


Eric-Paul Riege - HDTS Edition
Eric-Paul Riege
how to skin + mount a yoke, 2024
Pigment print
20 x 20 inches
Edition of 25, 2 APs
Framed
HDTS Editions provide a unique opportunity to both contribute to the future of High Desert Test Sites through the purchase of artwork, and to honor artists whose work has significantly contribute to contemporary art in our high desert region. Eric-Paul Riege was the inaugural HDTS Fellow in 2023.
About the Artist
Eric-Paul Riege (b. 1994, Na’nízhoozhí [Gallup, New Mexico]) uses a rich array of natural and synthetic materials—including wool, cotton, shells, faux fur, and human hair—to create his signature woven sculptures that reflect on the Diné (Navajo) philosophy of hózhó. Hózhó, as a practice in everyday life as well as in Riege’s own artistic practice, is a worldview which encompasses the values of beauty, balance, and goodness in all things physical and spiritual. For the artist, hózhó lives in the continuation of the Indigenous weaving and jewelry-making traditions inherited within his own family history, particularly from his maternal ancestors. Often displaying these intricate objects as suspended looms, and activating them through video and performance, Riege uses space, sound, and gravity like any other material manipulated by the artistic hand. What results are sensorial installations built in homage to cosmology, craft, and inherited knowledge, where the spiritual and physical realms of memory are bridged as one.
Riege’s work exhibited at the 2022 Toronto Biennial of Art; the Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans as part of Prospect.5: Yesterday we said tomorrow (2021); the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami (2019); and at the 2018 SITElines Biennial, Santa Fe, New Mexico. He earned a BFA in Studio Art and Ecology from the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque in 2017. His work is in the collections of Denver Art Museum, Colorado; Forge Projects, New York; Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami; and Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
Shipping information to be confirmed following purchase.
Eric-Paul Riege
how to skin + mount a yoke, 2024
Pigment print
20 x 20 inches
Edition of 25, 2 APs
Framed
HDTS Editions provide a unique opportunity to both contribute to the future of High Desert Test Sites through the purchase of artwork, and to honor artists whose work has significantly contribute to contemporary art in our high desert region. Eric-Paul Riege was the inaugural HDTS Fellow in 2023.
About the Artist
Eric-Paul Riege (b. 1994, Na’nízhoozhí [Gallup, New Mexico]) uses a rich array of natural and synthetic materials—including wool, cotton, shells, faux fur, and human hair—to create his signature woven sculptures that reflect on the Diné (Navajo) philosophy of hózhó. Hózhó, as a practice in everyday life as well as in Riege’s own artistic practice, is a worldview which encompasses the values of beauty, balance, and goodness in all things physical and spiritual. For the artist, hózhó lives in the continuation of the Indigenous weaving and jewelry-making traditions inherited within his own family history, particularly from his maternal ancestors. Often displaying these intricate objects as suspended looms, and activating them through video and performance, Riege uses space, sound, and gravity like any other material manipulated by the artistic hand. What results are sensorial installations built in homage to cosmology, craft, and inherited knowledge, where the spiritual and physical realms of memory are bridged as one.
Riege’s work exhibited at the 2022 Toronto Biennial of Art; the Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans as part of Prospect.5: Yesterday we said tomorrow (2021); the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami (2019); and at the 2018 SITElines Biennial, Santa Fe, New Mexico. He earned a BFA in Studio Art and Ecology from the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque in 2017. His work is in the collections of Denver Art Museum, Colorado; Forge Projects, New York; Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami; and Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
Shipping information to be confirmed following purchase.
Eric-Paul Riege
how to skin + mount a yoke, 2024
Pigment print
20 x 20 inches
Edition of 25, 2 APs
Framed
HDTS Editions provide a unique opportunity to both contribute to the future of High Desert Test Sites through the purchase of artwork, and to honor artists whose work has significantly contribute to contemporary art in our high desert region. Eric-Paul Riege was the inaugural HDTS Fellow in 2023.
About the Artist
Eric-Paul Riege (b. 1994, Na’nízhoozhí [Gallup, New Mexico]) uses a rich array of natural and synthetic materials—including wool, cotton, shells, faux fur, and human hair—to create his signature woven sculptures that reflect on the Diné (Navajo) philosophy of hózhó. Hózhó, as a practice in everyday life as well as in Riege’s own artistic practice, is a worldview which encompasses the values of beauty, balance, and goodness in all things physical and spiritual. For the artist, hózhó lives in the continuation of the Indigenous weaving and jewelry-making traditions inherited within his own family history, particularly from his maternal ancestors. Often displaying these intricate objects as suspended looms, and activating them through video and performance, Riege uses space, sound, and gravity like any other material manipulated by the artistic hand. What results are sensorial installations built in homage to cosmology, craft, and inherited knowledge, where the spiritual and physical realms of memory are bridged as one.
Riege’s work exhibited at the 2022 Toronto Biennial of Art; the Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans as part of Prospect.5: Yesterday we said tomorrow (2021); the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami (2019); and at the 2018 SITElines Biennial, Santa Fe, New Mexico. He earned a BFA in Studio Art and Ecology from the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque in 2017. His work is in the collections of Denver Art Museum, Colorado; Forge Projects, New York; Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami; and Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
Shipping information to be confirmed following purchase.