Ellen Altfest in ‘The Female Gaze’ at Cheim & Read Gallery

Known for hyper-detailed renderings of the male body (among other natural subjects), Ellen Altfest’s ‘Leg’ ponders the facts on a section of a man’s leg. Veins, hair, and tiny blemishes are the ostensible subjects of the painting, but the limb gives off a vital glow, contrasting its grey surroundings and suggesting that even a fractional view of her subject bears close scrutiny. (At Cheim & Read Gallery in ‘The Female Gaze, Part Two: Women Look at Men’ through Sept 2nd).

Ellen Altfest, Leg, oil on linen, 8 x 11 x 1 ½ inches, 2010.
Ellen Altfest, Leg, oil on linen, 8 x 11 x 1 ½ inches, 2010.

 

Alex Katz at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Alex Katz’s towering painting of his wife, Ada, in red coat, hat and lips dominates a selection of paintings by the artist at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. As bold as an advertisement but with no product to sell, this arresting painting celebrates Ada’s allure. (Through Nov 6th).

Alex Katz, Red Coat, oil on canvas, on loan from the American Contemporary Art Foundation, Inc. Leonard A. Lauder, President, 1982.
Alex Katz, Red Coat, oil on canvas, on loan from the American Contemporary Art Foundation, Inc. Leonard A. Lauder, President, 1982.

Laszlo Moholy-Nagy at the Guggenheim

Hungarian avant-garde artist Laszlo Moholy-Nagy used camera-less photography to create experimental pictures like this one, for which he put his own face and glasses against light-sensitive paper in the darkroom and made multiple exposures to create this ghostly image. (At the Guggenheim in ‘Moholy-Nagy: Future Present’ through Sept 7th).

Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Photogram (Moonface), (Self-Portrait in Profile), gelatin silver print (enlarged from a photogram), 1926, printed 1935.
Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Photogram (Moonface), (Self-Portrait in Profile), gelatin silver print (enlarged from a photogram), 1926, printed 1935.

Nathalia Edenmont at Nancy Hoffman Gallery

Sweden-based artist Nathalia Edenmont is both collector and artist – using rare butterfly wings she acquires at fairs in Singapore and Paris, she creates labor-intensive collages that uniquely comment on nature’s beauty. (At Chelsea’s Nancy Hoffman Gallery through Sept 1st.)

Nathalia Edenmont, Vortex, collage of butterfly wings, 14 ¼ x 13 inches, 2011.
Nathalia Edenmont, Vortex, collage of butterfly wings, 14 ¼ x 13 inches, 2011.

Hiroshi Watanabe at Benrubi Gallery

We are like characters in a disaster movie, writes photographer Hiroshi Watanabe – though terrible events loom, we carry on with life as usual. Here, snow-covered persimmons make for a beautiful image but one that warns of a fast-arriving, harsher season. (At Chelsea’s Benrubi Gallery through Aug 26th).

Hiroshi Watanabe, The Day the Dam Collapses 25 (Persimmons), archival pigment print, 9 x 9 inches, 2009.
Hiroshi Watanabe, The Day the Dam Collapses 25 (Persimmons), archival pigment print, 9 x 9 inches, 2009.

Roger Steffens & The Family Acid at Benrubi Gallery

Wild abandon meets danger in this 1974 photo by counterculture photographer Roger Steffens, though what appears to be a fatal leap is an illusion – the young woman landed safely on the ledge directly beneath her. Under the titled ‘The Family Acid,’ Steffens’ photos chronicle the lives of his friends and family as they embody the changing mores of an era. (At Benrubi Gallery in Chelsea through Aug 26th).

The Family Acid, Roger Steffens, Big Sur Plunge (Clare’s Leap), March, 1974, edition of 8, archival pigment print, 24 x 20 inches.
The Family Acid, Roger Steffens, Big Sur Plunge (Clare’s Leap), March, 1974, edition of 8, archival pigment print, 24 x 20 inches.

Libby Rothfeld in ‘Daydream from 2013’ at Canada New York

Neatly tiled platforms suggest a clean and ordered place while glasses with red sticks hint at incense offerings in New York artist Libby Rothfeld’s evocative ‘Option #1,’ currently at Canada New York on the Lower East Side. The setup entices us to make up our own story – one in which a fragile crown sporting a fairy-like face might find its way to an Asian supermarket shopping basket filled with potatoes… (Through August 26th).

Libby Rothfeld, Option #1, tile, grout, cement, porcelain, potatoes, glassware, rock, 33 x 36 x 21 inches, 2016.
Libby Rothfeld, Option #1, tile, grout, cement, porcelain, potatoes, glassware, rock, 33 x 36 x 21 inches, 2016.

