
Ross Bleckner
We Undress, 2025
Signed, titled and dated verso
Oil on linen
60 x 72 in
152.4 x 182.9 cm
(BR 25/022)

Ross Bleckner
We Undress, 2025
Signed, titled and dated verso
Oil on linen
60 x 72 in
152.4 x 182.9 cm
(BR 25/022)

Ross Bleckner
Set You Free, 2025
Signed, titled and dated verso
Oil on linen
40 x 30 in
101.6 x 76.2 cm
(BR 25/045)

Ross Bleckner
Medicine Cabinet, 2025
Signed, titled and dated verso
Oil on linen
84 x 84 in
213.4 x 213.4 cm
(BR 25/047)

Isabella Ducrot
The Visited Land III, 2025
Pigments, meteorite pigment and collage on Japan paper
86 1/2 x 156 1/2 in
219.7 x 397.5 cm
(ID 25/027)

Isabella Ducrot
The Visited Land VII, 2025
Pigments, meteorite pigment and collage on Japan paper
95 3/4 x 154 3/4 in
243.2 x 393.1 cm
(ID 25/031)

Isabella Ducrot
Red Flowers I, 2025
Pigments, china ink, collage, and pins on paper
Framed: 30 1/2 x 24 in
77.5 x 61 cm
Unframed: 22 7/8 x 20 in
58.1 x 50.8 cm
(ID 25/052)

Derek Fordjour
Birthday Song, 2025
Acrylic, charcoal, cardboard, oil pastel, and foil on newspaper mounted on canvas
85 x 65 in
215.9 x 165.1 cm
(DF 25/005)

Nikita Gale
LOST ARENA 2, 2025
Numbered, signed, and dated verso
Velvet, river sand, cast iron powder, travertine, aluminum
41 x 31 x 5 in
104.1 x 78.7 x 12.7 cm
(NG 25/007)

Nikita Gale
LOST ARENA 3, 2025
Numbered, signed, and dated verso
Velvet, river sand, cast iron powder, travertine, aluminum
41 x 31 x 5 in
104.1 x 78.7 x 12.7 cm
(NG 25/008)

Stefanie Heinze
Head between heels, as above so below: (Don't mind me mindless Yous), 2025
Oil, acrylic and graphite on linen
Diptych
Overall: 120 x 160 in
304.8 x 406.4 cm
Each panel: 120 x 80 in
304.8 x 203.2 cm
(SH 25/008)

Sean Landers
Rinse Repeat, 2025
Sign and dated on verso
Oil on linen
38 x 32 in
96.5 x 81.3 cm
(LS 25/036)

Sean Landers
Does It Stand?, 2025
Signed and dated on verso
Oil on linen
30 x 28 in
76.2 x 71.1 cm
(LS 25/038)

James Little
Homage El Shabazz #2, 1985
Signed, titled and dated verso
Oil and wax on linen
24 3/4 x 24 3/4 inches
62.9 x 62.9 cm
Frame 32 1/2 x 32 1/2 inches
(JL 23/194)

Allan McCollum
Collection of Sixty Drawings, 1988/90
Artist's Pencil on Museum Board
Dimensions variable
(AM 24/001)

Rodney McMillian
Ranunculus (an ode to flowers), 2025
Oil on canvas
24 x 18 in
61 x 45.7 cm
(RM 25/023)

Malcolm Morley
Isles of Scilly, 2008
Signed, titled, and dated verso, signed lower right recto
Oil on linen
25 1/2 x 36 in
64.8 x 91.4 cm
(MOR 23/0480)

Jorge Pardo
Untitled, 2025
PETG 3mm, birch, dzalam, aluminum, stainless steel
41 x 25 x 25 in
104.1 x 63.5 x 63.5 cm
(JP 25/043)

Joyce Pensato
Fuzzy Duckie, 2015
Signed, titled and dated verso
Charcoal and pastel on paper
100 x 159 1/4 inches
254 x 404.5 cm
(PEN 15/114)

Joyce Pensato
Batman Mask, 2022
Each work comes with a Certificate of Authenticity signed by The Joyce Pensato Foundation
Bronze, black patina
17 1/4 x 11 x 7 3/4 in
43.8 x 27.9 x 19.7 cm
Edition 12/20, 4
(PEN 22/034)

