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.

Simen Johan at Yossi Milo Gallery

Simen Johan’s stunning image of sea lions (seen here in detail) has the creatures rising to the right in a digitally manipulated crescendo of activity. The composition and atmospheric background recalls Gericault’s famously dramatic 19th century shipwreck scene, ‘The Raft of the Medusa,’ though it is animals that embody intense emotion. (At Yossi Milo Gallery in Chelsea through Aug 10th).

 

Simen Johan, Untitled #188, digital C-Print, 71 x 94 ¼, 2015.
Simen Johan, Untitled #188, digital C-Print, 71 x 94 ¼, 2015.

Amanda Nedham in ‘Frida Smoked’ at Invisible Exports

An ostrich, Asiatic black bear and other animals look to be constructed of cigarettes but have actually been crafted from Sculpey and acrylic by Amanda Nedham. A standout in Invisible Export’s group exhibition on the current cultural status of smoking, Nedham equates animals threatened by habitat loss with another endangered species – the smoker. (At Invisible Exports on the Lower East Side through June 19th).

Amanda Nedham, installation view in ‘Frida Smoked,’ sculptures in Sculpey and acrylic, 2016.
Amanda Nedham, installation view in ‘Frida Smoked,’ sculptures in Sculpey and acrylic, 2016.

Martin Wittfooth at Jonathan LeVine Gallery

Martin Wittfooth’s ‘Dawn’ would look like an exaggerated prophecy about the dangers of global warming on coastal cites were it not for the few apartment lights on below the massive whale. A few people are waking up to a reality far beyond the norm – a theme that ties into Wittfooth’s interest in altered consciousness in shamanistic practice. (At Chelsea’s Jonathan Levine Gallery through Nov 14th).

Martin Wittfooth, Dawn, oil on canvas, 54 x 120 inches, 2015.

Yumiko Kayukawa at Foley Gallery

Drawing on Japanese pop culture and a predilection for nature, Seattle-based Japanese artist Yumiko Kayukawa’s exhibition at Foley Gallery on the Lower East Side strikes a clever balance between irony and kitsch. (Through July 12th).

Yumiko Kayukawa, Ominugui (Cleaning), acrylic on linen, 22 x 18 inches, 2013.