Three new exhibitions open now through August 26, 2023
White Columns

Now on view!
Three new exhibitions
July 13–August 26, 2023

Carol Brun

Pol Morton / Sara Murphy

Everette Ball

An off white sculptural mask hung on a white wall. There are three circular holes in the mask representing a set of eyes and a mouth with various sized shapes protruding from the mask.
Carol Bruns, Meltdown, 2022, cardboard, styrofoam, paper, plaster, 21 × 16 × 9 in.

Carol Bruns

White Columns is pleased to announce a solo exhibition of recent work by the Brooklyn-based artist Carol Bruns (b. 1943, Des Moines, Iowa.) This is Bruns’ largest individual exhibition to date and her first in Manhattan in more than two decades. Bruns’ exhibition comprises a group of more than twenty wall-, pedestal- and floor-based figurative sculptures made over the past two years, including a major new sculptural installation, Fringe Elements, 2023.

Writing about her intentions and motivations Bruns has said:

My sculptures inquire into the human condition. I improvise life-sized human figures from common materials by assemblage. Its outsider vocabulary enlists bitumen, chalk, ash and dirt, teeth, and hemp as well as paper, Styrofoam, bamboo, and plaster. In 1930 Andre Breton suggested “that there exists a certain point of the mind at which life and death, the real and the imagined, past and future, the communicable and the incommunicable, high and low, cease to be perceived as contradictions. …” The surrealists searched to find and fix this point. My experience of this contradictory level in the human mind is the mythic, a type of consciousness where divergent potentials of the human can be encompassed within a single image or figure. An ancient example is the figure of Janus, a god who faces opposite directions yet is a single being, both life-giving and death-dealing. I utilize this theme to give unreason, the irrational, even the bestial its due, not as approval but to acknowledge its part in the forces that bring culture into existence and sustain it. It establishes a practical relationship to the catastrophic violence of our times, for the enemy is always part of ourselves.


Carol Bruns (b. 1943) lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. She graduated from New York University in 1966, and subsequently attended the Art Students League and l’Académie de la Grande Chaumière, Paris. Her work has been exhibited since the 1970s, initially at OK Harris Gallery in a 1975 group exhibition curated by Patterson Sims, and most recently in the group exhibition ‘Women of Spirit’ at New York’s Zurcher Gallery in 2022. Her current exhibition at White Columns is the largest presentation of her work to date, and her first solo exhibition in Manhattan in two decades.

To learn more about Bruns’ work, visit her website: www.carolbruns.com

Carol Bruns’ exhibition is a part of White Columns 2023 summer programs that focus on the work of artists who are currently represented in White Columns’ Curated Artists Registry. Founded in the early 1980s the Registry provides a platform for artists – of all kinds – currently without gallery representation in New York. The Registry currently includes the work of more than 500 individual artists. To learn more about the Registry and how to submit your work for consideration, please visit: registry.whitecolumns.org

For further information about this exhibition contact: violet@whitecolumns.org

Left: Sara Murphy, Jasper’s Jiggle, 2021, oil on canvas and acrylic on plywood, 52 × 42 in. Right: Pol Morton, On/Off, 2022, oil, pastel, graphite, and collaged canvas on canvas, 6 × 5 ft.

Pol Morton / Sara Murphy

White Columns is pleased to present a two-person exhibition of works by Pol Morton and Sara Murphy. The exhibition comprises a group of paintings, drawings and sculptures in which the body, exaggerated or shrunk, mapped onto canvas, wood, or cut into mirror, encounters itself as both subject and object. 

Pol Morton’s paintings reconstruct the experience of living in an unreliable, chronically ill body and the body’s understanding of its ongoing recovery. The diaristic mode is enacted in content and in medium specificity: images drawn from the artist’s memory are as essential materials as the real cat hair forming the ears that rest atop Memorial for Babe.  The mirrored surface of the work fragments the viewer, a fragmentation echoed throughout Morton’s work, in which the body is rarely recreated in whole but rather experienced as a collection of discrete though interconnected parts. Recurring motifs enshrine the repetition of the homebound body: in Vertigo, hypnotic spirals hover above two cat heads, and the artist’s face finds itself reflected; the spirals reappear as eyeballs.  Painted only in navy, the piece’s restrained palette has the counterintuitive effect of appearing like a hallucinatory fever dream. This dreamlike state reoccurs in Pillow Wounds, wherein a found pillowcase cover just stretches to cover the painted edge of another bike wheel: the memory is glimpsed, but ultimately obscured. 

