Coincident with ARCOmadrid 2019, Galería Cayón is pleased to present New Classic Models, the first solo show in the Gallery devoted to one of the most influential artists; Dan Graham (Urbana, USA, 1942). His multidisciplinary practice (installation, video, performance, drawing, photography and architecture) reflects on the communication of the artistic practice and on the individual and collective perception.

From the beginning of his career during the 60’s, Graham explored the perceptive structures with a corpus of works that involve the spectator transforming it into an essential element.

His video installations, the first ones from 1974, seek to generate a closed loop where the public feels part of the action that is being displayed on the screen.

Concerned about the mass culture, the mass media, and the malls, since 1975 he included in his work a fundamental material in his contemporary practice: the mirror-glass. This material leads him to culminate a series, from 1978 onwards, of buildings - known as Pavilions - that hide a deep reflection on architecture, contemporary urbanism in the USA and landscape. These installations, connected with the idea of the modern shopping center - "temple" of contemporary society-, and with the architecture of large corporations, become scenarios that encourage fun and entertainment due to its reflective surface and its labyrinthine configuration.

His practice, in all its diverse manifestations, is considered as a set of geometric forms inhabited and activated by the presence of the spectator, that generates a sense of restlessness through the continuous play between the perceptions of being inside or outside the space.

His Pavilions have been installed on the rooftop of the Metropolitan Museum (New York, USA) in 2014; in the garden of the Modern Art Museum (New York, USA) 2015-2016; in the Fondazione Zegna (Trivero, Italy) among other locations. Works by Graham are preserved in the collections of some of the main worldwide museums: Museum of Modern Art in New York, Art Insitute in Chicago, Tate Gallery in London and the Fundação Serralves in Porto.

In 2016, the collector Juan Várez Benegas donated to the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía (Madrid, Spain) Daca Pavilion (2008) that has been recently installed in the museum.