And of course the glimmer of light... |
Thomas Nozkowski, Untitled, 1976, Black metallic rayon, vinyl, glass, aquarium gravel, milk glass, foam core, 39.5 x 50 |
Lisa Beck's symmetrical mirror painting, "Double Burst," 2012, enamel on broken mirror mounted on painted panels, 12 x 24 |
Joanne Greenbaum's ceramic sculpture, front, and Lydia Dona's "Cities of Doubt," 2012, 60 x 66 inches, using oil, acrylic, metallic and sign paint on canvas. |
Fabian Marcaccio. "Swing State" presents unusual output by well-known artists, and this sculptural Marcaccio, greeting us at the door, certainly came as a surprise. |
Fabian Marcaccio, Child Soldier Structural Canvas #2, 2013, pigmented ink on canvas, aluminum, alkyd paint, and silicone, 48 x 36 x 30--the size of a small child. |
On to Brooklyn and Pierogi, to see Sarah Walker's new work. |
Beginning with pours, and working back into them, expands her language of smaller, compartmentalized liquid areas into a new internal scale. |
Inter-galactic constellations emerge, belied by bifurcated compositions that imbue "surface tension" with new definition. |
Moving about the paintings, one sees letters and numbers emerging from the abstract phenomena. |
Walker has experimented with gels to give her pours a rhythmic, evenly patterned quality she then paints back into. |
Pattern surrounds bursts and points of focus that sometimes pierce the surface into otherworldly spaces. The punctum is both illusionistic and material--the touch of the hand is present. |
Stanley Whitney's exhibition at Team, now on Grand St. in Soho, which seems to be re-emerging as a hub for galleries. |
Exciting paintings--loosely brushed, with knowing color relationships. |
Counter-rhythms, overlays and shadows or strips of a related color complicate the paintings. |
The eye thrills to color relationships attenuated by touch. One thinks equally about the dynamic grids of Mondrian and the carefree, brushed surfaces of late deKooning. |
Ranges of warmth, moving in and through the wheel, exploiting paint's material power to evoke sun-kissed landscapes. |
Down the street at Peter Freeman, Catherine Murphy! Here, a meticulous drawing of chocolates, "Half Full," 12 x 12 inches, leading us through multiple spaces across a lavish, pencil surface. |
Small, wood knot painting, one of many, which sang with chromatic and proportional harmony. |
Detail of the larger work below. Murphy's look, mark, look methodology reminds me of Neil Welliver and Richard Bosman's paintings, with less brio to the paint. |
This results in painting that borders the line of drawing, yet they are extremely material. One is extremely aware of the hand, and the continued back-and-forth between observation and touch. |
Gift box, a jade surprise. |
Ink drawings by Cynthia Lin at Garis & Hahn on the Bowery, from a three-person show that just closed. |
Review: Finding Empathy in the Confines of the Skin |
Back to Pierogi for James Esber's exhibition of new gouache drawings. "Prostrate Figure" is my favorite. |
An ornate, calligraphic application of material evolves anthropomorphic perspectives of humans, in a concise version of his Sculpey works from the 1990s. |
Esber |
Detail--free and easy wandering in the paint. |
In another part of Brooklyn at the Gallery at I-Gap: Nancy Friedemann and her large mylar paintings. |
The Gallery at I-Gap is the lobby of a Richard Meier-designed building, which hosts exhibitions every four months. |
Friedemann's fanciful works, informed by lace patterns and South American folklore, explore ways that colonialism insinuates itself within decorative imagery. |
Ambitiously-scaled, generously painted works invite us in, |
and introduce imagery with historical resonance. |
Last stop Edward Thorpe, Chelsea, to view Judy Simonian's knockout solo exhibition. |
Talk about materiality! Acrylic acts like oil, pats of the brush become mountains. |
A series on fish was a strange and interesting side note to her usual works that combine disparate images. |
Swipes of paint yield shimmering forms fleeting past. |
Adding landscape space to split the perspective and take us far into the distance. |
Or reinforce the surface of the canvas. |
Here, it was as if landing on a foreign planet, only to enter a theatre space. | See more here: Judith Simonian at Thorp |
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