Meredith Allen in ‘Les Fleur du Mal’ at Pierogi Gallery

Summer takes a slightly sinister turn at Pierogi Gallery’s ‘Les Fleur du Mal’ group show; here, a photo from the late Williamsburg gallery scene stalwart Meredith Allen’s ‘Melting Ice Pops’ series documents a Pokemon treat as it morphs into a dripping demon.  (On view on the Lower East Side through Aug 4th).

Meredith Allen, Moriches Island Road, Pokemon, C-print, 18 x 22 inches, 1999.

Tanya Marcuse at Julie Saul Gallery

Over a period of weeks or months, photographer Tanya Marcuse builds up sections of earth with transplanted mushrooms, berries, and various plants, adding in preserved animals (who have died elsewhere) along with fresh materials. The result is a tour de force of nature, which she likens to the roiling bodies of Jan van Eyck’s Last Judgment or a Jackson Pollock dense, all-over composition. (At Julie Saul Gallery through Nov 25th).

Tanya Marcuse, detail of ‘Woven No. 9,’ pigment print, 62 x 124,” 2015.

Thomas Bangsted at Marc Straus Gallery

Danish photographer Thomas Bangsted’s WWII scenes at first read as strangely hi-res documentary images until revealed as masterpieces of reconstruction. Photographing objects and vehicles from war museums and collectors, building his own props (like the life raft in the foreground) and tracking down remaining ships, Bangsted pictures the maneuvers that won the war, including this episode in the Allied effort to sink one of the largest warships ever made. (On view at Marc Straus Gallery on the Lower East Side through Dec 10th).

Thomas Bangsted, Port of Embarkation (Lady Liberty SS Margaret Knight), pigment print, 85 x 115.8, 2012 – 2017.

Ydessa Hendeles in ‘The Keeper’ at the New Museum

Ydessa Hendeles’ ‘Partners (The Teddy Bear Project)’ is a standout in ‘The Keeper,’ the New Museum’s intriguing homage to obsessive collections of deeply meaningful, often personal, artifacts. The installation presents over three thousand photographs from diverse family albums of individuals with their teddy bears, taken since the stuffed animal came into existence thanks to Teddy Roosevelt’s hunting exploits. Here, teddies break through class barriers, age differences and cultural divides as the world embraces a mass-produced consumer good. (Through Sept 25th).

Ydessa Hendeles, installation view of ‘Partners (The Teddy Bear Project)’ at the New Museum, July 2016.
Ydessa Hendeles, installation view of ‘Partners (The Teddy Bear Project)’ at the New Museum, July 2016.

Lucas Blalock at Ramiken Crucible

Lucas Blalock’s overt manipulation of this odd but banal scene begs the question of why anyone would want to represent chopped sausage at all, never mind as both a photo and a digital rendering. The effect is to put our minds between places –simultaneously in the digital realm and in a stranger’s kitchen. (At Ramiken Crucible on the Lower East Side through May 22nd).

Lucas Blalock, Double Recipe, archival inkjet print, 20.5 x 25.25 inches framed, 2015-16.
Lucas Blalock, Double Recipe, archival inkjet print, 20.5 x 25.25 inches framed, 2015-16.