Victoria Gitman at Garth Greenan Gallery

Vintage fur handbags by Victoria Gitman amaze with their abundant color and detail at Garth Greenan Gallery in Chelsea. With the contours of the purses cropped, Gitman’s arrangements resemble color field painting or Peruvian feather work. (On view through Feb 17th).

Victoria Gitman, Untitled, oil on board, 6 ¼ x 8 inches, 2017.

Bennett Vadnais in ‘Cityscapes’ at George Billis Gallery

New York painter Bennett Vadnais’ ‘House’ is a standout in George Billis Gallery’s summer group exhibition of cityscapes. Several of the show’s paintings zero in details of urban life – a water tower, a segment of a bridge – but Vadnais adds a focus on the passage of time by contrasting buildings from different eras.  (On view in Chelsea through July 22nd ).

Bennett Vadnais, House, gouache on panel, 7 x 11.5 inches.

Kay Kurt at Albertz Benda

Collectors might metaphorically salivate after coveted artworks, but the feeling turns literal in sight of Kay Kurt’s intense, realist renderings of candy. At six feet high and eleven feet long, this assortment of hard candies brings to mind the flavors of childhood while treating each piece as its own perfectly formed sculptural object. (At Albertz Benda in Chelsea through Feb 16th).

Kay Kurt, Hallelujah, oil on linen, 72 x 132 inches, 1995-2016.
Kay Kurt, Hallelujah, oil on linen, 72 x 132 inches, 1995-2016.

Ellen Altfest in ‘The Female Gaze’ at Cheim & Read Gallery

Known for hyper-detailed renderings of the male body (among other natural subjects), Ellen Altfest’s ‘Leg’ ponders the facts on a section of a man’s leg. Veins, hair, and tiny blemishes are the ostensible subjects of the painting, but the limb gives off a vital glow, contrasting its grey surroundings and suggesting that even a fractional view of her subject bears close scrutiny. (At Cheim & Read Gallery in ‘The Female Gaze, Part Two: Women Look at Men’ through Sept 2nd).

Ellen Altfest, Leg, oil on linen, 8 x 11 x 1 ½ inches, 2010.
Ellen Altfest, Leg, oil on linen, 8 x 11 x 1 ½ inches, 2010.

 

Paulette Tavormina at Robert Mann Gallery

When a New York Times critic praised 18th century Spanish painter Luis Melendez’s intensely realist still life paintings at the National Gallery of Art in ’09, he was captivated by Melendez’s stunning ‘near-photographic verisimilitude.’ In her photographic homage to Melendez, New York photographer Paulette Tavormina closes the gap between painting and photo with assemblages of fruit, vegetables, meats and various kitchen items that extoll the beauty not only of Melendez’s work but of the bounty of the natural world. (At Robert Mann Gallery through March 21st).

Paulette Tavormina, Still Life with Jamon Iberico, after L. M., archival pigment print, 26 x 48 inches, 2014.