Sean Bleuchel at Nicole Klagsbrun

Sean Bluechel, 'Banana Pissing Bananas on Trockel,' glazed ceramic on wall, 2012.
Sean Bluechel, ‘Banana Pissing Bananas on Trockel,’ glazed ceramic on wall, 2012.

Andy Warhol is at the top of the contemporary art market, Rosemarie Trockel has a well-received solo exhibition at the New Museum.  Neither’s accomplishments seem to phase Sean Bluechel, whose glazed ceramic bananas (reminiscent of Warhol’s famed fruit) appear to rain down on a Trockel knit wool painting from 1986 in ‘Banana Pissing Bananas on Trockel.’  (At Chelsea’s Nicole Klagsbrun, through January 19th.)

Luc Tuymans at David Zwirner Gallery

Luc Tuymans, Jacket, oil on canvas, 2011.
Luc Tuymans, Jacket, oil on canvas, 2011.

From Belgium’s colonial past to The Disney Company’s practices, Luc Tuymans’s past paintings have obliquely referenced the exercise of power and control.  By contrast, his latest body of work presents fragments from his own life, including this ominous image of a zoo building and a jacket, which looks like a modernist abstraction plus or minus a body.  (At David Zwirner Gallery, 519 West 19th Street through Feb 9th).

Luc Tuymans, Zoo, oil on canvas, 2011.
Luc Tuymans, Zoo, oil on canvas, 2011.

Gallery tour schedule now available for Winter/Spring 2013

There’s more amazing artwork in New York than we can feature!  Join Merrily on a small group gallery tour and be inspired by all that the city’s galleries have to offer.  Please visit New York Art Tours’ website for a schedule and to book your spot.

Andrea Zittel in MoMA’s 53rd Street Window

Andrea Zittel, installation in MoMA's window, 2012-13
Andrea Zittel, installation in MoMA’s window, 2012-13

For her last Chelsea solo show in the fall, Andrea Zittel’s carpet, garments, and wall hangings asked how many ways a rectangle can be manipulated to create art & design.  In MoMA’s 53rd Street windows, her quasi-minimalism object/humanoid characters sport coverings that could be dress or artwork.

Monika Sosnowska and the Public Art Fund

Monika Sosnowska, Fir Tree, steel, 2012.
Monika Sosnowska, Fir Tree, steel, 2012.

Monika Sosnowska’s ‘Fir Tree,’ a 40 foot tall steel sculpture currently located at the southeast entrance to Central Park is just a step beyond the park’s trees but is more in keeping with the solid, man-made structures surrounding the park.  It belongs to neither world, however, and its lack of cheer and melted, post-disaster appearance lend it an ominous intrigue. (Through Feb 17th).