Julie Schenkelberg at Asya Geisberg Gallery

Julie Schenkelberg’s sculpture ‘Dowry, Rediscovered,’ a wooden bench sliced open to reveal crockery-stuffed cushions, has the feeling of a long hidden secret suddenly brought to light or a wondrous intrusion of nature – the plates look like fungus – on a man-made object.  (At Chelsea’s Asya Geisberg Gallery through April 20th.)  

Julie Schenkelberg, ‘Dowry, Rediscovered,’ wooden bench, dishes, acrylic gel, 2012.

Gert and Uwe Tobias at Team Gallery

Transylvanian twins Gert & Uwe Tobias offer more of the large-scale woodblock prints that have earned them widespread recognition in recent years in their solo show at SoHo’s Team Gallery.  In this untitled piece, a daybed with a circular, saw-blade-like ornament may have felled the caped jester on the floor…the mystery is provocative. (Through March 30th).  

Untitled (GUT/2053), colored woodcut on canvas, 2012

Rosy Keyser at Peter Blum Gallery

Peter Blum Gallery marks its first show at its new 57th Street gallery (as it says goodbye to its Chelsea and SoHo locations), with Rosy Keyser’s adventurous ‘paintings,’ assembled from materials as diverse as bamboo and rusty, corrugated steel. (Through April 20th).  

Rosy Keyser, ‘Hungry Shepherd, Honeypot,’ left panel:  enamel, spray paint and rope on steel.  Right panel: dye enamel, bamboo, and polycarbonate on aluminum and wood on canvas. 2013.

Andrea Zittel in MoMA’s 53rd Street Window

Andrea Zittel, installation in MoMA's window, 2012-13
Andrea Zittel, installation in MoMA’s window, 2012-13

For her last Chelsea solo show in the fall, Andrea Zittel’s carpet, garments, and wall hangings asked how many ways a rectangle can be manipulated to create art & design.  In MoMA’s 53rd Street windows, her quasi-minimalism object/humanoid characters sport coverings that could be dress or artwork.