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Sarah Morris
Sarah Morris
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Sarah Morris (born 20 June 1967 in Sevenoaks, Kent, England) is an American and British artist.[3][4][5][6][a][7] She lives in New York City in the United States.[8]

Key Information

Personal life and education

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Morris was born in Sevenoaks, Kent, in south-east England, on 20 June 1967.[5] She attended Brown University from 1985 to 1989, Cambridge University,[9] and the Independent Study Program of the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1989–90.[5] She was a Berlin Prize fellow at the American Academy in Berlin in 1999–2000; in 2001 she received a Joan Mitchell Foundation painting award.[10] She was married to Liam Gillick.[9]

Work

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Morris works in both painting and film, and considers the two to be interconnected.[11]

Vitasoy (Hong Kong) 207x152 cm

From about 1997 her paintings were geometric Modernist grid designs with flat planes of colour; a related series was of glass-faced skyscrapers with geometric landscape designs reflected in their façades. Among her earlier painting styles were screen-prints reminiscent of Andy Warhol, word-paintings, and paintings of shoes.[5]

Robert Towne, 2006. Lever House, Manhattan

Morris's films have been characterized as portraits that focus on the psychology of individuals or cities. Her films about cities, like Midtown, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Rio depict urban scenes, capturing the architecture, politics, industry and leisure which define a specific place.[12] Other films describe a place through the viewpoint of an individual, like psychologist Dr. George Sieber describing the terrorist event at the Olympic Stadium in Munich in the film 1972 or the industry politics of Hollywood from the viewpoint of screenwriter and producer in the eponymous film Robert Towne.[12][13]

Exhibitions

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She has shown internationally, with solo exhibitions at Hamburger Bahnhof in Berlin (2001),[14] Palais de Tokyo in Paris (2005),[15] Fondation Beyeler in Basel (2008),[16] Museum für Moderne Kunst in Frankfurt (2009),[17] Museo d’Arte Moderna di Bologna (2009),[18] Musée National Fernand Léger in Biot (2012),[19] M Museum, Leuven, Belgium (2015),[20] Kunsthalle Wein, Vienna, Austria (2016),[21] Espoo Museum of Modern Art, Espoo, Finland (2017),[22] UCCA, Beijing, China (2018),[23] Tai Kwun Contemporary, Hong Kong (2024) [24]

Her mid-career retrospective titled "All Systems Fail" traveled to multiple cities and museums in 2023 and 2024 including: Deichtorhallen Hamburg, Germany [1], Kunstmuseen Krefeld, Germany [2], Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern, Switzerland [3] and Kunstmuseum Stuttgart, Germany [4].

She has created site-specific works for various institutions including the Lever House,[25] Kunsthalle Bremen in Germany,[26] Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen Museum, Düsseldorf, Germany,[27] the lobby of UBS in New York City, the Gloucester Road tube station in London,[28] the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, Dutch Kills / 39th Ave Subway Station,[29] Ad-Diriyah Biennale in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia,[30] St. Louis Lambert International Airport,[31] General Dynamics Headquarters in Reston, Virginia, Tulsa Convention Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma,[32] Gateway School for Sciences, Queens, New York,[33] and Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio,[34] Key Biscayne Community Center, Key Biscayne, Florida.[35]

Morris's films have been featured at the following:

Public collections

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Kennedy Center (Capital) (2001), National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, D.C.

Filmography

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  • Midtown (1998)[79]
  • AM/PM (1999)[79]
  • Capital (2000)[79]
  • Miami (2002)[79]
  • Los Angeles (2004)[79]
  • Robert Towne (2006)[79]
  • 1972 (2008)[79]
  • Beijing (2008)[80]
  • Points on a Line (2010)[81]
  • Chicago (2011)[82]
  • Rio (2012)[83]
  • Strange Magic (2014)[84]
  • Abu Dhabi (2016)[85]
  • Finite and Infinite Games (2017)[86]
  • Sakura (2019)
  • ETC (2024)[87]

Other activities

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Origami lawsuit

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In 2011 Morris was sued by a group of six origami artists, including American Robert J. Lang. They alleged that in 24 works (eventually discovered to be 33 or more) in her "Origami" series of paintings Morris had without permission or credit copied their original crease patterns, coloured them, and sold them as "found" or "traditional" designs. [89] The case was settled out of court early in 2013; under the terms of the settlement, the creators of the crease patterns are to be given credit when the works are displayed.[90][91]

