Gerald Lovell at PPOW Gallery

Gerald Lovell’s grandmother’s photo albums were a key inspiration in the young Atlanta painter’s motivation to create portraits of family and friends.  Calling such source photos of family and person history ‘saving moments,’ Lovell sets out to make depoliticized, ‘honest depictions of the people I’m around.’ (On view at PPOW Gallery’s new Tribeca location through Feb 20th.  Masks and social distancing are required).

Gerald Lovell, Quil, oil on wood, 48 x 36 inches, 2020.

Radcliffe Bailey at Jack Shainman Gallery

Crushed green glass spills from a crate like a magical substance while the color echoes in the painted palms behind a confident young man wielding a pool cue in this sculptural installation by Atlanta artist Radcliffe Bailey. Is there an alchemy in the game of pool for this player? (At Jack Shainman Gallery in Chelsea through June 11th.)

Radcliffe Bailey, Before Cisero, mixed media installation including a framed photograph printed on aluminum, a pool stick, a crate and crushed green glass, 91 ½ x 64 x 47 inches, 2016.
Radcliffe Bailey, Before Cisero, mixed media installation including a framed photograph printed on aluminum, a pool stick, a crate and crushed green glass, 91 ½ x 64 x 47 inches, 2016.

Radcliffe Bailey at Jack Shainman Gallery

Known for using evocative materials to create sculptural mediations on the African diaspora, Atlanta-based artist Radcliffe Bailey has upped the ante in his recent exhibition at Chelsea’s Jack Shainman Gallery, where he’s exhibiting this startling taxidermied croc who appears to climb his way past memorial-like markers with dates and initials.  (At Jack Shainman’s 24th Street location through Feb 15th).  

Radcliffe Bailey, On Your Way Up, tarp, crocodile and steel, 120 x 106 x 10 inches, 2013.