Bradley Biancardi in ‘Lover’ at Thierry Goldberg Gallery

They’re not looking at each other, but this dancing couple makes a connection through the eyes. As if they share a common vision, or are alert to each other’s thoughts, each bears an eye of the other as they engage in an elaborate courtship ritual. (At Lower East Side Gallery Thierry Goldberg, through May 1st).

Bradley Biancardi, Rain Dance/Bing Bang, mixed media on canvas, 48 x 54 inches, 2015.
Bradley Biancardi, Rain Dance/Bing Bang, mixed media on canvas, 48 x 54 inches, 2015.

Barbara Takenaga at DC Moore Gallery

Set against wallpaper developed for an installation at Mass MoCA, Barbara Takenaga’s ‘Life’ looks like an implosion inside of a molecular structure. The effect is eye-popping in person. (At DC Moore Gallery in Chelsea through April 30th).

Barbara Takenaga, Lift II, acrylic on linen, 54 x 45 inches, 2015.
Barbara Takenaga, Lift II, acrylic on linen, 54 x 45 inches, 2015.

Amy Lincoln at Morgan Lehman Gallery

New York artist Amy Lincoln carefully studies particular plants, then incorporates them in paintings of the natural world so crisp and vibrantly colored, they’re almost hallucinogenic. (At Morgan Lehman Gallery in Chelsea through May 7th).

Amy Lincoln, Variegated Rubber Plant, acrylic on panel, 20 x 16 inches, 2016.
Amy Lincoln, Variegated Rubber Plant, acrylic on panel, 20 x 16 inches, 2016.

Keiichi Tanaami at Sikkema Jenkins & Co

Above a barely noticeable landscape of frothing waves and neon-colored bridges, a strange assortment of alien characters array themselves like a contemporary, psychedelic thangka in Keiichi Tanaami’s ‘Vision in the Womb.’ The Japanese icon blends eroticism and the lingering terror of Tokyo’s firebombing in a hallucinatory scene that stuns in its creative profusion. (At Chelsea’s Sikkema Jenkins & Co through April 23rd).

Keiichi Tanaami, Vision in the Womb, acrlic paint, digital pigment print, silkscreen print, glass powder on canvas, 80.125 x 118.125 inches, 2015.
Keiichi Tanaami, Vision in the Womb, acrlic paint, digital pigment print, silkscreen print, glass powder on canvas, 80.125 x 118.125 inches, 2015.

Jennifer Bartlett at Paula Cooper Gallery

Using her home and the surrounding landscape in Amagansett as subject matter, Jennifer Bartlett offers two versions of the same view. Both have been constructed with a graining brush, a tool that allows her to paint in parallel lines, taking her longstanding relationship with the grid to new directions. (At Paula Cooper Gallery through April 23rd).

Jennifer Bartlett, Amagansett Diptypch #2, oil on canvas, each of two panels 96 x 96 inches, 2007-08.
Jennifer Bartlett, Amagansett Diptypch #2, oil on canvas, each of two panels 96 x 96 inches, 2007-08.