Tunji Adeniyi-Jones at Nicelle Beauchene Gallery

At just smaller than 30 x 23 inches, Tunji Adeniyi-Jones’ new lithographs in the entry space of Nicelle Beauchene Gallery are smaller than the artist’s vibrant, pattern-driven paintings in the main space, but more intense and rewarding.  Powered by the motion of the curving, androgynous bodies that contort to fit into the picture’s confined space, each print conveys the energy and rhythms of dance.  (On view in Tribeca through Nov 23rd).

Tunji Adeniyi-Jones, Midnight Voices #2, two-color lithograph on paper, 29 7/8 x 22 3/8 inches, 2022.

M.C. Escher at Bruce Silverstein Gallery

Just as a tiny shift in perspective can cause a straightforward transparent cube to morph into an impossible cube, M.C. Escher’s architecture in this 1958 print is believable on first glance, until matching up columns to arches proves otherwise.  The lithograph is one of 75 artworks on view in Bruce Silverstein Gallery’s exhibition of the Dutch printmaker’s work from the ‘30s to late career. Inspired by the impossible cube, a version of which is being held by a seated man on the lower terrace, Escher delights viewers by confounding us.  (On view in Chelsea through Nov 20th).

M.C. Escher, Belvedere, lithograph, printers proof, 18 ¼ x 11 5/8 inches, 1958.

Peter Pillar at Andrew Kreps Gallery

German artist Peter Pillar spotted this surprising image of a woman being silenced by a ghostly hand while driving as he himself was traveling on the highway. As part of a series for which he photographed ads on the back of trucks, then removed text and non-image related info, Pillar lays bare how the images send particular messages. It’s an enticing challenge to imagine what’s would be sold by the original ad. (At Andrew Kreps Gallery through Aug 19th).

Peter Pillar, Erscheinungen #4, inkjet print on Alu-dibond, 59 1/16  x 53 1/8 inches, 2016.
Peter Pillar, Erscheinungen #4, inkjet print on Alu-dibond, 59 1/16 x 53 1/8 inches, 2016.

Glenn Ligon at Luhring Augustine Gallery

Glenn Ligon turns his well-worn copy of James Baldwin’s 1953 essay, ‘Stranger in the Village,’ into a suite of prints, each more or less obscured by paint and fingerprints left behind by years of reference use in Ligon’s studio. Ligon’s marks testify to the personal importance of Baldwin’s text, while the parts that remain visible leap out as a kind of charged concrete poetry. (At Luhring Augustine through April 2nd).

Glenn Ligon, Untitled, from a suite of 17 archival pigment prints, 71 x 49 inches, 2016.
Glenn Ligon, Untitled, from a suite of 17 archival pigment prints, 71 x 49 inches, 2016.

David Hockney at Pace Gallery

New media takes a turn for the traditional in David Hockney’s new series at Pace Gallery, for which his iPad drawings are displayed as prints. Still, the Brit art icon’s colors remain vibrant, transforming the English countryside with fantastical, south-of-France brightness. (At Pace’s 508 West 25th Street space in Chelsea through Nov 1st).

David Hockney, The Arrival of Spring in Woldgate, East Yorkshire in 2011 (twenty eleven) – 5 May, 2011, iPad drawing printed on paper, 55” x 41 ½”