ArtSeen
Howardena Pindell: Autobiography
By Susan HarrisThe “Autobiography” series came about after a near fatal crash in which Pindell sustained severe injuries and memory loss. Early works from this series on view at Garth Greenan bear witness to the artist literally and figuratively piecing together fragments of her past.
Tiona Nekkia McClodden: Hold on, let me take the safety off
By Madeleine SeidelYou are hit first by the contrast. The clinical white of the gallery walls behind the black leather and paint draw in and repelequal and opposite forces. Within the freeing constraints of the gallery space, we are invited to explore an artistic vision of other types of freeing constraint: physical and psychological kinds, based off leather and trust and, most importantly, balance in pain and pleasure.
Postwar Women
By Jonathan GoodmanPostwar Women concentrates on the work of women who attended the Art Students League, emphasizing art made between 1945 and 1965 and including pieces created before and after those periods. The League has been particularly open to women, presenting them with the chance to study beginning in the middle of the 19th century (it opened in 1875).
Modernisms: Iranian, Turkish, and Indian Highlights from NYUs Abby Grey Collection
By Vivian LiModernisms focuses on the period of the 1960s and 1970s when Grey traveled and assembled her collection of approximately 700 works from the Middle East and Asia (114 of which are on view), after which she established the Grey Art Gallery at New York University.
Kim Tschang-Yeul: New York to Paris
By Robert C. MorganThe Korean painter Kim Tschang-Yeul is part of a generation that traveled outside East Asia in the 1960s and 70s in order to develop a more universal approach to painting. In those decades, South Korea existed under a military dictatorship that offered its citizensand specifically its artistsvery little exposure to what was happening culturally in the Western world.
Tetsuya Ishida: Self-Portrait of Other
By Jared QuintonIn the more than 70 works by Tetsuya Ishida now on view at Chicagos Wrightwood 659, the late Japanese artist offers anxious visions of the individual within consumer capitalism. The haunting, darkly fantastical paintings depict men flayed, devoured, and exploited by industrial manufacturing and the fruits of its production.
Betye Saar: The Legend of Black Girl’s Window
By Ann C. CollinsThe exhibitions centerpiece is a pivotal work in the Saars career that blended the mystical imagery the artist was using in her ongoing printmaking practice with political and biographical elements to form a self-portrait assemblage.
Alex Sewell: When I Wanted Everything
By Hovey BrockAlex Sewell puts his considerable skills to work in paintings with trompe loeil flourishes that mimic the effects of pen, pencil, and chalk, as well as illusionistic interiors and landscapes.
Julia Bland: The Half That Ties, the Half that Breaks
By Claire VoonAn unshakable sense of magic pervades almost all of Julia Blands laboriously fabricated fiber works in her first solo show at Andrew Rafacz gallery. Cut, stitched, painted, and burned canvases joined with hand-woven textiles hang like tapestries that thrum with entrancing geometric configurations. Even the exhibitions measured title, The Half That Ties, the Half that Breaks, evokes an incantationa sort of ritual poem seeking to resolve seemingly contrary forces.
Rachelle Dang: Uncertain Haven
By Valentina Di LisciaIn the middle of a small room at Lesley Heller Gallery is a slightly disconcerting object. Disconcerting because its form and features are those of a thing we should recognize, a familiar thing, not a recondite conceptual artwork: gabled roof, symmetrical windows, an unassuming exterior painted gradients of yellow and green, like the façade of an abandoned house creeping with the first faint spores of moss.
Hope Gangloff
By Kathleen HeftyLandscape painting isnt typically thought of as seductive or radical, but that isnt the case with Hope Gangloffs eponymous exhibition at Susan Inglett Gallery. Gangloffs uncanny use of color and suggestive line work sets a mood that is both alluring and enticing.
Agnes Denes: Absolutes & Intermediates
By Marcia E. VetrocqFrom the start, Denes has wielded mathematics, philosophy, and unflinching logic as the instruments of an intellectually formidable practice that is driven by a passionalmost a hungerfor discovery.
Helen Frankenthaler and Robert Motherwell: The Art of Marriage
By Alfred Mac AdamHumor is not a matter we associate with great artists, but it is with these star-crossed lovers, both dedicated body and soul to their craft but with the good sense to periodically stop making sense.
Wayne Thiebaud: Mountains 19652019
By Alfred Mac AdamThese mountains embody the most sensuous aspects of the beautiful, as Thiebaud is a fundamentally erotic artist whose work arouses the viewers appetites.
