Waves of Return of Waves
03.22 — 04.25.26

Devening Projects is pleased to present the first solo exhibition in Chicago for New York- and Massachusetts-based artist Andrew Zarou. Waves of Return of Waves will open on Sunday March 22 and continue until April 25, 2026.

“In 2018, I returned to painting after a twenty-five year hiatus. A bit later in 2023, I began moving from New York City to western Massachusetts, an area where I attended college and where my family had property until the early 2000s. This past summer brought another return—for the first time in roughly twenty years, I began playing music again. My current life in 2026 has strong reverberations from when I was a student at Hampshire College in the 1990s. While a lot has changed both personally and globally, I never would have expected these things to resurface and be actualized.

Waves have been a recurring motif in my work, and lately, the river has been entering it as well. My current studio has a wide view of a small river, unlike my previous studio in Brooklyn which overlooked a busy avenue. The distracting sounds of traffic and street disputes have been replaced by a huge sycamore tree and occasional sightings of beavers and mergansers. During summer months I routinely slip in for swims. Regardless of the season or time of day, the river is the main feature when I look out my studio windows. Part of its appearance in the work has to do with the ergonomics of handling paint with a flat brush, but mostly it reflects my daily immersion in this landscape. Now that I live and work in an area replete with rivers and 19th-century mill buildings, I am resetting my nervous system through such different stimuli.

My work exists in the space between formal, geometric abstraction and intuitive lyricism. Each painting follows its own logic, or intuition, which guides but doesn’t predetermine its resolution. Some paintings start and end in the realm of non-narrative, geometric abstraction. Others veer off into an unscripted world of recognizable forms and autobiographical references. Both are legitimate, but I find the latter more compelling due to the surprise of layered meanings. Initially, I didn’t know how to accept or integrate lyrical narratives into a purist approach to formal abstraction. It felt vulnerable, vexing—but it’s become central to how I work now.

As a musician trained outside of academic contexts, primarily through punk and art rock, the guitar is the instrument I have clocked the most hours playing. When playing an electric guitar, my go-to effect is tremolo (or vibrato). With the intensity potentiometer set at 10 and the speed at 4, the tremolo effect disrupts the straight-forwardness of the present tense and clarity of linear space by bending the waveforms into more pronounced waves. A remote, non-space—an ethereal net becomes present.

It has a similar transportive quality to when the late afternoon or early evening sun reflects off the river and up onto the ten-foot high studio ceiling. Light patterns softly vibrate, glowing down from above. Like the sonic effect of a pulsating note or chord, the character of space and psychology of the perceiver is transformed— dislodged into the immersion of currents.

Non-dogmatic practices and chance outcomes are a big part of why I spend time in a room by myself making work. When I paint, I am mostly trying to have an intuitive, material endeavor, but sometimes autobiographical associations emerge. Small and large cycles provide opportunities for themes to repeat, and I’m learning to welcome rather than resist what returns.” — Andrew Zarou, 2026

Andrew Zarou is a painter based in western Massachusetts. He has exhibited work in solo exhibitions at The Painting Center in New York (Views from the Paraffin Parapet, 2021), Schema Projects and Gridspace in Brooklyn (2015), Robert Henry Contemporary in Brooklyn (2012), and Brooklyn Public Library (2009). Group exhibitions include shows at Transmitter, Sardine, and Parallel Art Space in Brooklyn, Perimeter in Belfast, Maine, Pulp in Holyoke, Massachusetts, 57W57 Arts in New York, PS1 in Queens, Bethanien Studio 1 in Berlin, SÎM in Reykjavik, Iceland, Association A.KEN in Marseille, France, and Carlsbad Museum and Art Center in New Mexico.

Zarou is a 2009 recipient of the Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant and has completed residencies at Yaddo (2010), The Atlantic Center for the Arts (2009), and SÎM in Reykjavik (2008). His work has been reviewed and featured in publications including The New York Times, Time Out New York, Two Coats of Paint, Hyperallergic, and Bushwick Daily. He attended Hampshire College and previously maintained a studio in Brooklyn before relocating to western Massachusetts.

andrewzarou.net

Two Coats of Paint — Andrew Zarou’s Particular Beat

Andrew Zarou interview

MOMA 100 Drawings

  • Andrew Zarou, spring reverb in march, 2026, Flashe and latex on printed cardboard on wood panel, 18 x 12 inches
  • Andrew Zarou, december run, 2025, enamel, Flashe and latex on found textile, 18 x 12 x 1 inches
  • Andrew Zarou, riffs for the viceroy, 2025, Flashe on unprimed muslin, 30 x 22 inches
  • Andrew Zarou, recording self diagonal stroll, 2025, enamel and Flashe on unprimed cotton, 18 x 12 inches
  • Andrew Zarou, jaguar station, 2026, enamel and Flashe on unprimed linen, 24 x 18 inches 2026
  • Andrew Zarou, signpost ( goodbye city ), 2023, acrylic and Flashe on unprimed canvas, 18 x 12 inches
  • Andrew Zarou, find the river nest, 2025, Flashe and spray-paint on unprimed polyester, 18 x 12 inches
  • Andrew Zarou, synopsis for new england waters, 2025, Flashe on unprimed muslin, 18 x 12 inches
  • Andrew Zarou, adequate anchors, 2024, aluminum tape and Flashe on unprimed, found textile mounted on birch panel, 18 x 12 inches
  • Andrew Zarou, 2023, against erosion, enamel and Flashe on unprimed, found textile, 18 x 12 inches
  • Andrew Zarou, conditions of carriage,  2024, Flashe and cotton string on unprimed muslin, 18 x 12 inches
  • Andrew Zarou, river above / river below, 2022-2026, enamel, latex and vinyl paint on found textile, 18 x 12 inches
  • Andrew Zarou, landslide quiz, 2025, Flashe on unprimed canvas, 18 x 12 inches
  • Andrew Zarou, roomtone, 2025, Flashe on unprimed cotton twill, 36 x 24 inches
  • Andrew Zarou,  2024, hammer price and safe return, enamel and latex on unprimed canvas, 18 x 12 inches
  • Andrew Zarou, katedral, 2024-2026, enamel, latex and vinyl paint on textiles mounted on birchboard, 18 x 18 inches