Duke Riley at the Queens Museum of Art

Located in the same room as the Queens Museum’s model of New York City’s water system, Duke Riley’s ‘That’s What She Said’ is a commissioned work warning against misuse of a precious natural resource. To the left, an Egyptian goddess creates the waters that flow down into a landscape destroyed by power plants and the indifference of its inhabitants. (Through Jan 1, 2017).

Duke Riley, installation view of ‘That’s What She Said,’ at the Queens Museum of Art, July 2016.
Duke Riley, installation view of ‘That’s What She Said,’ at the Queens Museum of Art, July 2016.

Sopheap Pich, Rang Phnom Flower No. 2 at Tyler Rollins

Sopheap Pich’s bamboo and rattan flower is made of natural materials but resembles computer-generated imagery. In fact, this flower – from the cannonball tree – has personal meaning to the artist. It represents the tree that sheltered Buddha during his birth and is found near Buddhist temples and Pich’s home. (At Tyler Rollins Fine Art in Chelsea through Aug 26th).

Sopheap Pich, Rang Phnom Flower No. 2, bamboo, rattan, metal wire, approx. 85 ½ x 43 ¼ x 20 inches.
Sopheap Pich, Rang Phnom Flower No. 2, bamboo, rattan, metal wire, approx. 85 ½ x 43 ¼ x 20 inches.

Paul Outerbridge at Bruce Silverstein Gallery

Influential for his photographs of consumer culture items isolated and made strange, as well as his laborious tri-color Carbo printing technique, Paul Outerbridge is currently celebrated at Bruce Silverstein with a retrospective including this intensely colored cinematic homage to spring. (At Bruce Silverstein Gallery in Chelsea through Sept 17th).

Paul Outerbridge, First Robin of Spring, Carbo print, 14 3/8 x 10 5/8 inches, 1938, printed c. 1938.
Paul Outerbridge, First Robin of Spring, Carbo print, 14 3/8 x 10 5/8 inches, 1938, printed c. 1938.

Rokni Haerizadeh at the Guggenheim Museum

Painting over You Tube video stills, Iranian artist Rokni Haerizadeh morphs familiar imagery into a setting for mythological creatures inspired by Persian tradition. Here, a building echoes the Guggenheim’s spiraling form but is surrounded by emergency vehicles, one of which has partially changed into a fish. (At the Guggenheim, in ‘A Storm is Blowing from Paradise: Contemporary Art of the Middle East and North Africa’ through Oct 5th).

Rokni Haerizadeh, one piece from the 24-part work ‘But a Storm is Blowing from Paradise,’ gesso, watercolor and ink on inkjet prints, 2014.
Rokni Haerizadeh, one piece from the 24-part work ‘But a Storm is Blowing from Paradise,’ gesso, watercolor and ink on inkjet prints, 2014.

RongRong and inri at Chambers Fine Art

To make work for the 2012 Echigo-Tsumari Art Triennial, photographers RongRong and inri packed up their family and moved from Beijing to rural Japan, creating timeless, ethereal black and white scenes shot in a 200-year-old house. (At Chambers Fine Art in Chelsea through Aug 20th).

RongRong and inri, Tsumari Story No 11-4, silver gelatin print, 46 ¾ x 58 ¼ inches, 2014.
RongRong and inri, Tsumari Story No 11-4, silver gelatin print, 46 ¾ x 58 ¼ inches, 2014.

Richard Woods at Friedman Benda Project Space

British artist/designer Richard Woods has applied mock Tudor façade to a shopping mall in Seoul, fake flagstones to a cottage in Finland, and now brings a collection of woodblock tabletops to Friedman Benda Project Space in Chelsea. Presented as both tables and wall-mounted works, the exhibition’s vibrant color and patterns celebrate the places where we eat, work and commune. (Through Aug 19th).

Richard Woods, installation view of ‘Work Tables’ at Friedman Benda Project Space, June 2016.
Richard Woods, installation view of ‘Work Tables’ at Friedman Benda Project Space, June 2016.

‘Blackness in Abstraction’ at Pace Gallery

From a 1962 painted black rectangle by Sol LeWitt to a series of canvases hung from the ceiling by Oscar Murillo, Pace Gallery’s ‘Blackness in Abstraction’ discusses varieties of blackness, touching on race, the life of the spirit and simplicity of form. (On 25th Street in Chelsea through Aug 19th).

Installation view of ‘Blackness in Abstraction’ at Pace Gallery, June, 2016.
Installation view of ‘Blackness in Abstraction’ at Pace Gallery, June, 2016.

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.