Suzanne Bocanegra: Wardrobe Test
By Amanda GluibizziThroughout Wardrobe Test, we encounter women trying things on: costumes, other voices, new or different personae. And yet despite, or even through, this garb, we also witness glimpses of what we have to assume or hope to believe is the person within, the compassionate collaborator and mourner, the artist as empath, the woman of faith above all else.
Pat Passlof: The Brush is the Finger of the Brain
By Eleanor HeartneyWhat comes through in these paintings is a radiant pictorial intelligence, a questing curiosity about what paint can do and a willingness to take formal risks.
Okayama Art Summit 2019: If the Snake
By Osman Can YerebakanBlending with its surroundings, the engaging art spills outside, runs through the streets, and bleeds into uncharted, overlooked interiors, bringing fresh breath to sites frequently occupied yet rarely used outside of their original intents.
Sanam Khatibi: An hour before the Devil fell
By Elizabeth BuheThe show at PPOW consists of 22 paintings and two wall-bound sculptures (all 2019). Five large paintings depict reposing, peachy-porcelain nudes arranged on shallow, tree-framed outcroppings, surrounded by the detritus of extravagant feasts: dishes loaded with fruit, meticulously-crafted cakes, chalices alight with flames, even an oyster shell full of pearls. This bounty, however, is haunting.
Michael Eade: past is present is future
By Jonathan GoodmanMichael Eade is an American artist showing at Echo Hes Fou Gallery, located in Bedford Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. The artists shown at Hes gallery are mostly from Mainland China, reflecting her background, but the gallerist also shows non-Chinese artists, and Eade is one of them.
Mark Leckey: O’ Magic Power of Bleakness
By Toby KampsIn his engulfing, otherworldly video installation at Tate Britain, O Magic Power of Bleakness, Mark Leckey has transformed a cavernous gallery into a freeway underpassspecifically his childhood hangout under the M53 Motorway, which runs through his deindustrialized hometown on the Wirral Peninsula across the River Mersey from Liverpool.
Whose Reality?
By Mengna DaHere I am, standing on Fifth Avenue just across from Apples recently reopened Batcave of a store and chasing a liquid, care-free form as it flies in and out of the midtown skyscrapers surrounding us. While the shimmering ghost takes on various colors and shapes, sometimes even forming words, a high-pitched voice, reminiscent, perhaps, of Bjork, sings along with it.
Janine Antoni: I am fertile ground
By Nolan KellyI am fertile ground is a piece imbued with the themes of Antonis workthe body as an artistic tool, both for making and meaning-making, which corresponds to the art objects that will inevitably outlast it. Her work as a product hinges upon her physical form in the time she makes it, a period sometimes as specific and short as the instant of a photograph.
Caroline Coon: The Great Offender
By William DavieAny initial humor found in the absurdity of these two hyper-sexualized scenes, perhaps especially for straight male audiences, quickly gives way to uneasiness and introspection, resulting in a sudden and powerful realization that the only way systematic change can begin is from within the viewer.
Ron Gorchov: At the Cusp of the 80s, Paintings 1979–1983
By David CarrierEight of Ron Gorchovs classic paintings on shields, executed in the late 1970s and early 1980s, are currently on view in the new uptown gallery of Cheim & Read. Two of them arch out vertically, while the others are horizontally oriented. None, needless to say, are either rectangular or flat.
Brendan Fernandes: Contract and Release
By Avram C. AlpertI detect a strong Marxism underlying the work, moving from the struggle of black and white to a resolved dialectic in red. Their work completed, the performers lounge on the sculpture, rather than dragging and assembling it. Such subtle resistance matches again with Noguchi, who, curator Dakin Hart reminds visitors, was a social activist most of [whose] efforts to shape society were indirect and abstract.
Hadi Fallahpisheh: Almost Alone
By Simon WuIn Blind Rat (2019), one of 15 large photographs featured in Hadi Fallahpishehs exhibition at Tramps, a rat wears tiny, 90s Matrix-style glasses and spreads its legs suggestively, its crotch replaced by a mouse hole
Vija Celmins: To Fix the Image in Memory
By Cynthia CruzVija Celmins began her career with the ambitious goal of wishing to remove gesture, composition, and the artists personality from the work of art.
Bojana Ginn: Phygital Muse
By Rebecca BrantleyThe future looks good in Bojana Ginns Phygital Muse. Nature and technology co-exist throughout Ginns interdisciplinary exhibition. She explores transhumanism, a school of thought dedicated to the notion that technology will radically enhance human life.
