terence koh
For his show “nothingtoodooterencekoh” at Mary Boone, Terence Koh softly circles a 45 ton mountain of rock salt while on his knees.
For his show “nothingtoodooterencekoh” at Mary Boone, Terence Koh softly circles a 45 ton mountain of rock salt while on his knees.
The Scope Art Show, the “largest and most global art fair in the world,” is this weekend.
The Art Show, the Art Dealers Association of of America’s “longest running national art fair,” is this weekend.
PULSE Contemporary Art Fair, which “serves as the junction between central and satellite art fairs,” is this weekend.
The Armory Show, “America’s leading fine art fair devoted to the most important art of the 20th and 21st centuries,” is this weekend.
For more than two decades Rudolf Stingel has been challenging the idea of Painting. His show at Gagosian touches on his relationship between painting and space, nostalgic remembering and decadent decoration.
José Parlá’s show, Walls, Diaries and Paintings, at Bryce Wolkowitz, opens on March 3.
Somehow this is Glen Fogel’s first solo show in New York. The 2002 Whitney Biennial participant is at PARTICIPANT INC with “a new five-channel video installation and an ongoing series of large-scale paintings of letters written to the artist.”
At Anton Kern, Jonas Wood “has put together a body of paintings and drawings that confronts the viewer with formal rigor and emotional intensity combined with a strong dosage of contemporaneity, thrill and pleasure.”
Bad Boys, Marcia Resnick’s show at Deborah Bell Photographs, is a collection of “punks, poets and provocateurs that studies the various ways in which power and maleness manifested themselves in New York City in the 1970s and ‘80s.”