Heinz Mack at Sperone Westwater Gallery

Post-war German ZERO group leader Heinz Mack carries his decades-long interest in color right up to his recent work, including this nearly 20-foot long abstract painting at Sperone Westwater on the Lower East Side. Titled ‘The Garden of Eden (Chromatic Constellation),’ Mack’s colors conjure verdant earth and the colors of the hot sun and cool night. (On view through March 25th.)

Heinz Mack, The Garden of Eden (Chromatic Constellation), acrylic on canvas, 143 x 236 inches, 2011.

Yinka Shonibare at James Cohan Gallery

British-Nigerian artist Yinka Shonibare celebrates ethnic diversity in British literature with ‘The British Library,’ an installation of books written by British authors from around the globe. Wrapped in Shonibare’s signature fabric – Dutch prints derived from Indonesian batik and sold to West African markets – the volumes bear silent testimony to the beauty of difference. (At James Cohan Gallery’s Chelsea location through March 18th).

Yinka Shonibare, The British Library, hardback books, Dutch wax printed cotton textile, gold foiled names, headphones, interactive Application, dimensions variable, 2017.

Paul Resika at Steven Harvey Fine Art Projects

Paul Resika’s current solo show, ‘Empty’ at Steven Harvey Fine Art Projects defies its title by engaging color field abstraction and also representational painting. A rich blue night sky and curiously intimate sailboats invite enjoyment of saturated color and the beginning of a narrative. (On the Lower East Side through March 19th).

Paul Resika, Blue Nights 2 Boats, oil on canvas, 40 x 31 ¾ inches, 1990.

 

Gerhard Richter at FLAG Art Foundation

To create the Rorschach-like image on this tapestry, German painter Gerhard Richter quartered and flipped a section from a 1990 abstract painting. At around nine feet tall and twelve feet wide, the complexity of its large surface boggles and its presence is both powerful and yet more ephemeral than the artist’s paintings. (At FLAG Art Foundation in Chelsea through May 13th).

Gerhard Richter, YUSUF, jacquard woven tapestry, 108 11/16 x 148 13/16 inches, 2009.

Cristine Brache at Fierman

Christine Brache’s flesh-colored domino table swaps cards for playing pieces and features Brache’s face as queen and king. This mash-up speaks to the artist’s comparison of her own post-colonial genetic makeup to a VHS tape recording of a family event that has been repeatedly taped over. (At Fierman through March 19th).

Cristine Brache, Colonial style Domino table (self-portrait), porcelain, silicone, curly maple, dried oxeye daisies, glass, 33 x 33 x 45 inches, 2017.