Teresita Fernandez in ‘American Landscape’ at Lehmann Maupin Gallery

Teresita Fernandez’s show last spring at Lehmann Maupin featured an American landscape constructed of charcoal, maps burned into paper and a ceramic wall panel featuring raging flames. Currently on view on Chelsea, ‘Fire (United States of America),’ forcefully continues Fernandez’s consideration of the US landscape as contentious and combustible. (On view in Chelsea through May 5th).

Teresita Fernandez, Fire (United States of the Americas), charcoal, 57 parts, 158 x 175.75 x 1.25 inches (approx.), 2017.

Nicola Tyson in ‘Somebodies’ at Petzel Gallery

Nicola Tyson’s freewheeling firewood sculptures embody a grace that belies their origins in the woodpile. Stripping each piece of dried firewood of its bark, Tyson assembles fleshy ‘dancing figures’ as disproportionate assemblages of thick and thin segments that bring to mind human bodies, trees and robots. (In ‘Somebodies’ at Petzel Gallery in Chelsea through Aug 4th).

Nicola Tyson, installation view of ‘Dancing Figure #1’ (foreground) and ‘Dancing Figure #2,’ both 2016, apple, elm and maple wood.

Teresita Fernandez at Lehmann Maupin Gallery

A horizon line made of charcoal surrounds visitors to Teresita Fernandez’s haunting installation of burnt and burning landscape at Lehmann Maupin Gallery on the Lower East Side. Though Fernandez has explained that she wants to question the reality of the ‘virgin’ landscape described by early European settlers in North America by pointing to existing slash and burn farming methods, this handsome installation tantalizingly offers many interpretations. (On view through May 20th).

Teresita Fernandez, Charred Landscape (America), charcoal, dimensions variable, site specific installation for Lehmann Maupin, New York, 2017. Background: Fire (America) 5, glazed ceramic, 96 x 192 x 1.25 inches, 2017.

 

Roger White at Rachel Uffner Gallery

Roger White’s new oil paintings at Rachel Uffner Gallery approach the wondrous in the everyday – a mirror reflects light, an array of mushrooms grows from a bag – but the artist amps up the drama in this picture of fire on a river. Has there been a chemical spill? Is this a miracle? A sci-fi scene? This small, intriguingly moody canvas asks good questions. (On the Lower East Side through Feb 19th).

Roger White, Touristic Scene with Burning River, oil on canvas, 10 x 17 inches, 2017.
Roger White, Touristic Scene with Burning River, oil on canvas, 10 x 17 inches, 2017.