List of affected paintings/models
Painting title Year painted Square painting edge sizes Model title Model composer
Angel 2009 214 cm Harpy Jason Ku
Bat 2007 214 cm Bat Noboru Miyajima
Black Ant 2009 214 cm Harvestman (Phalangium) Manuel Sirgo
Calypte Anna 2007 214 cm Ruby-throated Hummingbird, opus 389 Robert J. Lang
2008 289 cm
Cat 2007 53.5 cm Cat Noboru Miyajima
214 cm
Chaser 2008 214 cm Dragonfly, opus 369 Robert J. Lang
Clerid Beetle 2009 214 cm Scorpion (Buthus) Manuel Sirgo
Crane 2008 214 cm Dancing Crane, opus 460 Robert J. Lang
Cuttlefish 2009 214 cm Sepia Manuel Sirgo
Dragon 2007 214 cm KNL Dragon, opus 132 Robert J. Lang
Falcon 2007 214 cm Cooper’s Hawk, opus 464 Robert J. Lang
2008 53.5 cm
Goatfish 2007 152.5 cm Goatfish, opus 202 Robert J. Lang
Grasshopper 2007 76.6 cm Grasshopper, opus 83 Robert J. Lang
289 cm
Hercules Beetle 2007 214 cm Hercules Beetle, opus 271 Robert J. Lang
June Beetle 2009 214 cm Cyclommatus metallifer Nicola Bandoni
Kawasaki Cube 2008 53.5 cm Kawasaki Cube #1 Toshikazu Kawasaki
53.5 cm
214 cm
2009 289 cm
Leaf Mantis 2009 214 cm Leaf Mantis Manuel Sirgo
Lion 2007 214 cm Lion Noboru Miyajima
Mommoth 2007 53.5 cm Mommoth Noboru Miyajima
214 cm
Mouse 2007 122 cm Rat, opus 159 Robert J. Lang
Night Hawk 2008 214 cm Stealth Fighter, opus 324 Robert J. Lang
Night Hunter 2007 214 cm Night Hunter, opus 469 Robert J. Lang
Orchis 2008 214 cm Orchid, opus 392 Robert J. Lang
Parrot 2009 214 cm Macaw Manuel Sirgo
Pegasus 2007 53.5 cm Pegasus, opus 325 Robert J. Lang
214 cm
Praying Mantis 2007 214 cm Praying Mantis, opus 246 Robert J. Lang
Rabbit 2007 122 cm Rabbit, opus 186 Robert J. Lang
Raccoon Dog 2007 122 cm Raccoon Dog Noboru Miyajima
Rhino Beetle 2008 214 cm Eupatorus gracilicornus, opus 476 Robert J. Lang
Rockhopper 2007 20.8 cm Penguin Noboru Miyajima
122 cm
2009 289 cm
Swan 2007 122 cm Swan Noboru Miyajima
214 cm
289 cm
2008 53.5 cm
Tarantula 2008 53.5 cm Tarantula Robert J. Lang
214 cm
Weasel 2007 76.6 cm Weasel Noboru Miyajima
214 cm
2008 122 cm
289 cm
Wolf 2007 289 cm Wolf Noboru Miyajima

Notes

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Sarah Morris (born 1967) is a British-born artist based in , recognized for her geometric abstract paintings and 35mm films that dissect the architectures, bureaucracies, and circulatory systems of modern cities. Her works draw on influences from , , and to create hard-edged compositions that abstractly map urban typologies and socio-economic dynamics, often employing vibrant colors and precise grids to evoke the interplay between physical structures and psychological flows. Born in , , , Morris grew up in , and earned a degree from in 1989. Since the mid-1990s, she has developed a distinctive practice alternating between and , with her films—such as those set in , , and —using dynamic to probe themes of capital, control, and consumption in global metropolises. Her paintings, meanwhile, translate these investigations into flattened, patterned forms reminiscent of architectural plans or data visualizations, challenging viewers to reconsider the hidden mechanics of everyday environments. Morris has garnered international acclaim through solo exhibitions at institutions including the Kunstmuseum , Museum , and UCCA Center for Contemporary Art in , as well as participation in biennials such as SITE Santa Fe and the São Paulo Biennial. Her oeuvre consistently privileges empirical observation of systemic patterns over narrative storytelling, aligning with a commitment to unveiling causal structures in contemporary urban life.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Background

Sarah Morris was born on June 20, 1967, in , , . She holds dual American and British citizenship, reflecting her transatlantic upbringing. Although born in the , Morris spent much of her early years in the United States, growing up in . This relocation likely exposed her to diverse cultural influences from a young age, though specific details about her family background or formative experiences in Rhode Island remain limited in public records. Her early life bridged British origins and American environments, setting the stage for her later international artistic career centered in New York.