Fred Wilson in ‘GLASS’ at Pace Gallery

Using found objects, Fred Wilson tells a story of a man – in the form of a classic Greek bust – who lies broken before a stoic young African woman in the artist’s 2005 ‘Love and Loss in the Milky Way.’ Surrounded by glowing white milk glass objects (plates and various vessels) with two motherly figures positioned behind them, their disastrous encounter becomes a racially charged rendition of Romeo and Juliet. (At Pace Gallery on 24th Street in Chelsea through Aug 19th).

Fred Wilson, Love and Loss in the Milky Way (seen in detail), 1 table with 47 milk glass elements, 1 plaster bust, 1 plaster head, 1 standing woman and a ceramic cookie far, 77 ¾ x 92 x 43 7/8 inches, 2005.
Fred Wilson, Love and Loss in the Milky Way (seen in detail), 1 table with 47 milk glass elements, 1 plaster bust, 1 plaster head, 1 standing woman and a ceramic cookie far, 77 ¾ x 92 x 43 7/8 inches, 2005.

Margot Bergman at Anton Kern Gallery

Chicago-based octogenarian Margot Bergman makes her New York solo debut with highly emotive, expressionist portraits created on canvases found in thrift stores and flea markets and reworked into double portraits. Here, a kindly, elderly face peers out from the forehead of a pouty-lipped blond, perhaps foretelling the younger woman’s future or portraying her internal voice. (At Chelsea’s Anton Kern Gallery through Aug 19th).

Margot Bergman, Wilma Rose, acrylic on found canvas, 30 x 24 inches, 2012.
Margot Bergman, Wilma Rose, acrylic on found canvas, 30 x 24 inches, 2012.

Nancy Shaver at Derek Eller Gallery

Nancy Shaver marshaled work by twenty-four artists to create ‘Quilt,’ a wall collage of Shaver’s own fabric panels and works in other media which spreads out over Derek Eller Gallery’s walls like a kudzu of patterns and pop culture references.   (On the Lower East Side through Aug 19th).

Nancy Shaver, installation view of ‘Quilt’ in ‘Dress the Form’ at Derek Eller Gallery, June 2016.
Nancy Shaver, installation view of ‘Quilt’ in ‘Dress the Form’ at Derek Eller Gallery, June 2016.

Zachari Logan at Julie Saul Gallery

Young Saskatchewan-based artist Zachari Logan asserts a new place in the natural world for the male body in works like ‘Leshy,’ a human figure created from flora and fauna, beautifully rendered in pastels on black paper. (At Julie Saul Gallery in Chelsea through Aug 12th).

Zachari Logan, Leshy 3, pastel on black paper, 57 ½ x 37 ¾ inches, 2015.
Zachari Logan, Leshy 3, pastel on black paper, 57 ½ x 37 ¾ inches, 2015.

Don Nice at Driscoll Babcock Galleries

Realist painter Don Nice pairs soda pop and pop corn in a Warholian consideration of the allure of brightly packaged processed food. These two paintings hang side by side in Nice’s current show at Driscoll Babcock Galleries, as if arranged for our viewing and eating pleasure. (In Chelsea through Aug 12th).

Don Nice, Coke Can and Popcorn, both oil on canvas, 24 x 18 inches, 2015.
Don Nice, Coke Can and Popcorn, both oil on canvas, 24 x 18 inches, 2015.

Karen Lederer in ‘A Series of Moves’ at Driscoll Babcock Galleries

Karen Lederer’s ‘Hipster Wellness’ is a standout in Driscoll Babcock’s summer group show of painting by young artists who follow new approaches to traditional still life. Bright colors dominate, particularly a glowing bowl of Cheetos, which balances the orange color squares on an art book about Josef Albers. Painted as if seen in digital space, the picture includes Lederer’s own hand, not wielding a brush but as if poised to take a selfie. (In Chelsea through Aug 12th).

Karen Lederer, Hipster Wellness, oil and acrylic on panel, 30 x 40 inches, 2015.
Karen Lederer, Hipster Wellness, oil and acrylic on panel, 30 x 40 inches, 2015.

Scott King in ‘I Beam U Channel’ at Bortolami Gallery

The changing built environment is the subject of Bortolami Gallery’s summer group exhibition, which opens with Scott King’s hard-to-miss ‘Temporary Eyesore.’ The printed banner brings to mind ‘pardon our appearance’ signs on renovation sites, albeit at a gargantuan scale, while the text seems to promise that a space deemed unpleasing to the eye will soon be taken care of. (In Chelsea through Aug 12th)

Scott King, Temporary Eyesore, 71 x 216 inches, 2008-2016.
Scott King, Temporary Eyesore, 71 x 216 inches, 2008-2016.

Imi Knoebel in ‘Shapeshifters’ at Luhring Augustine Gallery

Imi Knoebel’s large potato paintings are a standout in Luhring Augustine’s impressive intergenerational summer painting exhibition. Organic and geometric shapes seem to vie for dominance while muted tones struggle with vibrant color. (At Luhring Augustine Gallery through August 12th).

