Tony Matelli in ‘Friends of the Pod’ at Broadway Gallery

‘Friends of the Pod,’ an enjoyable group exhibition at Broadway Gallery in Tribeca featuring artists linked to a podcast hosted by advisor Benjamin Godsill and Vanity Fair art columnist Nate Freeman opens with this wonderfully weird assemblage by Tony Matelli.  Anyone who knows Matelli’s sculpture knows to mistrust what they see; the master of trompe l’oeil has produced realistic human bodies and floral arrangements that appear to float upside down as well as pieces of what look to be classical statuary that include pieces of fruit and vegetables.  Traditionally understood in European painting as a warning of mortality, perfect fruits and flowers point to the inevitability of what will come next.  Matelli’s veg avoids this fate while triumphing over a human head that no longer stands upright.  (On view through Feb 3rd).

Tony Matelli, Bust (Eggplant and Celery), concrete, painted bronze, 13 x 18 x 12 inches, 2022.

Sally Saul in ‘At Home’ at LaunchF18

Sally Saul’s arresting ceramic self-portrait portrays her as if in mid-sentence, her eyes looking into the distance as if trying to phrase something just so. Surrounded by tiny attentive birds, what she says has caused nature to stop and listen. (At LaunchF18 on the Lower East Side through March 6th).

Sally Saul, Self-Portrait, clay and glaze, 12 x 9 x 8 inches, unique, 2010.
Sally Saul, Self-Portrait, clay and glaze, 12 x 9 x 8 inches, unique, 2010.

Alexandre Singh at Metro Pictures

British artist Alexandre Singh’s theatrical performance ‘The Humans’  – an elaborate tale of creation, then divine meddling in human fate – was called ‘one of the outstanding achievements’ of the Performa 13 performance art biennial this November.  Metro Pictures in Chelsea gives us a close-up on the eccentric characters in the play with busts including Singh’s ‘Wife’ character.  (At Metro Pictures through December 7th).  

Alexandre Singh, Wife, bronze, 2013.