Olney Gleason is delighted to announce the representation of Tony Lewis (b. 1986, Los Angeles, CA). The artist’s first solo exhibition in New York will go on view in the gallery’s flagship location in Chelsea from May–June, 2026, debuting three new bodies of work. A large-scale work on paper from the artist’s Shorthand series, previously featured as part of the exhibition What drawing can be: four responses at the Menil Drawing Institute, Houston, will be included in the gallery’s Art Basel Miami Beach presentation from December 3–7, 2025.
Tony Lewis (b. 1986, Los Angeles, CA) expands the conceptual and material possibilities of drawing in a practice that spans large-scale works on paper, sculpture, collages, digital projections, and site-specific installations. Language, and its formal and material qualities, are central subjects in Lewis’ work. Examining semiotics and drawing as parallel forms of abstraction, he appropriates and adapts forms including the Roman alphabet and the phonetic symbols used in stenography. In his vibrant Shorthand series, Lewis invents and utilizes a signature glyph alphabet based on bisecting lines and biomorphic planes of color encoded with references to specific historical or current events that engage with themes of race, power, and communication. Lewis’ work suggests that, as with any social system, language both reflects and actively impacts the Black American experience.
Eric Gleason says, “It is an honor to be representing Tony Lewis. Tony’s inimitably rigorous practice has redefined what drawing can be, and Olney Gleason is incredibly excited to present his long overdue first solo exhibition in New York City in the Spring of 2026."
Nicholas Olney says, “We've followed Tony's work for many years and eagerly await his first exhibition. We have been struck by the breadth of connections to our program, including historical artists working in abstraction such as Lee Krasner and Robert Motherwell, and those innovating with drawing and collage. We warmly welcome Tony to Olney Gleason.”
Across multiple, interrelated bodies of work, Lewis draws from American cultural history and plays with collaborative authorship by using the words of writers, philosophers, and poets as generative points of departure. For an expansive 2018 solo exhibition at Smithsonian’s Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden titled Anthology 2014–2016, Lewis reproduced hundreds of iterations of Bill Watterson’s comic strip Calvin and Hobbes, shaping them into visual poems through a process of careful erasure. The televised 1965 debate between James Baldwin and conservative commentator William F. Buckley has also provided a jumping off point for work in multiple media. In his 2025 commission for the Menil Drawing Institute, Lewis constructed a monumental stenographer’s mark from rubber bands coated in graphite powder, wound taut around a constellation of screws affixed to the wall. The mark directly referenced the contents of the debate, “Has the American dream been achieved at the expense of the American negro?” which was won by Baldwin and continues to influence discourse today.
Lewis lives and works in Chicago, IL. His work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at the Orange County Museum of Art (2023); the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C. (2018); the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University, Waltham, MA (2017); Museo Marino Marini, Florence (2016); and the Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland (2015). He participated in the 2014 Whitney Biennial and was the 2017–2018 Ruth Ann and Nathan Perlmutter Artist-in-Residence at the Rose Art Museum. In 2025, the Menil Drawing Institute, Houston, invited Lewis to participate in the exhibition What drawing can be: four responses, where he presented several new works including a site-specific commission.
His work is held in numerous public collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; the Dallas Museum of Art; the Studio Museum in Harlem; and the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, among others.
Lewis will continue to be represented by Massimo de Carlo.

