Lin Tianmiao at Galerie Lelong

 

Lin Tianmiao, Badges installation view, Galerie Lelong, NY, 2012.
Lin Tianmiao, Badges installation view, Galerie Lelong, NY, 2012.

Lin Tianmiao ‘s installation at Chelsea’s Galerie Lelong, titled ‘Badges,’ features sixty embroidered American and Chinese slang terms for women, most of which aren’t particularly flattering.  When asked for a recent Artnews article if she’d call herself feminist, Lin’s great reply was “…in China, we don’t have that tradition…but no matter how you look at it…it is better to have respect in mind and equality in mind.” (through Dec 15th).

Jules de Balincourt at Salon94 Bowery

Jules de Balincourt, Off Base, oil and acrylic on canvas, 2012.
Jules de Balincourt, Off Base, oil and acrylic on canvas, 2012.

Jules de Balincourt’s soldiers have a dazed, world-weary expression and, like Andy Warhol’s ‘Triple Elvis,’ each has at least one shadow character in near proximity.  In this detail from the larger painting ‘Off Base,’ the artist turns the mens’ face paint camouflage into Fauvist masks that resonate with a reinterpreted Matisse painting nearby. (At Salon94 Bowery, on the Lower East Side, through January 13th.)

Mickalene Thomas at Lehmann Maupin Gallery

Mickalene Thomas, 'Vertical View of Jardin d'Eau,' rhinestones, acrylic, oil and enamel on wood panel, 2012.
Mickalene Thomas, ‘Vertical View of Jardin d’Eau,’ rhinestones, acrylic, oil and enamel on wood panel, 2012.

Mickalene Thomas is having her moment in New York, with gallery shows at Lehmann Maupin Gallery in Chelsea and on the Lower East Side while her retrospective at the Brooklyn Museum continues.  This landscape, now on view on the Lower East Side and titled ‘Vertical View of Jardin D’Eau’ was inspired by Thomas’ residency at Monet’s residence and garden at Giverny, home of his famous water lilies.   (At Lehmann Maupin Gallery through Jan 5th).

‘The Art of Scent’ at the Museum of Art & Design

'The Art of Scent,' Museum of Art and Design, Installation view, 2012.
‘The Art of Scent,’ Museum of Art and Design, Installation view, 2012.

Though it looks like a mini-version of a Doug Wheeler Light & Space installation crossed with a urinal and an abstracted cleavage, this wall indentation (designed by architecture firm Diller, Scofidio & Renfro) is the receptacle for an artwork that is scent alone.  It is one of twelve concoctions on display in the Museum of Art & Design’s ‘The Art of Scent’ and is called L’Eau d’Issey after designer Issay Miyake, who commissioned a scent that would suggest water.  (Through Feb 24th, 2013).

Trenton Doyle Hancock at James Cohan Gallery

Trenton Doyle Hancock, Plate of Shrimp, acrylic and mixed media on canvas, 2012.
Trenton Doyle Hancock, Plate of Shrimp, acrylic and mixed media on canvas, 2012.

For a decade, Trenton Doyle Hancock’s busy, messy and captivating collages told the tales of his invented creatures – the Mounds and the Vegans.  He leaves those characters behind in his latest solo show at Chelsea’s James Cohan Gallery, but not before making this disconcerting self-portrait in which his eye and mostly removed face emerges from the open maw of a screaming, striped Mound. (through Dec 22nd)