Valerie Hegarty at Burning in Water

In the shadow of Chelsea’s ultra-luxurious new residential buildings, Valerie Hegarty’s new sculptures and wall installations at Burning in Water are a poignant, contemporary vanitas, reminding us that what is fresh will soon be old.  Here, the Brooklyn-based artist’s own subway stop is the inspiration for a paint and paper installation that nestles right into a pristine wall.  (On view in Chelsea through Jan 5th).

Valerie Hegarty, Eastern Parkway/Brooklyn Museum (My Subway Stop), paper, latex and acrylic paint, Tyvek, glue, 82 x 72 inches, 2018.

Valerie Hegarty in ‘Morph’ at Asya Geisberg Gallery

Valerie Hegarty’s deliciously bizarre watermelon rind takes a bite out of summer at Asya Geisberg Gallery’s fanciful summer group show of ceramic sculpture. (In Chelsea through August 11th).

Valerie Hegarty, Watermelon Rind with Teeth 2, glazed ceramics, 4.5 x 12.5 x 3.5 inches, 2016.

 

Valerie Hegarty at The Brooklyn Museum

Known for crafting historical art and furnishings as if they’d been partly destroyed, Brooklyn artist Valerie Hegarty has astoundingly transformed several rooms in the Brooklyn Museum’s Cane Acres Plantation Dining Room to look as if disaster has struck, turning a gentile space into a riot of gunshot holes, destroyed food and flapping crows.  (In the 4th floor Period Rooms at the Brooklyn Museum through Dec 1st).  

Valerie Hegarty, installation view of ‘Valerie Hegarty:  Alternative Histories’ at the Brooklyn Museum, July 2013.

Valerie Hegarty at Nichelle Beauchene

Valerie Hegarty, Watermelon Tongue, canvas, stretcher, acrylic paint, modeling paste, paper, glue, foil, gauze, glue, thread, 2012.
Valerie Hegarty, Watermelon Tongue, canvas, stretcher, acrylic paint, modeling paste, paper, glue, foil, gauze, glue, thread, 2012.

This is one watermelon you do not want to eat…or be eaten by.  A giant lick of modeling paste extends from Valerie Hegarty’s repulsive ‘Watermelon Tongue,’ curbing the appetite and recalling ‘Little Shop of Horrors,’ one inspiration for this painting.  Hegarty was also thinking of last year’s news reports of exploding watermelons in China, which were mistakenly sprayed with growth accelerator.  Now do you want to know where your food comes from?  (At Nichelle Beauchene Gallery on the Lower East Side, through October 20th).