Veronika Pausova at Simone Subal Gallery

Geometry rules this painting by Toronto-based painter Veronika Pausova, who alludes to domestic environments by picturing curtains, cupboards and flower vases in still life paintings that are both tranquil and tense. This standout from her current show at Simone Subal Gallery, titled ‘Neighbour,’ suggests a nosy neighbor twitching her stylish curtains or the reverse – a neighbor tantalizingly out of our view. (On the Lower East Side through July 28th).

Veronika Pausova, Neighbour, oil on canvas, 36 x 30 inches, 2017.

Larry Bamburg at Simone Subal Gallery

A 300 lb piece of talc was the basis of this large sculpture by Larry Bamburg, who bridged the natural and manmade by adding a similarly colored soap, then bathroom tiles to the stone, creating a conversation between materials whose properties converge yet remain distinct. (At Simone Subal on the Lower East Side through March 20th).

Larry Bamburg, Talcto Tile PL’d to MDO, talc, ceramic and plaster tiles, planitesine, medium density overlay (MDO) plywood, 70 3/10 x 43 ½ x 54 ½ inches, 2016.
Larry Bamburg, Talcto Tile PL’d to MDO, talc, ceramic and plaster tiles, planitesine, medium density overlay (MDO) plywood, 70 3/10 x 43 ½ x 54 ½ inches, 2016.

Kiki Kogelnik in ‘Untitled Body Parts’ at Simone Subal Gallery




Austrian Pop artist Kiki Kogelnik lays out bodies for view in ‘Cold Passage,’ an oil painting that offers and denies access to its subjects by abstracting heads into round emoji-like circles (though the painting is from 1964) and silhouetted bodies as if they’re flat cutouts or crime scene chalk outlines. (At Simone Subal Gallery through Feb 7th).

Kiki Kogelnik, Cold Passage, oil and acrylic on canvas, 59 ¾ x 48 inches, 1964.


Larry Bamburg at Simone Subal Gallery

On a pedestal of lava rock, Larry Bamburg stacked a 400lb redwood burl, then proceeded to add animal hoofs, turtle shells and more burls.  The materials are evocative and the arrangement is a feat of balance but the real charge comes from nature used as both raw material and formal element.  (At Simone Subal Gallery through April 28th)  

Larry Bamburg, ‘Burls Hooves and Shells on a Pedestal of Lava Rock,’ wood burls, animal hooves, turtle and mollusk shells, lava rock, ratchet strap, 2013.

Lucy Skaer at Simone Subal Gallery

Lucy Skaer, Us to Them V, C-print mounted on aluminum, 2012.
Lucy Skaer, Us to Them V, C-print mounted on aluminum, 2012.

British conceptual artist Lucy Skaer once left a diamond and a scorpion together on an Amsterdam street.  ‘Us to Them V,’ a photo of Skaer comparing natural materials to French Post-Impressionist Eduoard Vuillard’s 1895 painting ‘Album’ in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, isn’t quite so dangerous.  But it does make a strange juxtaposition that interrupts usual ways of thinking of 19th century art. (At Simone Subal Gallery the group show ‘It’s Over There,’ Lower East Side through Feb 10th).