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Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin PLY WOULD

Moran Moran is pleased to present PLY WOULD, an exhibition by Lizzie Fitch (b. 1981) and Ryan Trecartin (b. 1981), featuring a new sculptural theater housing two interconnected movies. Known for their immersive installations, the artists present several standalone sculptures alongside video work within a room-size hybrid structure as part of their multiphase project Whether Line.

Whether Line was initiated in 2016, when the artists relocated to rural Ohio and constructed permanent sets and land work. Comprising a hobby barn, a watchtower, a lazy river trench, and other structures, the site operates as a generative framework—part landscape, part stage, part conceptual engine. Aspects of this real-life setting are transposed into the current body of work as an amusement park or “culture” preserve. Originally commissioned by Fondazione Prada as a large-scale multimedia installation in Milan, the movie that shares the name of the larger project, Whether Line (2019/2026), uses the fiction of idealized rurality as a starting point, exploring contested concepts of territory and property and the inherent mutability of boundaries, whether existential, psychosocial, or physical. In the movie, narrative functions spatially rather than sequentially. Plot points operate as locations on a map that can be entered, revisited, and regulated, while characters are defined less by interior psychology than by position and mobility. The work imagines a speculative social order in which people are featured within a managed environment, their identities preserved according to rules written by an “access class.” What appears as leisure or protection gradually reveals itself as a system of surveillance and constraint—a horror structure embedded within the language of tourism and care.

Trecartin has continued to revisit and mine this foundational video work, a strategy he has employed once before in Junior War (2013). In this exhibition, Whether Line (2019/2026), the movie, finds its final form. Structurally, the work embraces iteration, contradiction, and simultaneity, further underscoring the artist’s interest in the fundamental instability and fluidity of meaning.

The movie TITLE WAIVE (2026) is an evolution of Trecartin’s familiar linguistic and editing devices, with dense layers of virtual rendering, animation, captioning, digital manipulation, and musical compositions recorded live as part of the artists’ expansive performance Audience Plant (2024). Characters recur from Whether Line (2019/2026) but function differently inside the new, partly animated environment. Through continual layering and return, characters and scenes persist across altered states. Lines of dialogue are repeated and tweaked, echoing in loops and fragments, often with a lumbering quality. Faces and settings transform and contort, slipping between the real and the augmented, the subtly imperceptible and the fully uncanny. “We buy and sell origin stories, any condition, any situation,” says one character. “You will never leave the moodboard,” utters another. “Try it again, try it again. More. Build.”

Within the exhibition space, the movies are installed inside a sculptural theater that echoes the barn-like structures seen on screen, such as wooden decking, weatherboard cladding, wallpaper, carpet, banisters, sofas, and chairs. Elements of the installation play with the boundaries of interior and exterior space and between observation and participation. The two screens on which the movies are projected are placed on opposite sides of the same partition wall, providing a sense of multiple vantage points on a continuously evolving work.

A series of sculptural works occupy the space alongside the videos. Composed of human figures scaled smaller than life, these sculptures act as both a visual and psychological connection between the audience and the two movies. Conceived as software proxies that represent the park’s modeling logic and code, they give human form to the site’s underlying systems—the park’s “back end”—and extend the artists’ long-standing use of character as a structural device: a way of organizing action and language rather than simply expressing interiority. Titles such as Lip Sink (2025), Page (2025), Drift Watch (2025), and Open Fire (2025) position these works as operational units within a larger structure. In a reversal of the artists’ typical process, these figurative works were produced first with the intention that they would be digitized and animated, ultimately serving as framing devices that inform the movie’s narrative and shape how its plots unfold. These sculptural figures appear, in their animated state, in the intro and outro for TITLE WAIVE (2026) and were created by longtime collaborator Rhett LaRue using a gaming environment he developed to mirror the artists’ real-life site in Ohio.

