Rosy Keyser at Peter Blum Gallery

Peter Blum Gallery marks its first show at its new 57th Street gallery (as it says goodbye to its Chelsea and SoHo locations), with Rosy Keyser’s adventurous ‘paintings,’ assembled from materials as diverse as bamboo and rusty, corrugated steel. (Through April 20th).  

Rosy Keyser, ‘Hungry Shepherd, Honeypot,’ left panel:  enamel, spray paint and rope on steel.  Right panel: dye enamel, bamboo, and polycarbonate on aluminum and wood on canvas. 2013.

Monika Sosnowska and the Public Art Fund

Monika Sosnowska, Fir Tree, steel, 2012.
Monika Sosnowska, Fir Tree, steel, 2012.

Monika Sosnowska’s ‘Fir Tree,’ a 40 foot tall steel sculpture currently located at the southeast entrance to Central Park is just a step beyond the park’s trees but is more in keeping with the solid, man-made structures surrounding the park.  It belongs to neither world, however, and its lack of cheer and melted, post-disaster appearance lend it an ominous intrigue. (Through Feb 17th).

John Baldessari at Marian Goodman Gallery

John Baldessari, Double Play:  Never Swat a Fly, 2012.
John Baldessari, Double Play: Never Swat a Fly, 2012.

Conceptual artist John Baldessari pairs song lyrics with images abstracted from canonical paintings in his latest series of paintings.  The odd angle of this deer’s head gives its source away as an 1867 hunting scene by Gustave Courbet.  The hunt looks more comical than gruesome in Baldessari’s version, though on reflection maybe both deer and fly should be spared. (At Marian Goodman Gallery, 57th Street, through Nov 21).

Joel Meyerowitz at Howard Greenberg Gallery

 

Joel Meyerowitz in front of Easter Parade, Rockefeller Center, New York City, 1964.
Joel Meyerowitz in front of Easter Parade, Rockefeller Center, New York City, 1964.

Today, Joel Meyerowitz chatted with visitors to Howard Greenberg Gallery on the occasion of a show of his street photographs from the 60s and 70s, which include iconic shots like his couple in camel colored coats walking through NYC steam, the odd spectacle of a fallen man on a Paris sidewalk, and this eccentric human/cat threesome from New York’s 1964 Easter Parade. (On 57th Street through December 1st).

Sally Mann at Edwynn Houk Gallery

Sally Mann, Untitled (Self-Portrait), 2006-12.
Sally Mann, Untitled (Self-Portrait), 2006-12.

As Sally Mann recovered from an accident in which she was thrown from and pummeled by her dying horse in ’06, she turned to self-portraiture to create haunting ambrotypes like this one.  Streaking, blurring, over and underexposures mar the images, speaking movingly to the damage inflicted on their subject. (At Edwynn Houk Gallery on Fifth Ave & 57th Street through Nov 3rd.)