Opening Reception: November 7th, 2025 | 6 - 8 pm
Bruce Silverstein Gallery is pleased to present Keith Smith: Synecdoche, curated by Megan N. Liberty, the gallery’s fifth solo exhibition of the artist’s work. The title Synecdoche, “a figure of speech in which a part represents the whole,” captures the conceptual premise of this exhibition and a central tenet of Smith’s practice. In his own words, “pictures can, no, must give up their sovereignty for the sake of the total.”
The exhibition brings together over forty works from Smith’s groundbreaking early experiments in photography and bookmaking from the 1960s to the 1980s, a period of profound innovation. Drawn from the artist’s personal archive, the collages, works on fabric, postcards, and artist books in this exhibition offer a rare opportunity to appreciate a true polymath who drew upon a vast range of mediums and techniques to explore themes of love, self-identity, sexuality, friendship, and domesticity. Over six decades, Smith has consistently challenged and expanded the boundaries of art, influencing generations of artists working at the intersection of image, text, and structure.
Keith Smith’s (b. 1938) early experimental works stem from undergraduate studies at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (1963–1967) and continued experimentation at Visual Studies Workshop, where he was influenced by Nathan Lyons, Sonia Landy Sheridan, and Joan Lyons. It was during these formative years that Smith began experimenting with sequencing photographs, employing innovative printmaking techniques, as well as stitching, collage, drawing, and painting. Since then, Smith has continued a lifelong investigation into the book as an artistic medium, placing him at the forefront of a movement that transformed the book from a container of images and text into a dynamic sculptural and conceptual form, challenging conventions of sequence, structure, and narrative.
Across Smith’s early works, Liberty observes, a persistent interest in shifting perception of the part within the whole. This dynamic is especially evident in his use of transparencies, collage, quilting, and photocopier technology. The works gesture to the unexpected relationship between the part and the whole, changing how we read a book or see a photograph.” To this end, Book Number 2, A Change in Dimension (1967) and Postcard: Keith (1975) both feature moving transparent sheets. Other works use body parts as stand in for full figures, such as floating heads in Emerging Image, Portrait of the Artist (1965). Miss B. (1971), Eye Quilt (1965), and Book Number 10, Orifice (1969) use quilting techniques and patterns to create layers that shift how we see the figures. In other cases, the stitched parts create gridded bodies that suggest people in motion and cinematic sequencing, as in Book Number 27 (1973), Book Number 34 (1973), and two untitled copier portraits from 1971.
Keith Smith (b. 1938, Tipton, Indiana) is an American artist and author whose work is held in major collections including the Art Institute of Chicago, Museum of Modern Art, New York, The Getty Museum, Los Angeles, and the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. He is the author of influential texts on bookmaking, including The Structure of the Visual Book (1998) and Text in the Book Format (2004), and has been awarded two Guggenheim Fellowships, a National Endowment for the Arts grant, and a Pollock Krasner Foundation grant. Smith’s work was included in the landmark 1978 exhibition Mirrors and Windows: American Photography since 1960 and featured in a solo exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in 1974. More recently, he was the subject of a major solo retrospective, Keith Smith at Home, at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 2018, his first major museum survey in five decades.
Megan N. Liberty is an arts writer, editor, and curator based between Brooklyn and Los Angeles, with a focus on artists books and publishing. She is the Art Books section editor at the Brooklyn Rail and has curated major traveling exhibitions. She holds a Masters in Art History from the Courtauld Institute of Art.
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Untitled, 1971 -
Untitled, 1967Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Untitled, 1967
Gelatin silver print, watercolor, and sheet film mounted to board, printed c. 1967
Annotated and dated 'Sep 67' on verso
2 7/8 x 12 1/4 in (7.3 x 31.1 cm)
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Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Book Number 27, 1973
One of a kind artist book with artist's shirt cover, 3M Color-in-Color, and other copier imagery
Signed, annotated, and dated '11:57pm, 11 January 1973' on interior title page
11 1/2 x 11 1/2 x 0 3/4 in (29.21 x 29.21 x 1.9 cm)
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Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Eye Quilt, 1965
Photo-silkscreen onto panels of cloth and machine-quilted with padding
Signed, titled, and dated 'March 1965' on verso
87 x 64 in (221.0 x 162.6 cm)
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Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Book Number 34, 1973
One of a kind artist book with Verifax prints and machine sewn bedsheet cover
Signed and titled on front cover
Signed, titled, and dated 'Nov 1973' on interior page12 1/4 x 13 3/4 x 1 in (31.1 x 34.9 x 2.5 in)
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Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Postcard: Philip's Foot; 25 January 1981, 1981
Gelatin silver print with machine sewing
Signed, titled, and dated '25 Jan 81' on recto
13 3/4 x 10 3/4 in (34.9 x 27.3 cm)
Each: 3 3/8 x 5 3/8 in (8.6 x 13.7 cm) -
Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Untitled, 1971
3M Color-in-Color paper prints machine-sewn to satin with padding
Signed and dated '8:01pm, 4 December, 1971' on recto
16 x 30 in (40.6 x 76.2 cm)
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Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Book Number 23, 58 Rowley Street, 1972
One of a kind artist book with drawing, collage, film, copy machine images, and polaroids with no darkroom work
Signed, titled, and dated '7:15pm, 23 Dec 71' on interior last page
13 1/2 x 12 1/2 x 1 1/8 in. (34.3 x 31.8 x 2.9 cm)
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Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Untitled, c. 1960s
Gelatin silver print, printed c. 1960s
2 1/2 x 13 5/8 in (6.3 x 34.6 cm)
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Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Book Number 2, A Change In Dimension, 1967
One of a kind artist book with photographs, film positives, and drawing
Signed, titled, and dated 'Sep-Oct 1967' on interior page
11 1/8 x 13 3/8 x 0 1/2 in (28.3 x 34 x 1.3 cm)
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Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Margaret Looking the Other Way, 1972
Gelatin silver prints and collage element machine-sewn to velvet and satin cloth with padding
Signed, titled and dated 'Dec 72' on recto
13 3/4 x 14 in (34.9 x 35.6 cm)
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Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Postcard: 20 May 1971, 1971
Mixed media with machine sewing
Signed, dated '20 May 1971,' and annotated 'negative from 1964' on recto
Signed and dated '20 may 1971' on verso6 1/4 x 4 1/4 in (15.9 x 11.4 cm)
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Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Book Number 10, Orifice, 1969
One of a kind artist book with film positives, paper silver prints, and cut holes
Signed, titled and dated 'January-February 1969' on interior last page
18 x 25 x 1 in (45.7 x 63.5 x 2.5 cm)
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Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Miss B, 1971
3M Color-in-Color copier heat transfers to cloth woven with strips of silver prints hand stitched to fabric and polaroid machine sewn to fabric
Signed, titled, and dated '1:30pm, 17 November, 1971' on recto
28 x 23 in (71.1 x 58.4 cm)
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Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Margaret Gave Me a Rainbow, 1971
Gelatin silver print and transfer print machine sewn and knitted yarn hand sewn on cloth with braided tassel trim and collage element on verso
Signed, titled and dated '2:30pm, 21 November, 1971' on recto
18 3/4 x 16 1/2 in (47.6 x 41.9 cm)
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Keith Smith (b. 1938)
Book Number 46, 1974
One of a kind unbound artist book with 79 variations on a print, silk screened monoprints, boxed
Signed, titled and dated 'Started 1971' on first page
11 x 10 in (27.9 x 25.4 cm)


















