Judy Pfaff at Ameringer McEnery Yohe Gallery

Judy Pfaff, The Path to the Center Was Clearly Marked, honeycomb cardboard, pigmented expanded foam, melted plastics, fluorescent and incandescent light, 2012.
Judy Pfaff, The Path to the Center Was Clearly Marked, honeycomb cardboard, pigmented expanded foam, melted plastics, fluorescent and incandescent light, 2012.

Judy Pfaff’s new sculptures, on view at Chelsea’s Ameringer McEnery Yohe Gallery, channel Lynda Benglis’s neon colors and puffy forms, Louise Bourgeois’ or Yayoi Kusama’s profusion of phallic protrusions, and the commanding presence of a more recent wall-mounted Frank Stella.  Yet the profusion of optical seduction is typical Pfaff, as seen in pieces like ‘The Path to the Center was Clearly Marked’ (2012), an over 7ft wide tour de force created from honeycomb cardboard, pigmented expanded form, melted plastics, fluorescent and incandescent light. (Through November 10th.)