Imi Knoebel, Kartoffelbild, acrylic on aluminum, 69 5/8 x 98 13/16 inches, 2015.
Imi Knoebel, Kartoffelbild, acrylic on aluminum, 69 5/8 x 98 13/16 inches, 2015.

Jennifer Dalton in ‘Summer School’ at FLAG Art Foundation

Jennifer Dalton’s contribution to FLAG Foundation’s summer group show stays with visitors in a unique way. Custom-printed gum balls invite chewing, once you’ve decided between, ‘Tell Me Everything’ or ‘Don’t Tell Me Anything.’  The balls act as mini-personality test – are you prepared for a long story, or would you rather not know? (At FLAG Art Foundation through August 12th).

Jennifer Dalton, Decision Analysis, doubled gum ball machine, custom printed, 42 ½ x 17 x 7 ½ inches, 2014.

Alicia Gibson in ‘X’ at Lyles & King

Alicia Gibson’s charmingly messy abstraction revels in the possibilities of nail decoration and personal expression in ‘Nail Polishing Club remix.’ Gumdrops, hats and very celebratory tombstones come to mind in this riotous appreciation of a female art. (In ‘X’ at Lyles & King through Aug 12th).

Alicia Gibson, Nail Polishing Club remix, oil, ink, spray paint, and burlap on canvas, 60 x 48 inches, 2016.
Alicia Gibson, Nail Polishing Club remix, oil, ink, spray paint, and burlap on canvas, 60 x 48 inches, 2016.

Bas Jan Ader at Metro Pictures Gallery

At the start of Dutch artist Bas Jan Ader’s 19 second video, Fall 1, the artist perches on a chair on a roof. As we watch with increasing unease, he leans over until he causes himself to tumble to the ground below. Absurd yet emotionally jolting, Ader’s video portrays the artist as dare devil willing to take risks and foretells his eventual disappearance at sea during the creation of another event-as-artwork. (At Metro Pictures in Chelsea through Aug 5th).

Bas Jan Ader, Fall 1, Los Angeles, 16mm black and white film, 1970.
Bas Jan Ader, Fall 1, Los Angeles, 16mm black and white film, 1970.

Greg Drasler at Betty Cunningham Gallery

Cutaway cars seen on a trip to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios inspired Greg Drasler to paint views of vehicles from multiple perspectives at once. Here, a car sits sandwiched between a vast sky and a flat, patchwork patterned plain, reflected as if partially submerged under water. The effect is strangely cinematic and painterly all at once. (At Betty Cunningham Gallery through Aug 5th).

Greg Drasler, Eat and Sleep, oil and linen, 80 x 44 inches, 2014.
Greg Drasler, Eat and Sleep, oil and linen, 80 x 44 inches, 2014.

Beauford Delaney in ‘It’s Not Your Nature’ at Michael Rosenfeld Gallery

Trees appear to dance and sway at the center of Beauford Delaney’s gorgeously curvy nature scene from c. 1945. As Fauvist colors turn the park into a riot of color, specifics of place or season feel beside the point. (At Michael Rosenfeld Gallery through Aug 5th).

Beauford Delaney, Untitled (Trees), oil on canvas 29 1/8 x 23 1/8 inches, c. 1945.
Beauford Delaney, Untitled (Trees), oil on canvas 29 1/8 x 23 1/8 inches, c. 1945.

Matthew Ronay in ‘Empirical Intuitive Absorption’ at Andrea Rosen Gallery

Does abstract art tap into a subconscious human understanding of the order of the universe? Curator and artist, Matthew Ronay asks this question in Andrea Rosen Gallery’s summer group show. His own colorful wooden sculptures explore forms recalling (in his words) ‘alien deep sea creatures, glandular secretions, vibrating fields of energy, and tongues and protrusions on scales indeterminable.’ (In Chelsea through August 5th).

Matthew Ronay, The Kernel, basswood, dye, gouache, steel, 18 x 31 ½ x 11 ¼ inches, 2016.
Matthew Ronay, The Kernel, basswood, dye, gouache, steel, 18 x 31 ½ x 11 ¼ inches, 2016.

Deborah Brown at Mike Weiss Gallery

Brooklyn artist Deborah Brown reframes Picasso’s distorted, phallic-headed sculpture of Picasso’s lover Marie-Therese with wicked humor by imaging her in painted form, an innocent in traditional dress, frolicking in a garden. (At Mike Weiss Gallery in ‘School’s Out!’ through August 6th).

Deborah Brown, Bacchante, oil on canvas, 36 x 36 inches, 2016.
Deborah Brown, Bacchante, oil on canvas, 36 x 36 inches, 2016.