Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac
London / Paris / Salzburg + 2 other locations
Artists
- Cory Arcangel
- Jules de Balincourt
- Stephan Balkenhol
- Ali Banisadr
- Miquel Barceló
- Alvaro Barrington
- Georg Baselitz
- Oliver Beer
- Joseph Beuys
- Marc Brandenburg
- Lisa Brice
- Jean-Marc Bustamante
- Rosemarie Castoro
- Heemin Chung
- Tony Cragg
- Richard Deacon
- Marcel Duchamp
- Mandy El-Sayegh
- Valie Export
- Harun Farocki
- Sylvie Fleury
- Adrian Ghenie
- Gilbert & George
- Amos Gitaï
- Antony Gormley
- Han Bing
- Hans Josephsohn
- Donald Judd
- Martha Jungwirth
- Ilya and Emilia Kabakov
- Alex Katz
- Anselm Kiefer
- Imi Knoebel
- Wolfgang Laib
- Jonathan Lasker
- Lee Bul
- Roy Lichtenstein
- Robert Longo
- Liza Lou
- Marcin Maciejowski
- Robert Mapplethorpe
- Jason Martin
- Bjarne Melgaard
- Ron Mueck
- Patrick Neu
- Not Vital
- Nick Oberthaler
- Lydia Okumura
- Irving Penn
- Elizabeth Peyton
- Jack Pierson
- Rona Pondick
- Imran Qureshi
- Arnulf Rainer
- Robert Rauschenberg
- Daniel Richter
- Gerwald Rockenschaub
- Megan Rooney
- James Rosenquist
- Tom Sachs
- David Salle
- Markus Schinwald
- Sean Scully
- Raqib Shaw
- Andreas Slominski
- Joan Snyder
- Sturtevant
- Emilio Vedova
- Banks Violette
- Andy Warhol
- Lawrence Weiner
- Robert Wilson
- Erwin Wurm
- Zadie Xa
- Yan Pei Ming
Robert Longo
(American, born 1953)
Robert Longo is an American artist best known for his photorealistic drawings of jumping figures, sharks, tigers, and guns. Drawn with great detail in charcoal, graphite, and ink, his monochrome series Men in the City renders businessmen and women in a state of suspended animation, and brought the artist critical acclaim in the early 1980s. Born on January 7, 1953 in Brooklyn, NY, Longo studied sculpture with Cindy Sherman at the State University College in Buffalo, NY, where he received his BFA in 1975. “I always think that drawing is a sculptural process,” Longo has explained. “I always feel like I'm carving the image out rather than painting the image. I'm carving it out with erasers and tools like that.” He has gone...