kasmingallery.com

Facebook, opens in a new tab.
Twitter, opens in a new tab.
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Join the mailing list
Send an email
Manage cookies
© 2025 Kasmin Gallery
Site by Artlogic

This website uses cookies
This site uses cookies to help make it more useful to you. Please contact us to find out more about our Cookie Policy.

Manage cookies
Accept

Cookie preferences

Check the boxes for the cookie categories you allow our site to use

Cookie options
Required for the website to function and cannot be disabled.
Improve your experience on the website by storing choices you make about how it should function.
Allow us to collect anonymous usage data in order to improve the experience on our website.
Allow us to identify our visitors so that we can offer personalised, targeted marketing.
Save preferences