Jackie Gendel at Thomas Erben Gallery

Jackie Gendel’s almost abstract chorus line of colorful figures appears chicly modern and homespun at the same time, recalling Gino Severini’s 1912 Futurist nightclub dancers but looking as if sewn together from fabric, an attractive and disarming effect achieved by painting in oil on vinyl. (At Thomas Erben Gallery through Oct 29th).

Jackie Gendel, As of yet untitled, oil and vinyl on linen, 40 x 30 inches, 2016.
Jackie Gendel, As of yet untitled, oil and vinyl on linen, 40 x 30 inches, 2016.

Georg Baselitz at Gagosian Gallery

Two nudes descending a staircase by Georg Baselitz channels Marcel Duchamp’s famous 1912 Cubist figure but without the nervous energy. Upside down and painted in white, they are joined in the room’s other monumental paintings by ghostly characters who could be disappearing slowly downward into a dark pool of water, like Bill Viola’s transcending subjects. (At Gagosian Gallery’s 21st Street location in Chelsea through Oct 29th).

Georg Baselitz, Zweimal Treppe runter (Twice Down the Stairs), oil on canvas, 122 1/16 x 99 5/8 inches, 2016.
Georg Baselitz, Zweimal Treppe runter (Twice Down the Stairs), oil on canvas, 122 1/16 x 99 5/8 inches, 2016.

Nendo: 50 Manga Chairs at Friedman Benda Gallery

Does your furniture say something about your personality? Japanese design group Nendo goes a step further, suggesting that chairs themselves have personality, as demonstrated by fifty stainless steel seats. All were inspired by manga and intended to convey mood or attitude. Enhanced by swirling projections on the gallery walls, the chair in the foreground looks like it’s just arrived from another dimension, eager to please. (At Chelsea’s Friedman Benda through Oct 29th).

Nendo:  50 Manga Chairs, installation view, Friedman Benda, Sept 2016.
Nendo: 50 Manga Chairs, installation view, Friedman Benda, Sept 2016.

Amy Casey at Foley Gallery

Walks and bus rides through Cleveland’s post-industrial landscape inspires Amy Casey’s amazingly intricate acrylic paintings. Here, the built environment mobilizes into twisted chains that evoke jewelry or a train set. (At Foley Gallery on the Lower East Side through Oct 30th).

Amy Casey, (detail) Swirlsnap, acrylic on panel, 48 x 48 inches, 2016.
Amy Casey, (detail) Swirlsnap, acrylic on panel, 48 x 48 inches, 2016.

Matthew Chambers at Feuer Mesler Gallery

‘Not everything needs to be exalted and monetized,’ says Matthew Chambers, who allows gallery visitors to flip through his huge, painted books. On the gallery walls at Feuer Mesler, Chambers explores color via appealing flower paintings (left wall), tulip canvases are all about pattern, and torn canvas strips [right wall) morph into textured monochromes. (At Feuer Mesler Gallery on the Lower East Side through Oct 23rd).

Matthew Chambers, installation view of ‘(My) LA Paintings,’ at Feuer Mesler Gallery, Sept 2016.
Matthew Chambers, installation view of ‘(My) LA Paintings,’ at Feuer Mesler Gallery, Sept 2016.