Nohra Haime Gallery

Nohra Haime Gallery Representing an internationally diverse group of contemporary artists with varying expertise in pain

Nohra Haime Gallery was founded in New York in 1981 on Madison Avenue and 78th Street. In 1988, the gallery moved to the Fuller Building on 57th Street. Since 2010, the gallery is located at the Crown Building, on 5th Avenue. Since its inception, the principal focus of the gallery has been the representation of a selected group of international contemporary artists whose diverse practices include

painting, drawing, sculpture, video and photography. The gallery has exhibited new voices and historical artists, as well as established artists from the United States, Europe, and Latin America. The gallery is known for organizing legendary significant group exhibitions as well as one person exhibitions. The gallery has also specialized in the resale of select works of art from the 20th century. Nohra Haime Gallery is a member of the Art Dealers Association of America. ARTISTS REPRESENTED: The Niki de Saint Phalle Foundation, The Estate of Juan Downey, NATALIA ARIAS, ALVARO BARRIOS, HUGO BASTIDAS, ROSALYN BODYCOMB, NICOLA BOLLA, CAROL K. BROWN, ANDREA CHIESI, JULIE HEDRICK, VALERIE HIRD, SUSANA JAIME-MENA, MENASHE KADISHMAN, LEOPOLDO MALER, JAVIER MARIN, LIKA MUTAL, EVE SONNEMAN, ADAM STRAUS, FRANCISCA SUTIL, HUGO TILLMAN, JOHN VAN ALSTINE, SOPHIA VARI

Hird’s compositions unfold as perceptual fields structured through rhythm, repetition, and subtle variation. Undulating ...
04/30/2026

Hird’s compositions unfold as perceptual fields structured through rhythm, repetition, and subtle variation. Undulating bands of color and translucent veils evoke the simultaneity of oceanic movement and atmospheric drift, collapsing distinctions between above and below. Rather than depicting landscape as a fixed horizon, Hird constructs an environment in constant transformation, one that resists stasis and instead foregrounds circulation, exchange, and flux.

VALERIE HIRD
ACRUMI : AIR, 2013
oil on linen
36 x 48 in. 91.4 x 122 cm.............

Last days of VALERIE HIRD: ELEMENTAL ASCENDANT. A solo show by the artist! 🙌At the intersection of sea and sky, Valerie ...
04/29/2026

Last days of VALERIE HIRD: ELEMENTAL ASCENDANT. A solo show by the artist! 🙌
At the intersection of sea and sky, Valerie Hird constructs a visual language of continuity in which elemental forces dissolve into one another, forming a unified system of movement and exchange.

VALERIE HIRD
TERO: EARTH, 2013
oil on linen
36 x 48 in. 91.4 x 122 cm.............

Join us from Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 am to 6:00 pm to experience the marvelous paintings of Hugo Bastidas🙌AF...
03/21/2026

Join us from Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 am to 6:00 pm to experience the marvelous paintings of Hugo Bastidas🙌

AFTER VAN GOGH, 2023
oil on canvas
48 x 60 in. 121.9 x 152.4 cm.

Throughout the exhibition, Bastidas returns to a central premise: that many realities unfold in plain sight without bein...
03/18/2026

Throughout the exhibition, Bastidas returns to a central premise: that many realities unfold in plain sight without being fully recognized. By bringing attention to these conditions, the paintings propose remembering as an active gesture, one that acknowledges what has been overlooked and invites a deeper engagement with the present. In doing so, Let Me Remember Things I Don’t Know (Capturing the Imagination) offers a space for reflection where viewers are encouraged not only to look, but to reconsider what it means to see, to remember, and to remain attentive to the subtle forces shaping our shared experience.

PAYING ATTENTION, 2026
oil on canvas
40 x 60 in. 101.6 x 152.4 cm.

In Haul, the artist draws on the removal of Theodore Roosevelt’s statue from the American Museum of Natural History as a...
03/17/2026

In Haul, the artist draws on the removal of Theodore Roosevelt’s statue from the American Museum of Natural History as a point of departure to reflect on the ongoing process of reckoning with historical narratives and the weight of inherited representations🙌

HAUL, 2025
oil on canvas
48 x 72 in. 121.9 x 182.9 cm.

