Verne Dawson at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise

New paintings made in New York and North Carolina feature spring blossoms and mobile homes in Verne Dawson’s current show at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise. In the foreground of this bucolic but blighted landscape, Dawson portrays a pastoral scene of women bathing and gathering water, not from a sylvan spring but from a ditch. (At Gavin Brown’s Enterprise on the Lower East Side through June 24th).

Verne Dawson, N.C. 25, oil on canvas, 66 x 60 inches, 2017.

Eric Fischl at Skarstedt

Though the pool is enticing, this isn’t a tranquil summer scene. Eric Fischl’s ‘Daddy’s Gone, Girl’ suggests that the woman in the voluminous black dress is in mourning for an absent father and maybe a little unmoored. As an update on Fischl’s well-known 1984 painting Daddy’s Girl, it’s a meditation on loss and isolation. (At Skarstedt’s Chelsea location through June 24th).

Eric Fischl, Daddy’s Gone, Girl, oil on linen, 78 x 107 inches, 2016.

Roxy Paine at Paul Kasmin Gallery

Roxy Paine’s three new dioramas at Paul Kasmin Gallery continue the artist’s interest in systems of control. Here, a view into a view into a hotel room alludes to the CIA’s experiments in administering LSD to unsuspecting civilians in the 1950s. The meticulously crafted scene illustrates a shocking invasion of privacy and personal well-being. (On view in Chelsea through July 1st).

Roxy Paine, Experiment, steel, maple, fluorescent lamps, acrylic prismatic light diffusers, aluminum and oil paint, 96 3/8 x 106 3/8 x 71 3/8 inches, 2015.

Wyatt Gallery at Foley Gallery

Subway advertising boards, scraped free of ads before being recovered by new posters, continue to inspire Wyatt Gallery’s ongoing photo series, ‘Subtext.’ In the latest work, he considers his images as portals to more tranquil, meditative environments than the train platform. (On view at Foley Gallery on the Lower East Side through June 25th).

Wyatt Gallery, 135th BC: 157-245.9, UV Cured Pigment Ink on Dibond, 42 x 54 inches, 2017.

Nicola Lopez at Jacob Lewis Gallery

Nicola Lopez mixes interior and exterior walls, façade and skeleton in her bold installation at Jacob Lewis Gallery in Chelsea. Titled ‘Big Windows: Skin: Portals’ Lopez questions the impenetrable quality of anonymous modern glass wall architecture, mounting woodcuts on normally hidden metal studs that support interior walls. (On view through June 30th).

Nicola Lopez, installation view of ‘Big Windows: Skin: Portals’ at Jacob Lewis Gallery, Chelesa, June 2017.