Just opened: Paula Wilson's The Light Becomes You at Denny Dimin. Gallery Link |
Wilson, seen here in two guises, the daughter of a sociologist, comments with subtlety on the infiltration of media in our lives. |
A relationship between Wilson's stained glass reflections and Matt Bollinger's film still paintings. |
Jen Mazza's Disobedience Is Not Careless at James Gallery, CUNY . Gallery Link |
Mazza's paintings of books are enchanting. |
The surfaces look like plaster, slathered on so the touch of the brush glides softly over. |
The most gorgeous painting. |
Source material (there is also a library of carefully chosen readings)~ |
and its influence. |
Jennifer Riley's Machine Series Paintings, presented by Silas Von Morrisse at CHASHAMA, midtown. Gallery Link |
Riley is not looking at early American landscape per se, but her inversions contain their buoyant light and space. |
She is working with large metal components as superimposed shapes she then works around. |
Lisa Yuskavage at Zwirner uptown. Gallery Link |
As her work becomes less distorted by her own subjective desires, it becomes tricker compositionally. |
The padded walls remain, the wine a shocking color note, as the implied opening of the reflected shirt. The paint is accomplished, confident, blithely scraped away or slathered on. |
I think of Bronzino's tense moments of contact that feel heated despite their seeming quotidian nature: opening a book, or holding a letter. |
This painting was shocking for its deep red space, reminiscent of Yuskavage's 1993 series Bad Girls, and especially the man's creepy, glass-like eye. |
Always the hands, block like, intertwined, creating staccato meeting points. |
Next door, the Gutai show at Hauser and Wirth. Gallery Link |
Thick, joyous enamel freely brushed on. |
Or piled. |
Such calligraphic freedom in these works, their marks piling on, yet distinct in their articulation. |
From the transparent blue pour top right to the density of middle, the substance of paint transforms. |
Bars of burlap create striations like rice fields on a cliffside, scaffolds for paint to address. |
Glue hangs heavy in the pearl white world of Matsutani. |
There's a beautiful film about this Japanese artist who lives in Europe, and his work with glue is no less compelling for its expansive sense of time. |
A spellbinding performance of light and shadow. |
Seen from side. |
First work as you enter the gallery. |
Jennifer Packer, Quality of Life at Sikkema Jenkins. Gallery Link |
Interspersing portraits of 'bodies I love' with flowers to memorialize those struck down needlessly. |