The exhibition brings together works that reflect on conditions we live with, social, historical, and psychological,  th...
03/14/2026

The exhibition brings together works that reflect on conditions we live with, social, historical, and psychological, that are present before us yet not fully understood.
On view Let Me Remember Things I Don’t Know, Capturing the Imagination

SHADOWS, 2026
watercolor and graphite on paper 22 x 30 in. 55.9 x 76.2 cm.

Rooted in the idea of recognizing what has unfolded “under our nose,” the paintings invite viewers to consider how aware...
03/13/2026

Rooted in the idea of recognizing what has unfolded “under our nose,” the paintings invite viewers to consider how awareness emerges through reflection, and how remembering can become a way of moving forward.

Visit the exhibition through April 4th,2026
HUGO BASTIDAS
PREPARING FOR SPRING, 2004
oil on canvas 50 x 60 in. 127 x 152.4 cm.

Join us for the opening of Let Me Remember Things I Don’t Know (Capturing the Imagination) by Hugo Bastidas at Nohra Hai...
02/26/2026

Join us for the opening of Let Me Remember Things I Don’t Know (Capturing the Imagination) by Hugo Bastidas at Nohra Haime Gallery.

🥂 Opening Reception: Thursday, March 12, 2026 | 6–8 PM
🗓 On view: March 9 – April 4
📍 500 A West 21 Street. New York

Through striking, carefully composed paintings, Bastidas explores the social and historical forces unfolding in plain sight, inviting us to look again, remember differently, and question what we think we know.

The exhibition will be open through April, 2026

SUSANA JAIME-MENAMOSAIC, 2000copper and glass on wood15 x 15 x 2 in.  38.1 x 38.1 x 5 cm.signed, dated verso
02/21/2026

SUSANA JAIME-MENA
MOSAIC, 2000
copper and glass on wood
15 x 15 x 2 in. 38.1 x 38.1 x 5 cm.
signed, dated verso

02/20/2026

Colombia is a country of many regions, each shaped by its own histories and identities, and the Caribbean is no exception.
In Nosotros 172 años después, artist Ruby Rumié revisits the visual archive of the 19th-century Chorographic Commission and historical texts to question the social fragmentation that continues to shape how the Colombian Caribbean is represented and understood today.
Through a series of photographic portraits, the project reflects on the absence, and construction of images within the historical narratives that have defined the region, opening space to rethink memory, identity, and who gets to be seen.

Email us at [email protected] to get yours, we have worldwide shipping!💥

Address

500 West 21st Street
New York, NY
10011

Opening Hours

Tuesday 10am - 6pm
Wednesday 10am - 6pm
Thursday 10am - 6pm
Friday 10am - 6pm
Saturday 10am - 6pm

Telephone

(212) 888-3550

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Nohra Haime Gallery posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Category

//iconSize: [32, 32], //html: '' }) .bindTooltip(name, { //permanent: true, direction: 'bottom', //offset: L.point(12, 25), //opacity: 0.88, interactive: true }) .bindPopup(name); markersLayer.addLayer(marker); } function getMore() { if (gettingMore) { return; } gettingMore = true; var center = map.getCenter(); $.ajax({ url: "/vicinitysearch", data: { lat: center.lat, lng: center.lng, country: "UNITED STATES" } }) .done(function(data) { var added = 0; data.forEach(function(loc) { if (!locationIds.includes(loc.id)) { var mapLoc = {id:loc.id,lat:loc.latitude,lng:loc.longitude,title:trunc20(loc.name),popupHtml:loc.popupHtml,urlPath:loc.urlPath,pictureUrl:loc.pictureUrl}; locations.push(mapLoc); locationIds.push(loc.id); map._addMarker(mapLoc); added++; } }); }) .always(function() { gettingMore = false; }); } map._clearMarkers = function() { markersLayer.clearLayers(); } }); }, 4000); });