Barbara Rossi at the New Museum. Acrylic on two-sided plexi. |
Rossi, Imagst and SAIC Professor, showing works from the 70s in the exhibitions space on the ground floor. http://www.newmuseum.org/exhibitions/view/barbara-rossi-poor-traits |
These gleam and it is hard to get the color, but Rossi's love for Indian painting is clear. She authored a book on the subject in 2000. See the link here: http://www.amazon.com/From-Ocean-Painting-Popular-Paintings/dp/019511194X |
Rossi drawing. |
Not only an incredible eye, mind and hand, but a fabulous person and teacher. A bow to you, Barbara Rossi. |
At Fergus McCaffrey, Sadamasa Motonaga. |
http://fergusmccaffrey.com/exhibition/sadamasa-motonaga-2015-fergus-mccaffrey-new-york/ |
Motonaga was a member of the Gutai group. |
In addition to these airbrush and acrylic paintings he wrote children's books! |
This is work he made in New York when he visited in the 1970s. |
The show is not aesthetically as focused as presented so far: many works are shown together. |
But these airbrush characters are favorites. |
Frank Owen at Nancy Hoffman |
Owen works in Keene, NY. His studio there is palatial; I visited this summer. He is an aficionado and expert with acrylic paint. |
This new work shows a slipping away from his fealty to the grid. |
Alexi Worth interviewed Owen for the Brooklyn Rail. Read it here: http://www.brooklynrail.org/2015/11/art/frank-owen-with-alexi-worth |
Simon Hantai (1992-2008), "Blancs," at Kasmin. http://www.paulkasmingallery.com/exhibition/simon-hanta--blancs |
These are canvases that have been folded, and the exterior of the fold painted with acrylic. |
They are then unfolded to create patterns. |
Consequently the texture of each painting is rippled, raw and topographical with respect to the process of its making. |
There was a show of his "pliages" at Muchnin earlier this spring. http://www.mnuchingallery.com/exhibitions/simon-hanta |
Mary Jones watercolor from 2008, in the exhibition "Beyond Decoration: Identity, Expression and Adornment in Art," at Hudson Guild, organized by Jim Furlong. http://hudsonguild.org/event/opening-reception-beyond-decoration-identity-expression-and-adornment-in-art/ |
Early indications of painterly surfaces in Jones' current Xray portraits (previous post): exuberant splashes, the shift between photographic image and paint, doubling the image in ways. |
Also, a halo effect from spray paint in subsequent works. |
Mary Jones, detail |
In the same show, technological shards by Gabriel J. Schuldiner. |
He trademarked these works as hybridsculpturalpaintings. |
Excessive surfaces - when to stop? |
Hudson Guild |
Caroll Dunham's exhibition at Barbra Gladstone http://www.gladstonegallery.com/exhibition/10750/installation-view#&panel1-1 |
The X painting |
Reams of drawings showing how he got there |
An exhibition about process |
As well as surface |
Echoed shapes, rendered like drawings |
Often including drawing |
A lovely, self-contained landscape by Caroll Dunham |
Last call: Beatriz Milhazes at Cohan (Chelsea) http://www.jamescohan.com/exhibitions/2015-10-22_beatriz-milhazes |
Blunt crazy surfaces that are literally painted and collaged together |
The work is dense, direct |
And at Ed Thorpe, a lovely group exhibition, Receptive Fields. http://edwardthorpgallery.com/2015-receptive-fields This is Sara Faux, fresh from Yale, MFA 2015 |
Detail - crazy and lovely shifts |
Sarah Faux, eye painting |
From Tom McGlynn's recently closed exhibition "Minimax" at Bullet Space. http://bulletspace.org/site/minimax I did not know that Don Voisine painted on styrofoam surfaces as well as wood , and it thrills me to see these pristine compositions on such quotidian grounds. |
In the front of the gallery's three rooms, buoyant work by Mary McDonnell, a veteran painter heretofore unknown to me. |
Humorously playing with several Tom McGlynn paintings behind. |
A photogram by Tenesh Webber, in which the center becomes a void, exploded. |
No comments:
Post a Comment