Joyce Pensato
Golden Googlyeyes, 2014
Signed, titled and dated verso
Enamel and metallic paint on canvas
72 x 64 in
182.9 x 162.6 cm
(PEN 15/040)

Joyce Pensato
The Enforcer, 2017
Signed and dated recto; signed, titled and dated verso
Charcoal and pastel on paper
20 x 16 in
50.8 x 40.6 cm
Frame: 23 1/8 x 19 1/16 in
(PEN 17/011A)

Joyce Pensato
Tipsy Donald, 2020
Signed in the bronze and there is a Certificate of Authenticity provided by Case Studyo, Gent and Petzel, New York
Bronze, black patina
13 3/4 x 7 7/8 in
35.1 x 20.1 cm
Edition 12/20, 4 APs
(PEN 20/352)

Seth Price
Teeth of Heaven and Earth, 2022
Signed on verso
Acrylic polymers and UV-print on aluminum composite
75 1/2 x 58 1/2 x 1 in
191.8 x 148.6 x 2.5 cm
(SPR 25/028)

Pieter Schoolwerth
Untitled (The Pineapple), 2025
Signed and dated on verso
Oil, acrylic and inkjet on canvas
53 x 44.5 in
134.6 x 117 cm
(PS 25/036)

Tschabalala Self
Red-Headed, 2025
Signed verso
Acrylic paint, colored pencil, wax pencil, fabric, thread, painted canvas on canvas
60 x 72 in
152.4 x 182.9 cm
(TS 25/020)

Tschabalala Self
Reverie, 2025
Signed verso
Acrylic paint, oil paint, colored pencil, wax pencil, fabric, thread, painted canvas on canvas
60 x 72 in
152.4 x 182.9 cm
(TS 25/013)

Emily Mae Smith
The Locust, 2025
Signed verso
Oil on linen
67 x 38 in
170.2 x 96.5 cm
(EMS 25/016)

Cosima von Bonin
WHAT IF IT BARKS 4 (BLACK UKULELE VERSION), 2018
Glass reinforced plastic (GRP), wool fabric, scarfs, trolley, steel base, ukulele and chains
81 x 36 x 45 in
205.7 x 91.4 x 114.3 cm
(CVB 18/007)

Cosima von Bonin
DÄMONENRÄUMDIENST, 2023
Wool, cotton, fleece, and silkscreen
57 1/2 x 80 inches
146 x 203 cm
(CVB 23/023)

Charline von Heyl
Frenhoferin, 2010
Signed on verso
Acrylic, oil, and charcoal on linen
86 x 82 in
218.4 x 208.3 cm
Framed: 87 1/2 x 84 in
(CVH 10/007A)

Grace Weaver
Untitled (Mother and Child), 2025
Signed and dated verso
Acrylic on canvas
84 x 60 in
213.5 x 152.5 cm
(GW 25/002)