Dates

February 21 - April 18, 2026

Opening Reception

Saturday, February 21, 6-8pm

Location

641 N Western Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90004

Artist

Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin

Installation Views

All images: Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026, installation view. Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Installation view
Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin: PLY WOULD, 2026
Courtesy of the artists and Morán Morán

Artworks

Ryan Trecartin
TITLE WAIVE, 2026
4K 60fps color video with stereo audio
Runtime: 33 minutes and 35 seconds
Edition of 5 plus 2AP
Courtesy of the artist, Sprüth Magers, and Morán Morán

Ryan Trecartin
Whether Line, 2019/2026
4K 60fps color video with stereo audio
Runtime: 1 hour, 40 minutes, and 26 seconds
Edition of 3 plus 2AP
Courtesy of the artist, Sprüth Magers, and Morán Morán

Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin
ReRun (m.v.2), 2024
Mannequin, acrylic paint, wig, high density epoxy putty, silicone foam, boots, polyester stuffing, gauze, steel, and rocks*
41.5 x 28.25 x 28.375 inches
(105.4 x 71.8 x 72.1 cm)
*Rock dimensions variable
Courtesy of the artists, Sprüth Magers, and Morán Morán

Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin with Rhett LaRue
Page (m.v.3), 2024
Mannequin, human hair wig, vest, panty hose, lightweight epoxy putty, high density epoxy putty, hair pins, steel, epoxy, polyester stuffing, gauze, thread, gel medium, and rocks*
39.25 x 26.5 x 27.25 inches
(99.7 x 67.3 x 69.2 cm)
*Rock dimensions variable
Courtesy of the artists, Sprüth Magers, and Morán Morán

Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin with Kenny Curran
Blank Fire (m.v.1), 2024
Mannequin, wig, polyester foam, gauze, panty hose, brushable silicone, steel, fake rock, barrette, and rocks*
46.75 x 29.125 x 21.25 inches
(118.7 x 74 x 54 cm)
*Rock dimensions variable
Courtesy of the artists, Sprüth Magers, and Morán Morán

Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin
Drift Watch (m.v.2), 2024
Mannequin, acrylic paint, human hair wig, lightweight epoxy putty, fake crocs, spray paint. Epoxy, steel, barrette, and rocks*
32.75 x 29.5 x 21.5 inches
(83.2 x 74.9 x 54.6 cm)
*Rock dimensions variable
Courtesy of the artists, Sprüth Magers, and Morán Morán

Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin
Lip Sink (m.v.1), 2024
Mannequin, wig, brushable silicone, silicone dye, epoxy, steel, lightweight epoxy putty, high density epoxy putty, polyester foam, gauze, panty hose, and rocks*
51.5 x 28.25 x 22.5 inches
(130.8 x 71.8 x 57.2 cm)
*Rock dimensions variable
Courtesy of the artists, Sprüth Magers, and Morán Morán

Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin with Kenny Curran
Mug (m.v.3), 2024
Mannequin, wig, fake rock, lightweight epoxy putty, high density epoxy putty, acrylic paint, steel rod, epoxy, and rocks*
54.75 x 30 x 28.25 inches
(139 x 76.2 x 71.8 cm)
*Rock dimensions variable
Courtesy of the artists, Sprüth Magers, and Morán Morán

Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin with Kenny Curran
PanderSun (m.v.3), 2024
Mannequin, acrylic paint, human hair wig, underwear, polyester foam, gauze, panty hose, lightweight epoxy putty, high density epoxy putty, steel, gel medium, duct tape, earring, and rocks*
38.5 x 25 x 31.125 inches
(97.8 x 63.5 x 79.1 cm)
*Rock dimensions variable
Courtesy of the artists, Sprüth Magers, and Morán Morán

Lizzie Fitch / Ryan Trecartin
BuckIt (m.v.1) & Fish Sticks (m.v.2), 2024
Mannequins, acrylic paint, wig, clothing, spray paint, house paint, polyester foam, gauze, panty hose, lightweight epoxy putty, high density epoxy putty, and rocks*
28.25 x 41.5 x 46.25 inches
(71.8 x 105.4 x 117.5 cm)
*Rock dimensions variable
Courtesy of the artists, Sprüth Magers, and Morán Morán