Academic Training

Sarah Morris earned a degree from in , in 1989, after attending from 1985 to 1989. She also studied at the in , graduating in 1988 with a focus including political and social sciences. Following her undergraduate studies, Morris participated in the Whitney Museum of American Art's Independent Study Program in New York from 1989 to 1990, a non-degree postgraduate initiative emphasizing independent artistic development. Morris received no formal academic training in art, identifying as a self-taught practitioner whose work emerged from conceptual and interdisciplinary influences rather than studio-based instruction. Her educational background in social sciences informed early explorations of systems and urban structures, bridging theoretical analysis with visual media.

Artistic Practice

Paintings: Techniques and Evolution

Sarah Morris employs acrylic paints on canvas, applying them through a meticulous masking and layering technique to produce hard-edged geometric abstractions with a flat, slick finish and no visible brushwork. This process allows for precise control over vibrant, neon-inspired color contrasts and interlocking forms such as grids, parallelograms, and linear patterns inspired by urban architecture and systems. In her early career during the 1990s, Morris created graphic paintings that drew directly from the dramatic, emotive language of newspaper headlines and advertising taglines, often incorporating bold text elements into simplified compositions. By the mid-1990s, her style evolved into abstracted typologies of urban environments, organized into city-specific series beginning with Midtown Manhattan (1998–2001), where she distilled architectural and psychological dynamics into rhythmic geometric snapshots. Subsequent series, such as (2005), (2008–2009), and Rio (2012–2013), expanded this framework by integrating chromatic and structural cues from her films, enhancing the paintings' sense of motion and power structures. The "" series (2007–2009) introduced procedural elements by translating crease patterns from folding instructions into bold, abstract grids painted with household gloss for added sheen. Recent developments, as in "All Systems Fail" (2023–2024), refine these methods toward more open, self-referential compositions that emphasize interpretive flux over fixed representation.

Films: Style and Production

Sarah Morris produces films as a parallel extension of her painting practice, employing non-narrative structures to examine urban architectures, social systems, and psychological undercurrents in specific locales. Her approach integrates documentary-style observation with abstracted editing, often capturing sites of production, leisure, and bureaucracy through precisely composed shots that emphasize movement, geometry, and systemic flows without dialogue or overt storytelling. Films such as Midtown (1998), AM/PM (1999), and Capital (2000) establish this methodology, evolving into later works like Los Angeles (2004), shot during the Academy Awards to probe cinematic infrastructure and urban spectacle. In production, Morris directs and cinematographs her projects herself, adhering to a process dictated by on-site permissions, event timings, and institutional constraints, which she allows to shape the footage's content and rhythm. For instance, (2008) was filmed amid the , where bureaucratic protocols limited access and filming durations, resulting in fragmented, drifting sequences that reflect controlled urban environments. Similarly, Rio (2012) documents preparations, using stoic editing to underscore mundane operational logics beneath festive exteriors. She employs 35mm for its tactile quality, favoring long takes and minimal intervention to preserve an investigatory, disembodied gaze. Stylistically, Morris's films feature disquieting custom soundtracks—composed to evoke tension through synthetic pulses and ambient distortions—that amplify the visual detachment, contrasting the kinetic energy of depicted spaces with perceptual alienation. Techniques draw from architectural framing and montage principles, yielding nearly static compositions that evoke cinematic progression akin to her grid-based paintings, as in Points on a Line (2007), where abbreviated shots trace infrastructural nodes in Chicago. This method avoids fictional reconstruction, prioritizing empirical capture of "events themselves" to reveal underlying codes of power and efficiency. Later films like Strange Magic (2017) and ETC (2020) extend this to global hubs such as Abu Dhabi, maintaining a cool, observational precision that critiques systemic abstraction without authorial narration.

