Starting out with Fairfield Porter at Tibor de Nagy. This beauty greets one at the entrance. Gallery Link |
Then downstairs to Alexandre to see the Gregory Amenoffs. Gallery Link |
Such unusual paintings- these images are lighter than the dense and craggy paintings themselves. |
They owe a lot to early American landscape, as the press release makes clear. |
In several paintings, this hanging shape contains light, or water, or sun, an alternative landscape to its immediate surroundings. |
A sense of the surface- utterly painted. The light comes from deep within the paint, the juxtapositions of color. |
A swampy space and sunset... |
Perhaps my favorite work in the show, with daylight framing nightfall |
In the back, a Neal Welliver. |
It struck me with visual force that Maureen Gallace Gallace Linkmight be his rightful heir. |
More landscape: a lovely John Walker |
An artist new to me, Tom Uttech, of Wisconsin. |
Calm excess... |
Two more Amenoffs, as I emerge from the back |
The relationship to Dove and Hartley is particularly felt here. |
Onward to a lovely Maria Lassnig show at Petzel uptown. Gallery Link |
Hung opposite the previous painting - a moment, upon seeing, that brings one to laughter. |
A comedic, modernist shorthand begins to develop at odds with the naturalistic palette. |
And morphs into visions of power |
Or irony or blindness |
Detail. Lassnig kept a signed Alice Neel reproduction dedicated to her - one sees parallel interests between the two artists. |
Similar to Neel, in Lassnig's self portraits there is a powerful psychological force revealing a core facet of identity--here achieved through color and form as much as touch. |
Onward to visit fabled Buddhist LA painter Billy Al Bengston at Venus Over Manhattan. Gallery Link |
Here, Bengston paints a motorcycle series based on the actual one in the show, raced by his friend Aub LeBard. |
These are easel-size paintings. |
With wonderful direct application. The lights, however, created a strobe effect. Bengston's paintings, both the bikes and chevrons, looked simple and fresh, straight out of the studio, experimental. |
At Gagosian, Nude, From Modigliani to Currin. Gallery Link (turns out I missed a whole floor of this show - the historical floor with Cezanne, Giacometti, Picasso, Modigliani - show is on until November 19th, so there's time). Here, a gorgeous, simply gorgeous David Hockney- incredible color with surprising red and warm lavender highlights throughout, not to mention the geometry (see the square under table, for example, or the shadows leading out the door - what a painter! |
Really strange painting, not sure by whom. |
Made odder by its facture, which separated into impasto marks above the illusionist surface. |
Bacon |
Currin |
Wesselman - love this combine-like installation with the graphic figure and Renoir on the wall. |
Matisse |
Bourgeois |
Murakami, harking back to the early work first shown at Boesky in Soho in the 90s! These are 2010. |
Currin |
Detail, Currin |
Wesselman collage |
Jenny Saville. More when I return to view the top floor. |
Mary Jones at John Molloy on 78th St. Gallery Link |
Generous marks and the ad hoc addition of stencils,with a separate palette and history, make for dynamic layers that speak to the process of making -studio landscape, in a way. |
Then the more Surrealist roller paintings, with surfaces so lush I can only tell you to go see them for yourself. |
A 2014 collage with wallpaper and gold leaf. |
Smaller works. |
Then to the Met, with a Majolica crucifixion... |
and a Long Shawl, designed and made with goat fleece and silk in Paris by Denerous & Boglavy in 1849 |
Concluding at the bustling and beautiful Max Beckmann exhibition. Here, some landscapes by Beckmann: a mill in a forest... |
Park |
And a lovely, dramatic sunset over water. |
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