Marco Maggi: Initialism (From Obscurantism to Enlightenment)
By Alfred Mac AdamMarco Maggi has brought about the improbable union of Plato and Stéphane Mallarmé. Specifically, the marriage of Plato's allegory of the cave in the Republic and Mallarmé's Un coup des dés jamais n'abolira le hasard, his polyphonic text, meant to be read simultaneously at several levels in order to be understood.
Andrea del Verrocchio: Sculptor and Painter of Renaissance Florence
By Christian KleinbubAbout midway through the National Gallerys exhibition Andrea del Verrocchio: Sculptor and Painter of Renaissance Florence, you find yourself standing in front of a beautiful young woman carved from marble that has mellowed to a honey-brown hue.
Tamar Hirschfeld: Neuland
By Naomi LevIn 1902 Theodor Herzl, the founder of political Zionism, wrote an iconic novel titled Altneuland, also known as The Old New Land and Tel Aviv. This futuristic utopian story is about a young Viennese-Jewish intellectual who travels to Jaffa to find a land that has drastically transformed over the years: it is peaceful and well industrialized.
Sandra Brewster: Blur
By Magdalyn AsimakisThe repetition of Sandra Brewsters Blur portraits in the Art Gallery of Ontarios Canadian wing has a potency that exceeds the modest room they are displayed in. Installed with precision, there is a rhythmic nature to this single series of works that is both meditative and pointed.
Antony Gormley
By Daniel PatemanAntony Gormley at Londons Royal Academy is a confounding bundle of contradictions. With this solo showthe artists most significant in the UK for over a decadecurators Martin Caiger-Smith and Sarah Lea have united iconic older works with newly commissioned pieces, arriving at a blend of the imposing, the minimalist, and the aesthetically austere.
Albert Oehlen: Fn Paintings
By Tom McGlynnAlbert Oehlen comes out of what might now be considered a tradition of anti-tradition in post war German painting. It was established by Sigmar Polke, one of Oehlens mentors at the Hochschule für bildende Künste Hamburg, as a bricolage of pop iconography and pattern combined with bravura impasto and dissolute washes.
Albert Oehlen
By David RhodesThe Serpentine exhibition is extraordinary. This show highlights Oehlens ongoing engagement with both the Rothko Chapel in Houston, Texas and the Kiev-born American artist John D. Graham s painting Tramonto Spaventoso (Terrifying Sunset) from 194049. In the high-vaulted central gallery space of the Serpentine Galleryaround which smaller adjoining spaces provide views out onto the parkare a group of canvases scaled to match Rothkos horizontal paintings in the Houston chapel.
Torkwase Dyson: 1919: Blackwater
By Nina WolpowA new solo show of work by the New-York-based artist Torkwase Dyson grapples with the historically hostile relationship between the Black body and what is known in contemporary architectural theory as the built environment.
Francesca DiMattio: Statues
By Robert R. ShaneFrancesca DiMattios monstrous 9-foot tall She-Wolf (2018), with a bulbous black head stretching out from grafted human and animal forms, including a porcelain human front leg and a life-sized hunting dog standing in for a rear leg, restores the wildness of this maternal wolf once immortalized in the famous Etruscan bronze (500 BCE) that the sculpture references.
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
By Charlotte KentMcCullerss work evokes a sense of alienationboth from society and, crucially, from oneself. However, to many she also represents an enthusiastic, if not necessarily fully consummated, embrace of her own desires.
Terry Fox: Resonance
By Hannah Maier-KatkinResonance as it is known to the public although affectionately the series has been termed The Terry Fox Extravaganza by its co-curators Dena Beard, director of The Lab art space in the Mission neighborhood of San Francisco, and Constance Lewallen of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA)is a multi-venue celebration of the late, Seattle-born, Europhilic Fox's work and contributions to the Bay Area as a member of the first generation of conceptual artists in the late 1960s and 1970s.
David Hartt: The Histories (Le Mancenillier)
By Alex JenOff to the side of a video in David Hartts site-specific The Histories (Le Mancenillier) for Frank Lloyd Wrights Beth Sholom Synagogue outside of Philadelphia, papaya leaves nod in the breeze and burn white with sunlight, catching the curving shadows of nearby foliage.
Rajni Perera: Traveller
By Esmé HogeveenSleek, yet ornate; futuristic, yet traditional; feminine, yet androgynous. Mixed media portraits of powerful figures line the walls of Traveller, a solo exhibition by multidisciplinary artist Rajni Perera.
A Letter from Tbilisi
By Greg LindquistTbilisi, Georgias capital where nearly half of its population resides, now has an international art fair and a steady flow of unfettered capital funneling into large development projects of former Soviet factories as well as the accompanying problems of gentrification and worsening economic inequality.