Themes and Conceptual Framework

Urban Typologies and Systems

Sarah Morris's paintings and films systematically abstract urban typologies, distilling architectural patterns, infrastructural grids, and spatial organizations into vibrant geometric compositions that reveal underlying structural logics of cities. Her works, such as those in the Abu Dhabi series completed around 2010, employ fractured vertical and diagonal lines in bold colors to evoke the typological forms of skyscrapers, zoning plans, and urban expansions, transforming empirical observations of built environments into coded representations of spatial hierarchies and growth dynamics. These abstractions draw from first-hand studies of metropolises like New York and Dubai, where typologies—recurring motifs in high-rise clusters and transit corridors—serve as visual proxies for the rationalized, repeatable elements shaping modern urbanism. In parallel, her films interrogate urban systems through choreographed sequences of movement and , emphasizing circulatory networks and operational flows that sustain metropolitan functions. For instance, the 2015 Capital, shot in , captures the kinetic rhythms of government buildings, lobbies, and public transit hubs, layering shots to expose the interdependent systems of power, , and embedded in the capital's layout. Morris's approach avoids literal documentation, instead employing editing techniques to highlight psycho-geographic tensions—such as the friction between individual agency and systemic constraints—evident in how urban infrastructures dictate paths of least resistance for pedestrians and vehicles. This method underscores causal interconnections, where typological repetitions in design (e.g., modular towers or radial patterns) propagate efficiency but also rigidity across scales. Morris extends this framework to broader systemic critiques, incorporating globalization's reconfiguration of urban typologies into hybridized forms, as seen in her examinations of economic hubs where architectural standardization facilitates capital flows. Her Midtown series of paintings from the early 2000s, for example, fragments Manhattan's grid into interlocking polygons, symbolizing the interlocking bureaucracies and real estate typologies that define vertical density and horizontal sprawl. Films like Los Angeles (2008) further this by mapping infrastructural veins—freeways, ports, and supply chains—as pulsating entities, revealing how urban systems adapt to shocks like economic cycles or policy shifts, with empirical footage underscoring resilience through redundancy in design. These elements collectively position her oeuvre as a dissection of cities not as static entities but as adaptive apparatuses governed by typological invariance and systemic feedback loops.

Psychological and Social Codes

Sarah Morris's films and paintings probe the psychological dimensions of urban life, decoding the subtle codes that dictate social interactions and behavioral patterns within architecturally determined environments. Her works reveal how cities encode power relations and collective psyches, presenting metropolises as systems of veiled signals rather than overt narratives. By focusing on the of and human movement, Morris exposes the interplay between physical form and mental states, such as anxiety induced by bureaucratic opacity or exhilaration from excess. In films like Capital (2000), Morris constructs a psychological portrait of Washington, D.C., filmed amid the Clinton administration's close, to map socio-political networks through sites embodying conspiratorial power, including the Pentagon, , and . The 18-minute piece, shot on 16mm and later digitized, eschews for raw visuals of motorcades and secure zones, underscoring how architectural barriers enforce social hierarchies and psychological distances from authority. Similarly, (2004) dissects the city's and cultural machinery, using staccato editing to capture the performative codes of ambition and glamour that shape interpersonal dynamics in Hollywood's ecosystem. Her paintings extend this inquiry into , translating social and bureaucratic typologies into grids and loops that evoke the underlying psychologies of urban topologies. Series such as those inspired by (2002) employ vibrant geometries to abstract the coded of resort economies, where leisure masks competitive social signaling. Morris has articulated her intent as investigating "urban, social and bureaucratic typologies," framing cities as opaque realms of encrypted behaviors decipherable through formal rather than . This approach prioritizes empirical observation of spatial cues—traffic flows, building facades, crowd formations—over interpretive speculation, aligning with her view of as "open systems of coordinates" indexing contemporary flux. Critics note that Morris's decoding reveals the causal links between systemic design and psychological outcomes, such as conformity in high-control environments like Beijing's Olympic infrastructure in her 2008 film of the same name, where synchronized movements highlight engineered social obedience. Yet, her method avoids moralizing, instead presenting these codes as neutral mechanics of modern existence, verifiable through repeated viewings of urban minutiae. This detachment underscores a commitment to unvarnished structural realism over subjective bias.