Emma Webster
Capriole, 2025
Signed and dated on verso
Oil on linen
60 x 84 in
152.4 x 213.4 cm
(EW 25/008)
ART BASEL MIAMI BEACH 2025
Miami Beach Convention Center, Booth G21
December 3–7, 2025
For the 2025 edition of Art Basel, Miami Beach, Petzel is pleased to present works by artists integral to the program, with established histories to the gallery, and new to its roster. Artists on view will include Ross Bleckner, Cosima von Bonin, Isabella Ducrot, Derek Fordjour, Nikita Gale, Stefanie Heinze, Charline von Heyl, Sean Landers, James Little, Allan McCollum, Rodney McMillian, Malcolm Morley, Jorge Pardo, Joyce Pensato, Seth Price, Pieter Schoolwerth, Tschabalala Self, Emily Mae Smith, Nicola Tyson, Grace Weaver, Emma Webster, Austin Martin White, Heimo Zobernig.
Highlights include both new and significant works by Ross Bleckner, Derek Fordjour, Stefanie Heinze, Sean Landers, Pieter Schoolwerth, Tschabalala Self, Emily Mae Smith, Grace Weaver, Emma Webster, and Austin Martin White, in addition to historical works by James Little, Allan McCollum, Malcolm Morley, and Joyce Pensato.
Ahead of her major retrospective at the Madre Museum in Naples in 2026 and following her solo exhibition with the gallery this summer, Isabella Ducrot presents a work, The Visited Land III, 2025, from her new series “The Visited Land,” which use meteorite pigments for the first time to develop a new relationship to the artist’s materials and the natural world.
Stefanie Heinze debuts a new diptych, Head between heels, as above so below: (Don’t mind me mindless Yous), 2025. The work is embedded with a sensation of motion, everything seemingly in flux yet perfectly set. As with all of Heinze’s paintings, the diptych originates from one of her small-scale drawings, its translation to canvas unfolding slowly over time. As it takes shape, the work settles into another posture: it’s not exactly head over heels; it’s the head between heels, resisting any hierarchy of being taken over. Encountered at this imposing scale, the work’s vibrant intensity can feel overwhelming. Heinze challenges the intensity of emotional experience: being swept off one’s feet can just as easily leave one in a state of limbo. The work holds this tension between longing and hesitation, between the desire to step fully into an overwhelming feeling and the impulse to remain just outside it. Her forms slip between the intimate and the cosmic, never settling, as if caught mid-fall or mid-flight.
Petzel presents a new lamp by artist Jorge Pardo concurrently with his solo exhibition at the gallery, on view until December 20, 2025. Cascading in clusters of color which draw upon both Monet’s Haystacks and Warhol’s Shadows, the resulting lightwork slices, abstracts and restructures the interior light of Monet and the exterior saturation of Warhol’s shadows onto laser-cut planes of painted acrylic sheeting. Pardo collapses the boundaries between lighting and sculpture, inviting multiple interpretations through his calibrated use of material, shadow, and color.
Coinciding with Joyce Pensato’s major retrospective at ICA Miami opening on December 2, 2025, Petzel presents several of her significant works at Art Basel, Miami Beach, including, Batman Mask, 2022, and Fuzzy Duckie, 2015. The two late works are emblematic of her baleful transmutation of American cartoon culture. Pulling from pop iconography, Pensato renders familiar cartoon subjects in smeared, urgent strokes that verge on collapse. The images hover between caricature and ruin, exposing the psychic charge beneath cultural mascots.
Tschabalala Self debuts two new paintings, Reverie and Red-headed, both 2025. Reverie depicts a woman sitting alone within a domestic space lost in thought. The molding, tiled floor, vase and floral element all denote the trappings of a comfortable home. The protagonist of the scene looks beyond such trappings as she burls deeper into her own thoughts. While Red-headed shows a spirited figure, with a red afro, lounging upon a yellow chaise. She flashes a mischievous smile, full of confidence, relaxed, happy, and carefree. Self will create a new sculpture for the New Museum’s façade, to be unveiled in early 2026.
A new work by Emily Mae Smith, The Locust, 2025, advances Smith’s iconic broom’s metamorphosis into a near-human form emerging from straw, the discarded made animate. The central figure holds a scythe, evoking themes of harvesting and gleaning, and appears with an avenging, confrontational presence that rejects the passive nude archetypes of 19th-century and Symbolist painting. Smith reimagines Jules Joseph Lefebvre’s 1872 painting La Cigale (“The Grasshopper”) through a darker lens. Naming her painting The Locust, she invokes the grasshopper’s more disruptive form, transforming the figure into one of agency, force, and impending change.
In Emma Webster’s new painting, Capriole, 2025, she constructs the scene from an uncanny vantage point positioning the viewer gazing upward at a levitating beast. This disorienting perspective generates a sense of danger and suspended catastrophe, as though the moment before impact has been indefinitely prolonged. For this work, Webster drew inspiration from Picasso’s bull paintings, from the arena’s drama, the setting sun, and the charged anticipation of being confronted head-on. The title, Capriole, references Austrian Lipizzaner horses and their famed dressage, whose balletic elegance belies origins in military training. Webster uses this duality to fuse grace and threat, performance and combat, deepening the tension within the work.
The works mentioned here will be on view at Petzel’s Booth G21 during Art Basel Miami Beach, December 3–7, 2025.