


Jason Gringler, 'Steel/glass 2'
Jason Gringler
Steel/glass 2
48 x 36 inches
$1,000 USD
Jason Gringler (b. 1978, Toronto) merges industrial materials with minimal aesthetics to examine fragility and aggression in modern surfaces. Working in Berlin, his compositions are precise yet volatile, exploring destruction as a form of creation.
Gringler’s work has been exhibited at König Galerie (Berlin), Lo Brutto Stahl (Paris), and Steve Turner (Los Angeles), among others.
Your purchase supports Dallas Contemporary’s mission to present the leading edge of contemporary art through exhibitions, performances, and public programs. To inquire about this work, please contact shop@dallascontemporary.org.
Jason Gringler
Steel/glass 2
48 x 36 inches
$1,000 USD
Jason Gringler (b. 1978, Toronto) merges industrial materials with minimal aesthetics to examine fragility and aggression in modern surfaces. Working in Berlin, his compositions are precise yet volatile, exploring destruction as a form of creation.
Gringler’s work has been exhibited at König Galerie (Berlin), Lo Brutto Stahl (Paris), and Steve Turner (Los Angeles), among others.
Your purchase supports Dallas Contemporary’s mission to present the leading edge of contemporary art through exhibitions, performances, and public programs. To inquire about this work, please contact shop@dallascontemporary.org.
Jason Gringler
Steel/glass 2
48 x 36 inches
$1,000 USD
Jason Gringler (b. 1978, Toronto) merges industrial materials with minimal aesthetics to examine fragility and aggression in modern surfaces. Working in Berlin, his compositions are precise yet volatile, exploring destruction as a form of creation.
Gringler’s work has been exhibited at König Galerie (Berlin), Lo Brutto Stahl (Paris), and Steve Turner (Los Angeles), among others.
Your purchase supports Dallas Contemporary’s mission to present the leading edge of contemporary art through exhibitions, performances, and public programs. To inquire about this work, please contact shop@dallascontemporary.org.
Jason Gringler’s process centers on the transformation of industrial detritus such as abandoned machinery, shattered electronics, and metal scraps into complex resin-encased assemblages. Working in his Berlin studio, he combines materials including cement, acrylic glass, spray enamel, and steel to embed these fragments into layered compositions. By suspending discarded tools and devices within transparent and reflective surfaces, Gringler creates works that function as both relics and abstractions, examining themes of obsolescence, preservation, and the material legacy of industrial production.
