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    Mishkin Gallery Presents Christian Hincapié: Decisions at a Desk

    Exhibition on display from September 25 through December 5

    September 25, 2025

    Two blue monochrome prints hang side by side, each showing a stylized portrait inside an oval frame with the text ‘By Artist Andy Warhol 1964’ along the border.

    Christian Hincapié, Mosaic with Park-goers at the Entrance to Flushing Meadows Corona Park in Queens, NY, 2020. Diazotype (blueprint), diptych, 24 x 36 inches (each). Courtesy the artist.

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    Mishkin Gallery is pleased to present Decisions at a Desk, a solo exhibition by Christian Hincapié, on view from September 25 through December 5. Encompassing drawing, printmaking, and sculpture, this exhibition emerges from Hincapié’s extensive research across municipal archives and site visits throughout New York City. Expanding on a project Hincapié developed between 2018 and 2019, the works on display investigate previously unstudied decorative motifs found within the Harlem section of Riverside Park—in particular, four shackled monkey statues that were installed at the entrance of the 148th Street playground’s restrooms. In Hincapié’s project, these statues act as a prism towards understanding the subtle and oblique ways that pernicious ideology is designed into the built environment.

    Hincapié first visited the playground in 2018, after reading a brief mention of the statues in The Power Broker (1974), Robert Caro’s expansive biography of Robert Moses, the longtime New York City Parks Commissioner and unapologetically racist city planner. He began documenting the statues’ material presence in the park and searching for official traces of their existence and provenance in various city archives. Dating from Moses’ redesign of Riverside Park in the 1930s, the shackled monkey statues placed in the Harlem playground are evocative of racist and colonial symbolism that glorifies Western dominance over objects, animals, and people through exoticization and display. The statues remained in the park for nearly a century, until they were removed by the Parks Department in 2023.

    In this exhibition, Hincapié adopts the visual language of architectural drawings and recontextualizes found archival documents to confront social and material histories of the built environment. The works include inverted photographic diazotype blueprints, monumental site-specific rubbings, and a negative impression of one of the monkey statues captured in a sunken relief sculpture made from kneaded eraser putty, a gesture that conjures their eventual removal. Keenly attuned to the whims of public discourse and social memory, Hincapié has assembled a counter-archive through which to contend with the afterlife of these now-removed statues, as well as the broader landscape of racialized urban planning.

    Decisions at a Desk is Hincapié’s first institutional solo exhibition, marking the first time this project has been presented in New York. The exhibition is organized by Alexandra Tell, Interim Director of Mishkin Gallery. It is made possible by Friends of the Mishkin Gallery, the Schindler-Lizana Fund, and the Weissman School of Arts and Sciences at Baruch College (CUNY). Additional support is provided by The Jenni Crain Foundation, an initiative dedicated to preserving the legacy of the esteemed artist and curator.

    Booklet

    Download the exhibition booklet to learn more about all the artwork on display.

    Who is Christian Hincapié?

    Christian Hincapié is a Colombian-American visual artist. His work is multidisciplinary and expansive, incorporating projects in drawing, photography, assemblage, printmaking, and the artist book form. He has exhibited through the Public Art Fund; La Mama Gallery; Mana Contemporary; NARS Foundation; High Tide Gallery, Philadelphia; and various artist-run spaces in the Tri-state area. In 2018, he participated in the Palazzo Monti residency in Brescia, Italy. In 2021, he was a Keyholder Resident at the LES Printshop and was included in a three-person exhibition at Abrons Arts Center in the Lower East Side, alongside artists Emily Jacir and Rose Salane. In 2022, he was a printmaking fellow at the Vermont Studio Center and in 2023, he was a Sculpture Resident at 51 CTH in Roskilde, Denmark. His work and writing have been featured in The Brooklyn Rail and Viscose Journal, among other publications. He attended Yale Norfolk School of Art in 2012, and received his BFA from the Cooper Union in 2013. In 2020, he received his MFA from Rutgers University. He teaches printmaking at Parsons School of Design and drawing at the Cooper Union Summer Art Intensive Program.

    Exhibition Information

    Location: 135 East 22nd Street, New York, NY 10010
    Hours: Monday – Friday, 11:00 am – 6:00 pm

    There is an opening reception on September 25 from 6:00 – 8:00 pm.

    The gallery is free and open to the public.

    About Mishkin Gallery

    Mishkin Gallery at Baruch College, City University of New York (CUNY) presents exhibitions and public programs dedicated to education and advancing the understanding of modern and contemporary art, interdisciplinary cultural activity, and innovative artistic practice from around the world. Extending Baruch beyond its campus, the Mishkin Gallery promotes projects by artists and intellectuals who demonstrate how and why creative practice is a crucial force in nurturing diversity, tolerance and shaping culture.

    Follow Mishkin Gallery on Instagram, Facebook, X, and visit their website here.

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