Career Highlights

Key Exhibitions and Installations

Sarah Morris' key solo exhibitions include All Systems Fail (2023–2024), a surveying over 180 works from three decades of her career, presented at Deichtorhallen , Kunstmuseen , in , and Kunstmuseum . Earlier, in 2018, The Factor debuted at the Ullens Center for (UCCA) in , featuring paintings and the film The Factor (2017). In 2015, the – Museum für Gegenwart – Berlin hosted a major survey of her films and paintings. Other significant presentations encompass Points on a Line (2012) at the Wexner Center for the Arts in Columbus, Ohio, which paired her paintings with the film Points on a Line (2010); Gemini Dressage (2009) at the Museum für Moderne Kunst in Frankfurt, including the premiere of her film The Silent Barque; and Capital in the Twenty-First Century (2008) at Fondation Beyeler in Basel. In 2002, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C., showcased her Midtown series alongside the film Midtown (2000). Morris has also realized notable site-specific installations. Robert Towne (2006), commissioned by the Public Art Fund, transformed the lobby and courtyard of Lever House in New York with large-scale vinyl murals derived from her abstract paintings, evoking Hollywood's architectural and social systems. In 2012, for London's Art on the Underground, she created Big Ben, a digital countdown installation at Gloucester Road Tube station, and a custom Tube map cover inspired by her Rio series. More recently, Hellion Equilibrium (2021), a vibrant laminated glass artwork, was installed on the elevated platforms of the 39 Av-Dutch Kills station in New York as part of the MTA Arts & Design permanent collection.

Public Collections and Acquisitions

Sarah Morris's works are represented in numerous public collections worldwide, reflecting the institutional recognition of her contributions to contemporary painting and film. According to her official biography, these include the Museum of Modern Art, New York, which holds four items such as the film Capital (2001); the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Tate Modern, London; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Dallas Museum of Art; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; and Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt, among others. Specific acquisitions highlight targeted institutional interest in her output. In 2016, Guggenheim Abu Dhabi commissioned and added her film Abu Dhabi to its permanent collection as the inaugural work. In 2020, the Yale Center for British Art acquired the painting ADNOC (2016) via the John F. O'Brien Fund, emphasizing its exploration of urban and corporate systems. The Mead Art Museum at Amherst College has incorporated recent works into its holdings as part of contemporary acquisitions. The Government Art Collection in London also maintains examples of her pieces. Additional collections encompass the Fondation Louis Vuitton, ; Hamburger Bahnhof – Museum für Gegenwart, ; , ; and the , , underscoring the global scope of her institutional presence.

Recognition and Reception

Awards and Critical Acclaim

Morris received the Joan Mitchell Foundation Painting Award in 2001, recognizing her abstract paintings derived from urban observations. From 1999 to 2000, she held the American Academy Prize Fellowship, supporting her residency and research in . Her works have elicited acclaim for their bold geometric abstractions and films probing city infrastructures. A 1999 New York Times review lauded her exhibition as her "best foray into graphic punchiness," highlighting the vibrancy of her grid-based compositions. Artforum described her paintings as "stylish, hip, loud, reflexive, and assured," emphasizing their confident engagement with architectural forms. In 2009, ArtReview ranked her 79th in its annual Power 100 list of influential art-world figures, underscoring her impact through films and paintings on systems and . Critics have also noted the precision of her 35mm films, such as those capturing glamour, for revealing underlying urban codes without overt narrative.

