sven lukin
Sven Lukin’s show at Gary Snyder “offers detailed views of the artist’s work during the 1960s and the past decade.”
Sven Lukin’s show at Gary Snyder “offers detailed views of the artist’s work during the 1960s and the past decade.”
Marianne Boesky, along with The Pace Gallery, present When the dreamer dies, what happens to the dream?, an “historic exhibition of the work of Pier Paolo Calzolari.”
Anxiety and the Horse, Gary Hume’s show at Matthew Marks, “consists of a series of seven brightly colored abstract paintings made in Hume’s signature enamel on aluminum panels.”
Richard Prince: 14 paintings, at 303 Gallery, features work that “could have been played at CBGB’s.”
Chantal Joffe’s show at Cheim & Read features images “that she finds most alluring, especially in terms of sparking imaginative narrative.”
Giuseppe Penone’s show at Marian Goodman consists of work “from 1968 to today in a range of media representing a rich vocabulary of binary meanings related to the natural world and the notion of living sculpture.”
Appetite, Balint Zsako’s show at The Proposition, “describes the complexities of human interaction through a combination of realistic scenarios and fantastical metaphors.”
Ned Vena’s show at Clifton Benevento is “comprised of ink blotter paintings and acid-etched security glass panels.”
Jessica Labatte’s show at Golden is “constituted by three large-scale photographic tableaux picturing the materiality of colored light, depicted at once both active and substantive.”
Cindy Sherman’s extraordinary 2012 continues with her show at Metro Pictures.