The back glow behind the woman in Amanda Baldwin’s ‘Blushing Orchid’ and the neon-like outline of flowers against the wall suggest that the artist has a paintbrush in hand and her mind in the digital realm. The surreal, collage-like effect of pairing a realistic eye with Photoshop features or delicate blooms with blanched fern fronds deliberately juxtaposes the pleasure of looking in the digital and analogue realms. (On view at Thierry Goldberg Gallery through April 28th.)
Tag: digital
Matthew Stone at The Hole NYC
British artist Matthew Stone’s stunning merger of virtual and real (as played out on canvas) was a standout in The Hole NYC’s past ‘Post Analogue Painting’ shows, in which artists demonstrated how digital tools have altered the way they conceive of painting’s possibilities. In his latest work, Stone introduces a maelstrom of bodies, half-formed by a vocabulary of brushstrokes that he first paints on glass, photographs, then digitally models into not-quite-classic nudes. (On view on the Lower East Side through June 24th).
Matthew Stone in ‘Post Analog Painting II’ at The Hole
CGI and hand painting merge in Matthew Stone’s uncanny portrait. Part of The Hole Gallery’s ‘Post-Analog Painting II’ show, this image questions to what extent painting is influenced by the digital. (On view on the Lower East Side through May 14th).
Paul Pfeiffer at Paula Cooper Gallery
An unseen opponent batters James Kirkland with blows that literally make the flesh on his face shake in Paul Pfeiffer’s powerful video at Paula Cooper Gallery. By collaging together short clips that feature direct hits to the head and body and digitally removing Kirkland’s adversary, Pfeiffer focuses attention on the violence of boxing and turns fighter into victim. (In Chelsea through Nov 12th).
Jeff Elrod at Luhring Augustine Gallery
Jeff Elrod’s digitally inspired paintings may evoke a preschooler’s scrawl, but there’s something about ‘Rubber Miro’ that intrigues. Maybe it’s the necklace-like pattern or the pretty colors hovering somewhere in the background that make it hard to dismiss, maybe he’s succeeded in tapping into a subconscious, universal realm that Miro pioneered. (At Luhring Augustine Gallery through Oct 22nd).