Whitfield Lovell at DC Moore Gallery

A portrait of a portly businessman paired with a model train engine, a corseted woman with theatrical tassels attached to the sides of her likeness and other drawings of men and women in 19th century dress by Whitfield Lovell at DC Moore Gallery are made more intense and vibrant by their red background. In the new series titled ‘The Reds,’ Lovell continues to pair drawings of individuals with found objects that enhance our understanding of the sitter’s identity.  Here, a young man is surrounded by a hovering halo of stars prompting viewers to question how this individual’s identity relates to country.  (On view through Dec 18th).

Whitfield Lovell, The Red XIV, conte on paper with attached found objects, 45 ¾ x 34 inches, 2021.

Nathaniel Mary Quinn at Gagosian Gallery

Divisions both stark and subtle dominate Nathaniel Mary Quinn’s drawing ‘Double-Barreled Shotgun,’ a standout in his current show at Gagosian Gallery’s uptown location.  Prompted by a bad experience with a family member, this piece unites two figures only to show their differences.  Created with a technique that appears to be collage, yet is entirely hand drawn in charcoal, gouache and soft pastel on Coventry vellum paper, the work manifests invisible hurt in disfigured faces. (On view through Oct 30th).

Nathaniel Mary Quinn, Double-Barreled Shotgun, charcoal, gouache and soft pastel on Coventry vellum paper, 48 x 45 inches, 2021.

Ghada Amer at Marianne Boesky Gallery

“Do not fit into the glass slipper like Cinderella did, shatter the glass ceiling,” reads the text (quoting Indian actor Priyanka Chopra?) covering Ghada Amer’s portrait of her friend, Elizabeth.  Though Amer has changed her subjects from women in erotic magazines to friends, family and collaborators, she has not altered her habit of citing truisms from a feminist perspective.  Her latest Chelsea show – her first at Marianne Boesky Gallery – features texts intended to build up women and their capabilities.  (On view through Oct 23rd).

Ghada Amer, Portrait of Elizabeth, acrylic, embroidery, and gel medium on canvas, 2021.

Beauford Delaney at Michael Rosenfeld Gallery

Often painted from memory and incisively capturing aspects of a sitter’s emotional life, Beauford Delaney’s portraits at Michael Rosenfeld Gallery feel strikingly immediate.  Showcasing 25 portraits and 7 abstractions from the artist’s Greenwich Village days to his decades in Paris, the exhibition’s highlights demonstrate how (as the gallery puts it in a handout), “the physical description of the sitter is secondary to their psychological essence.”  Here, in a portrait titled ‘Untitled (Young English Lieutenant),’ the tones of Delaney’s multi-colored background direct our eyes towards a vivid encounter with a young Englishman.  (On view in Chelsea through Nov 13th.  Masks and proof of vaccination are required.)

Beauford Delaney, Untitled (Young English Lieutenant), oil on canvas, 36 x 30 inches, 1943.

Sydney Vernon in ‘Black Femme: Sovereign of WAP and the Virtual Realm’ at Canada Gallery

Pretty in pink but commanding her space, the subject of this portrait by Sydney Vernon at Canada Gallery is full of life.  Along with an accompanying video the mixed media portrait is actually a memorial to a family matriarch, ‘a tender reflection on familial love and loss.’  A pelvic x-ray to the left, a photo of two children on the right along with living spaces and artwork suggest episodes from a life while writing on the column to the left offers sage advice including ‘beauty is only skin deep.’ (On view in Tribeca through April 10th.  Masks and social distancing is required and occupancy is limited).

Sydney Vernon, Tying Loose Ends, pastel, charcoal, acrylic and collage on paper, 52 x 46 inches, 2020.