
Alex Bag
Untitled (Fall ‘95), 1995
video
57:00
edition of five

Alex Bag
Untitled (Coven Services), 2004
video
14:40
edition of five

Alex Bag
Untitled, 2020
digital video
41:38 loop
edition of five

Alex Bag
Not Yet Titled , 1993-2021
found dolls, tailored clothing, electronics
dimensions variable

Tony Hope
untitled, 2021
acrylic, resin and mixed media on panel
28 x 18 inches
71 x 46 cm

Tony Hope
untitled, 2021
acrylic and resin on birch panel
28 x 18 inches

untitled, 2021
acrylic and resin on panel
118 x 78 cm

Tony Hope
untitled, 2021
mixed media
8 x 12 x 10 inches
20.3 x 30.5 x 25.4 cm

Tony Hope
untitled, 2021
mixed media
12 x 10 x 8 inches
30.5 x 25.4 x 20.3 cm
von ammon co is the leading gallery for experimental contemporary art in Washington DC. Founded in 2019 by Todd von Ammon, the gallery maintains a full exhibition program, and has mounted solo exhibitions by Alex Bag, Tabor Robak, Julia Wachtel, Wickerham & Lomax, Catharine Czudej, Helmut Lang, Timur Si-Qin, Beth Collar, David-Jeremiah, Jacob Kassay, Tony Hope and Jason Yates since opening. The gallery has also mounted two group exhibitions, “Focus Group” and “ALIEN NATION (curated by Kenta Murakami).”
von ammon co will present a two-person project by Alex Bag and Tony Hope. Alex Bag will present a variety of important video works, including Untitled (Fall ‘95) and Coven Services, displayed on a CRT television within a staged domestic environment. Accompanying the video presentation will be a site-specific installation of Bag’s “Margiela Suicide Dolls,” an ongoing sculptural series initiated in the early 90s. A group of modified dolls in hand-tailored miniature Maison Margiela couture (all citing specific Margiela seasons and dating back to as early as the early 90’s) will be arranged throughout the room to evoke several complicated, pratfall murder and suicide scenes. The configuration of Bag’s work will represent the gamut of her practice, which is founded on video work but accommodates a vast array of other media, especially the modified readymade. Two hyperrealist paintings by Tony Hope will accompany Bag’s intervention. Initially composed using a combination of found images and personal keepsakes, Hope’s dizzyingly complex images are then meticulously hand-painted and then coated in resin—a process so painstaking and immaculate that the virtuosity of the process disappears.