john chamberlain
The John Chamberlain retrospective at the Guggenheim comes a year after the celebrated artist’s death.
The John Chamberlain retrospective at the Guggenheim comes a year after the celebrated artist’s death.
Albert Oehlen’s show at Gagosian “tugs at the distinctions between man-made and machine-made.”
Jeanne Silverthorne’s show at McKee Gallery consists of “30 new sculptures, first fashioned in clay and then cast in rubber.”
The Holy Grail, Max Gimblett’s show at Gary Snyder, consists of “glossy, calligraphic abstractions in high-keyed hues, many of which feature large expanses of gold, silver, and aluminum leaf.”
Brush up on your art history with Hans Hofmann’s show at Ameringer McEnery Yohe.
Andrea Galvani’s show at Meulensteen consists of “an interdisciplinary body of work including sound sculpture, drawings, text-based works, collages and photographs.”
The Hot Winds That Blow From The West, Bharti Kher’s show at Hauser & Wirth, “further plumbs metaphysical questions raised by our relationship to life’s quotidian activities and objects.”
Here is a very nice interview I did with Vice Magazine.
Robert Grosvenor’s show at Paula Cooper makes “oblique allusions to our everyday environment.”
Also at Lehmann Maupin, Juergen Teller’s photographs “display an amalgam of subjects and personalities.”