Criticisms and Debates on Appropriation

Morris's incorporation of pre-existing diagrammatic patterns, notably in her early "" series, has elicited debates on the legitimacy of appropriation in abstract painting. designers, including , contended that her geometric compositions too closely mirrored their unfolded crease patterns—originally functional instructions for three-dimensional folding—without meaningful alteration, viewing this as an uncredited borrowing that diminished the instructional essence of their designs. These artists emphasized the originality of their patterns as mathematical and creative achievements, arguing that Morris's flat, colorful renderings exploited them for decorative effect rather than advancing conceptual discourse. Art advocates, however, have positioned Morris's approach within established appropriation traditions, asserting that her reconfiguration of such schematics into non-functional, systemic abstractions critiques modernity's geometric underpinnings and urban codification. This transformative intent, they argue, elevates the source material into commentary on as power structure, echoing postmodern tactics seen in artists like or , where recontextualization challenges authorship norms. Such defenses highlight appropriation's role in subverting originality myths, though skeptics within craft-oriented communities maintain it risks commodifying specialized knowledge without reciprocity. Broader critiques extend to Morris's recurrent use of the modernist grid, appropriated from early 20th-century precedents like Piet Mondrian's compositions, as a lens for contemporary urban analysis. While some praise this as a "spectacular, virtual " exposing capitalism's repetitive facades, others imply it yields formulaic permutations prioritizing visual over substantive novelty, potentially diluting the grid's historical . This tension underscores ongoing art-world discussions on whether serial appropriation fosters or entrenches stylistic stagnation amid globalized aesthetics. In May 2011, six artists, including , filed a against Sarah Morris in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of in Oakland. The plaintiffs alleged that Morris had copied crease patterns from their original designs without permission or attribution for use in at least 24 paintings from her "" series, produced between 2008 and 2010. These paintings, which abstracted the geometric folds into colorful grid-based compositions, reportedly sold for prices exceeding $100,000 each. The suit contended that origami crease patterns constitute protectable original expressions under copyright law, distinct from mere ideas or functional folds, and sought including Morris's profits, statutory awards, and attorneys' fees. Morris's legal team initially moved to dismiss the case for lack of , arguing insufficient ties to , which the granted in October 2011. The plaintiffs refiled or pursued amendments, but the dispute highlighted broader debates over the copyrightability of abstract patterns in versus craft, with some observers questioning whether such diagrams qualified as original works eligible for beyond utility. Faced with the high costs and uncertainties of litigation, including potential risks, the parties reached a confidential settlement in March 2013. Under the agreement, Morris consented to crediting the specific origami creators on wall labels for future exhibitions of the affected works, though no admission of liability was required and financial terms remained undisclosed. The resolution avoided a precedential ruling on crease pattern copyrights, leaving unresolved questions about appropriation in practices.

Recent Developments

Projects from 2020 Onward

In 2020, Morris collaborated with filmmaker for the exhibition Sarah Morris with Alexander Kluge: Cats and Ghosts at König Galerie in , featuring paintings and discussions on narrative structures. That year, she also received the Aurélie Nemours Prize from the Fondation des Arts Graphiques in , recognizing her contributions to . Morris's 2021 exhibition Means of Escape at in , running from November 19, 2021, to January 9, 2022, presented new paintings exploring bureaucratic and urban typologies through vibrant grids and loops, accompanied by a concurrent show in West Palm Beach. These works continued her signature style of abstracted architectural forms, drawing from and urban . The retrospective All Systems Fail, organized by Deichtorhallen , debuted in 2023 and toured internationally, encompassing over 180 works including paintings, all of Morris's films to date, drawings, film posters, and sculptures. The exhibition traced her career's evolution in depicting networks, economies, and architectures, with stops at Kunstmuseen in 2023, in from March 29 to August 4, 2024, and Kunstmuseum from September 21, 2024, to February 9, 2025. Additional 2023 solos included As Slow As Possibles at Espace in and Pinecones and Corporations at Gallery Hyundai in , focusing on temporal and corporate motifs. In 2024, Morris released her sixteenth film, ETC (HD digital, 79 minutes), shot in during spring 2023 with sound by , examining the city's interconnections in the digital era through fragmented urban sequences. The film premiered on the M+ museum facade in , screening nightly from January to March 2024, and featured in the exhibition Who is Who at Contemporary from March 16 to April 14, 2024. This project extended her cinematic series on global sites, building on earlier works like Midtown (1998). Upcoming projects include a solo at Nakanoshima Museum of Art in , , scheduled for 2026, anticipated to highlight recent paintings and films.

Ongoing Influence

The major retrospective All Systems Fail, surveying thirty years of Morris's paintings, films, and installations, originated at Deichtorhallen in 2023 before touring to Kunstmuseen (October 2023–March 2024), in (June 2024), and Kunstmuseum (September 2024 onward), affirming the persistent curatorial interest in her geometric abstractions as mappings of urban and systemic dynamics. In 2024, Morris debuted the film ETC via nightly projections on the M+ museum façade in for two months, integrated into an exhibition at Contemporary that paired her cinematic works with architectural contexts, extending her practice of interrogating public infrastructures through site-specific media. A scheduled solo exhibition at Nakanoshima Museum of Art in in 2025 signals her continued production and international circulation. Morris's grid motifs and filmic dissections of perceptual and power systems, emphasized in 2024–2025 analyses, sustain engagement with art's capacity to diagram non-abstract realities amid technological and urban flux, as her interdisciplinary method—spanning biennials like (2012) and (2006, with echoes in recent festival screenings)—informs ongoing dialogues on visual encoding of complexity.

References

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