Across painting, sculpture and drawing, Sara Murphy examines the body’s attempts to orient itself in space. The sculptural work Closed, Closed, Closed, Closed 2 presents the form of a chair refashioned so that it cannot fulfill its use; rather, the object navel-gazes at its own squared reflection, both a semiotic in-joke and a rejection of functionality. In Nusuth, the form of an upper arm is mirrored over the middle of two shaped panels, which slope gently, like the centerfold of a book. The work’s title comes from Ursula K. Le Guin’s sci-fi classic The Left Hand of Darkness, which takes place on an alien planet populated by androgynous beings. In the fictional religious language of the novel, the word translates to “no matter,” i.e., never mind, don’t worry about it: it is a statement of inaction, and the bodies in Murphy’s paintings appear similarly suspended in states of flux. Like Morton’s work, they are not in repose, exactly, but rather responding to the condition of being observed, what Murphy describes as “two parallel registers of experience: sensing the body as an object, and presenting a body in social space.” The tension between the exactitude of the poses enacted and the vagueness of the forms depicted creates a space for what the artist terms “authentic perceptual attention.” Murphy’s works are distinctively haptic, and are, in fact, produced via a form of contact, as the artist’s process involves Murphy tracing her body directly onto the surface of a piece. She describes this as “a way of drawing from observation — one where the operative sense is that of touch rather than vision. Rather than translating what I see into an illusion on a flat plane, I’m creating a direct trace of my body’s experience of space.”


Pol Morton is a chronically ill non-binary artist making assemblage paintings about queerness, transness, and disability. Born in Palo Alto, California, they received their BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore (2009) and lived and exhibited in Beijing, China for four years. Morton received their MFA at Hunter College in New York City (2022). Their work has been exhibited in NYC at Klaus von Nichtssagend, Storage Gallery, Trestle Gallery, Field Projects, and Shin Haus; in San Francisco at Bass and Reiner; in China at The Beijing American Center, and the Luxun Academy of Fine Art; and online at White Columns and Young Space; among others.

Sara Murphy received a BFA from Memphis College of Art, and MFA from Hunter College. She also holds a Certificate in Art Conservation from Studio Art Centers International, Florence.  She was a recipient of the Rema Hort Mann Emerging Artist’s Grant in 2016, and a 2017 resident at Shandaken: Storm King. Her work has been shown in solo exhibitions at Essex Flowers Gallery and Cleopatra’s Gallery, and in group shows at Rachel Uffner Gallery, The Journal Gallery, and Halsey McKay Gallery, among others. She lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.

Morton and Murphy’s exhibition is a part of White Columns 2023 summer programs that focus on the work of artists who are currently represented in White Columns’ Curated Artists Registry. Founded in the early 1980s the Registry provides a platform for artists – of all kinds – currently without gallery representation in New York. The Registry currently includes the work of more than 500 individual artists. To learn more about the Registry and how to submit your work for consideration, please visit: registry.whitecolumns.org

For further information about this exhibition contact: violet@whitecolumns.org

Everette Ball, Plaza Hotel, 2021, colored pencil and marker on paper 19 x 24 in.

Everette Ball

White Columns is pleased to present an exhibition of works on paper by the New York-based artist Everette Ball. Ball is currently affiliated with Y.A.I. Arts (formerly H.A.I./Healing Arts Initiative), a creative studio that supports artists with intellectual and developmental disabilities in New York City.

Ball’s devotion to detail extends from his realistic landscape drawings to his fantastical paper mache sculptures. His primary subject is architecture – skyscrapers, bridges, amusement park rides, and freestanding sculptures. With patience and precision, Everette draws source images from his iPad in ink and colored pencil, leaving no brick, pipe, traffic light, or planter left behind. Subtle flourishes are as integral as signature features to a structure’s identity. He applies the same care to drawings of figure models, his grandmother, Venus Flytraps, “Sound of Music” posters, clowns, monsters, and other subjects.

Everette – who identifies as having a developmental disability – is a gifted world-builder, assembling a lexicon of expressions and visual tropes that are distinctly his. Spend time with Everette and you are sure to hear phrases like “The mouse is in the potatoes” and “There’s rainbow cake at the Plaza Hotel,” which invite you into his mind and appear peppered throughout his artwork like easter eggs. Everette’s humor and wild imagination are perfect foils to his methodical practice.


White Columns would like to thank Priscilla Frank and the staff of Y.A.I. for their support in putting together this exhibition.

For more information about Y.A.I, please visit: https://yaiarts.funraise.org

Everette Ball’s exhibition is a part of White Columns 2023 summer programs that focus on the work of artists who are currently represented in White Columns’ Curated Artists Registry. Founded in the early 1980s the Registry provides a platform for artists – of all kinds – currently without gallery representation in New York. The Registry currently includes the work of more than 500 individual artists. To learn more about the Registry and how to submit your work for consideration, please visit: registry.whitecolumns.org

For further information about this exhibition contact: violet@whitecolumns.org

White Columns
91 Horatio Street
New York, NY 10014
Tuesday–Saturday, 11 AM–6 PM
info@whitecolumns.org
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