Quentin James McCaffrey at Nicelle Beauchene Gallery

Never much more than a foot high, Quentin James McCaffrey’s small paintings at Nicelle Beauchene Gallery encourage viewers to draw close and peer into imagined domestic interiors that act as portals into other times and places. Here, ‘Mirror with a View’ presents us with a mirror (or is it a painting of a mirror’s reflection?) that reflects not us but a view of a landscape through a door, a painting of clouds on the domed ceiling and four paintings that lead the eye into other landscapes.  Though McCaffrey offers a profusion of exits via paintings, ceiling and door, the diminutive size of each limits our fantasy escape, instead underscoring the tantalizing possibilities of illusion.  (On view through July 7th).

Quentin James McCaffrey, Mirror with View, oil on canvas over wood panel, 16 x 13 x 1 ½ inches, 2023.

Kota Ezawa at Murray Guy Gallery

Kota Ezawa’s signature simplified, graphic images are well suited to his current body of work – lightboxes that replicate thirteen artworks stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston in 1990. Contrary to the carefully executed detail in the original painting depicted here by Johannes Vermeer, Ezawa’s more generalized rendering suggests the omissions of memory. (At Chelsea’s Murray Guy Gallery through Dec 19th).

 Kota Ezawa, The Concert, LED lightbox, 28 x 25 inches, 2015.