Anish Kapoor at Lisson Gallery

After confronting viewers with visceral, blood-red sculpture in his last New York show, Anish Kapoor is back with a two-venue exhibition bound to seduce his audience.  Front and center in Lisson Gallery’s 24th Street space is Tsunami, a towering stainless steel sculpture that lures visitors in to marvel at the spatial distortions created by the curved metal.  (On view in Chelsea through Dec 20th).

Anish Kapoor, Tsunami, stainless steel, 143 5/8 x 161 3/8 x 133 ¾ inches, 2018.

Anish Kapoor at Barbara Gladstone Gallery

Anish Kapoor’s monumental sculpture ‘She Wolf’ appears to be tipping over under its own weight, or deliberately leaning to the gallery floor from its marble pedestal. Given the title, giant quasi-oval shapes suggest teats, though a covering of soil over the structure’s rocky forms ties it to the earth, creating a kind of living geology. (At Barbara Gladstone Gallery’s 21st Street location through June 11th).

Anish Kapoor, She Wolf, resin, earth and marble, 107 x 355 x 209 inches, 2016.
Anish Kapoor, She Wolf, resin, earth and marble, 107 x 355 x 209 inches, 2016.

Anish Kapoor at Barbara Gladstone Gallery

Anish Kapoor, Untitled, stainless steel and lacquer, 2012.
Anish Kapoor, Untitled, stainless steel and lacquer, 2012.

Anish Kapoor’s concave sculptures, like this untitled stainless steel and lacquer disk currently at Chelsea’s Barbara Gladstone Gallery (24th Street location), are austere and elegant, a complete contrast to the lively Gangnam style video he recently released in support of artist/activist Ai Weiwei and Amnesty International.  It’s worth another Gangnam parody just to see clips from dancing staff at MoMA, the Whitney, Guggenheim, and Gladstone Gallery and more.

Anish Kapoor, ‘Untitled,’ at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Anish Kapoor, 'Untitled,' stainless steel, 2007, installation view.
Anish Kapoor, ‘Untitled,’ stainless steel, 2007, installation view.

There aren’t many artworks at the Metropolitan Museum of Art that could be described primarily as ‘fun.’  Anish Kapoor’s ‘Untitled’ from 2007 falls into that category by creating a surprising visual experience as tiny, polished stainless steel tiles on a concave form reflect viewers’ images as a blurry multitude of shapes.  London-based Kapoor’s best known works in the US (Chicago’s Cloud Gate, for example) make viewers aware of their surroundings.  At the Met, Kapoor’s piece is surprisingly intimate and thoroughly amusing.  (On view in the 2nd floor Modern and Contemporary Art Galleries).