David Kramer: Exactly the Same… Only Different
February 19 – March 21, 2026
Satchel Projects is pleased to present Exactly the Same… Only Different, a solo exhibition of recent works by New York–based artist David Kramer, on view from February 19 through March 21, 2026. The gallery will host an opening reception with the artist on Thursday, February 19 from 6-8 PM.
Known for his wry, deadpan text-and-image-based paintings and textiles, David Kramer’s work skewers the excesses of contemporary American life. Exactly the Same… Only Different brings together paintings, sculptural furniture, and wall-hung hook rugs that collectively form a satirical portrait of aspiration, nostalgia, and self-mythologizing.
Mining vintage print magazines and contemporary social media imagery, Kramer has developed a pop vocabulary of banal yet seductive forms. Paired with superficially clichéd but carefully chosen phrases and idioms, image and text reflect and refract one another, generating layered and open-ended meanings.
In recent works on paper, Kramer deploys text both directly and indirectly, sometimes eliminating it entirely from the painting and shifting it into the title. These wordless paintings depict obsolete, “muted” carriers of information: a manual typewriter, a rotary phone, an early model PC.
Sunsets are a perennial subject for Kramer. They are often sourced from print advertising and from COVID-era “escape” photos shared by those lucky enough to leave urban centers. In Kramer’s words,
“I’m always coming up with new ways of both admiring and dismissing the beauty of the sunset. Often the texts become somewhat self-deprecating; they’re about my inability to capture the beauty of nature. The text is often a reveal about my desire to do something that I am failing in front of you to do – to make a beautiful sunset that rivals the actual sunset that someone (or I) have photographed that is just stunning.”
The sun, of course, sets in the west. In these works, humor and satire are used to both embrace and parody the dream that California has symbolized — a kind of “westward wistfulness” that reads differently through the darkened lens of recent natural disasters.
Since 2016, Kramer has produced handmade hook rugs in parallel with his text-based paintings. In this labor-intensive process, burlap is stretched across a frame and acrylic yarn in bright pop hues is pulled through the weave. Multiple strands are often combined within a single loop, producing optical blends of color. The resulting “soft tondos” are hung unstretched on the wall, still attached to their burlap grounds.
Kramer arrived at his multidisciplinary practice intuitively and for practical reasons. The hook rugs emerged from the furniture, which in turn grew out of the need for props in his videos. In his early video work, Kramer constructed his own sets and props, and to this end he taught himself to make upholstered furniture. The two furniture pieces in Exactly the Same… Only Different function as both sculpture and a place to sit to view the wall-hung works.
Cultural attitudes are expressed through everyday imagery. David Kramer decodes contemporary visual language and coaxes out the ideas concealed within it. On its surface his work reads as cultural commentary, but at its core it is deeply personal and gently self-mocking. As history stumbles forward (or backward), the meanings in these works likewise kaleidoscopically shift, and new relevancies are revealed.
David Kramer was born in New York City, where he currently lives and works. A recipient of fellowships from the Pollock-Krasner Foundation and the New York Foundation for the Arts, Kramer has exhibited widely in the United States and abroad. His work has been featured at leading contemporary art fairs, including Art Basel and The Armory Show, and is held in public collections such as the Museum London (London, Ontario), the Musée National d’Art Moderne, Centre Pompidou (Paris), and the Lower East Side Printshop (New York), among others. His videos and performances have been presented at the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Centre Pompidou, the Brooklyn Museum, and Midway Contemporary Art. Kramer’s work has been discussed in Vogue, The New Yorker, New York Magazine, Artforum, Artnews, Artnet, British GQ, Esquire, The New York Times, and The Globe and Mail (Canada). He has collaborated with CELINE and Hedi Slimane on the Men’s SS2020 line and has contributed to The New York Times Opinionator section. Kramer received his MFA from Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, and his BA from The George Washington University, Washington, DC.