We start with Guy Goodwin's excellent show at Brennan Griffin. Why excellent? Strong, weird objects that invite the eye to roam. Read and see more here: Gallery Link |
Which offers a hilarious handout interview with David Reed in which the artist discusses the torture he feels making his work. |
Clearly the labor is there. |
DR: {Joseph Beuys} liked Palermo's work because it was 'porous.' |
Here, an arialist, one of many gifted performers in the splendid Norte Maar production Combine at Brooklyn's Muse. Foundation Link |
Speaking of dance: a small sketch by Amy Feldman in her show Nerve Reserve at James Cohan, LES Gallery Link |
The paintings risk fleeting touch, the very moment. Their surfaces are beautiful, the paint glossy and wet and brush load perfect. |
Jim Drain at Natalie Karg. Gallery Link |
I enjoyed the anthropomorphism |
Worlds within worlds on small floor pieces, reminding me of the topographies of Nicole Awai and others. |
At Sargent's Daughters, a magnificent group show, the Coverly Set. Gallery Link |
Trompe L'Oeil fades and flat gesture - delicious and just right |
Ann Craven's gorgeous bird |
"The Coverly Set highlights the complex ways nature and man are entwined, and how our own relationshp and development of technology can be used to enhance as well as enlarge the world around us." |
Suzanne McClelland's three-sided painting - a painting with a shadow life! |
Reminiscent of Stacy Leigh's densely painted figures with a stronger sense of form and internal life |
Animation |
Painting on a vinyl surface, similar to Alexi Worth - only other time I've seen this surface |
Keltie Ferris |
Alexis Rockman watercolor near desk - detail |
In Brooklyn, at Studio 10, a magnificent duo: Daniel Wiener and Jennie Nichols in a show called Doubled. Here, Weiner's epic mask installation in ceramic. Gallery Link |
Shadows behind the masks |
Ensor, Joanna Pousette-Dart come immediately to mind, but it's bigger than references: the primal confrontation with Others... |
In space you can enter, that weaves in and out, as if clouds on a Japanese screen. |
Here, the show's thesis: a mask-within-a-mask by Weiner and a cast rubber radiator by Nichols. |
Hand-kneading is evident, with imprints of fingers. |
Ending with the boisterous Bigger, Bolder, Better show at 470 Atlantic, temporarily commandeered by curators Etty Yaniv, Christina Massey and Jaynie Crimmins for an unruly experiment in artistic squatting (by invitation). Gallery Link Here and below, a walk through Elizabeth Riley's meditation on time, light and space. |
Carol Salmanson's live-light sketches |
Leaf rubbings by Alyce Rosner |
Jaynie Crimmins' shredded financial documents recast as decorative wall sculpture! These remind me in some ways of Carol Prusa's illuminated domes; I do not see work like this very often. |
Ellie Murphie's bilateral ropes ingeniously affixed like a bicycle delivery package, collapsing monumental and informal |
Christina Massey, fusing material and painted weaves |
Mia Pearlman |
Suzan Shutan's tar paper relief |
Jaanika Peerna in front of Pearlman |
3 comments:
Elisabeth:
Thank you so much for highlighting our show Bigger, Bolder, Better! And it is such a great honor to have my work mentioned in the same breath as Carol Prusa's.
Jaynie Crimmins
She would be happy to know that. It is a superficial comparison in that the concerns behind the work, even the structures, not to mention materials are different but struck me vividly all the same.
Thank you Elizabeth for your inclusion of bigger bolder better! -Suzan
Post a Comment