Suellen Rocca at Matthew Marks Gallery

Chicago artist and member of the iconic Hairy Who artist group, Suellen Rocca devises a language of her own in this symbol-laden, nearly 10-foot long canvas from 1965 at Matthew Marks Gallery in Chelsea. Dominated by the perfect beauties of advertising, simplified down to their silhouettes and made sinister with modified features, Rocca’s painting ponders the temptations of consumer culture. (Through Oct 22nd).

Suellen Rocca, detail from ‘Bare Shouldered Beauty and the Pink Creature,’ oil on canvas, two joined panels, 83 ¼ x 119 ½ inches, 1965.
Suellen Rocca, detail from ‘Bare Shouldered Beauty and the Pink Creature,’ oil on canvas, two joined panels, 83 ¼ x 119 ½ inches, 1965.

Margot Bergman at Anton Kern Gallery

Chicago-based octogenarian Margot Bergman makes her New York solo debut with highly emotive, expressionist portraits created on canvases found in thrift stores and flea markets and reworked into double portraits. Here, a kindly, elderly face peers out from the forehead of a pouty-lipped blond, perhaps foretelling the younger woman’s future or portraying her internal voice. (At Chelsea’s Anton Kern Gallery through Aug 19th).

Margot Bergman, Wilma Rose, acrylic on found canvas, 30 x 24 inches, 2012.
Margot Bergman, Wilma Rose, acrylic on found canvas, 30 x 24 inches, 2012.

Doug Fogelson at Sasha Wolf Gallery

Doug Fogelson’s ‘Ceaseless’ series comprises beautiful but damaged nature photos, for which the Chicago-based artist shot traditional landscape photos, which he printed and partially destroyed by applying common industrial chemicals to the surface. Ironically, the results are gorgeous. Here, a verdant forest hovers like an apparition surrounded by peeling layers of emulsion. (At Sasha Wolf Gallery on the Lower East Side through April 16th).

Doug Fogelson, Ceaseless No. 1, 24 x 24 inches, 2015.
Doug Fogelson, Ceaseless No. 1, 24 x 24 inches, 2015.

Molly Zuckerman-Hartung at Lyles & King

Molly Zuckerman-Hartung made a splash in the last Whitney Biennial with a huge painting on drop cloth that had been spray painted, pierced with a dremmel and stitched together with an industrial sewing machine. ‘Fruited Void,’ a standout in a two-person show at Lower East Side gallery Lyles & King, likewise is roughly handmade – fabrics with seeping stains meet in uneven tucks – but a warm palette and curving colors convey a softer sensibility. (Through Feb 7th).

 Molly Zuckerman-Hartung, Fruited Void, acrylic and oil on sewn silk, cotton, linen, 55.125 x 65.125 inches, 2014.

Jonathan Gardner at Nicelle Beauchene Gallery

Clashing juxtapositions of patterns and color, a doubled figure (or tripled if you include the shadow), flatten shapes and simplified figures quote canonical 20th century artists from Magritte to Picasso, suggesting we look to the past to see the present in this surreal scenario by Chicago artist Jonathan Gardner. (At Nicelle Beauchene Gallery through June 28th).

Jonathan Gardner, The Shadow, oil on linen, 36 x 22 inches, 2015.