Guy Ben-Ari at Scaramouche Gallery

Israel-born, New York based artist Guy Ben-Ari makes his New York exhibition debut with a show that speaks to our access and remove from contemporary events.  Here, hands hold a tablet showing an act of self-immolation caught on camera and witnessed by mostly passive spectators which include the tablet owner and finally, us. (At Scaramouche Gallery through April 28th)

Guy Ben-Ari, An Act of Protest Viewed Through a Tablet Device, oil on panel, 2013.

Sylvie Fleury at Salon 94 Bowery

Sylvie Fleury’s 1998 video ‘Walking on Carl Andre,’ features women’s feet as they pose on ‘60s Minimalist icon Carl Andre’s signature metal floor plate sculptures.  In this updated version, she allows visitors to try on a pair of heels and strut their stuff on an Andre replica in a feminizing collaboration that turns his masculine, industrial art product into a catwalk. (At Salon 94 Bowery through April 27th.)  

Sylvie Fleury, installation view of ‘It Might as Well Rain Until September,’ at Salon 94 Bowery, March 2013.

Wolfgang Laib at Sperone Westwater

Wolfgang Laib’s fourteen-foot high ziggurat dominates Sperone Westwater’s narrow main gallery with its hefty slabs of fragrant beeswax.  Titled, ‘Without Beginning and Without End,’ Laib creates his architecture in the form of an ancient structure, while using a natural material made by bees in their own building process. (On the Lower East Side through March 30th)  

Wolfgang Laib, ‘Without Beginning and Without End,’ beeswax, wooden understructure, 2005.

Allyson Vieira at Laurel Gitlen

Both Rubenesque and strong, caryatid-like females by New York sculptor Allyson Vieira update classical Greek architectural tradition by hoisting steel I-beams instead of plain lintels, suggesting that today’s new glass and steel structures will one day find themselves ancient. (At Laurel Gitlen on the Lower East Side through March 24th).  

Allyson Vieira, Weight Bearing III, drywall, screws, steel, 2012.

Matthias Merkel Hess at Louis B. James

Matthias Merkel Hess, Eagle 1 Gallon, moon blue, ceramic with glaze, 2012.
Matthias Merkel Hess, Eagle 1 Gallon, moon blue, ceramic with glaze, 2012.

On the subject of ceramics (see yesterday’s post about Takuro Kuwata), Matthias Merkel Hess takes an amusing position on aesthetics vs use value in contemporary ceramics with these beautiful gas cans.  (At Louis B. James, Lower East Side through Feb 22nd. )