Kyle Staver at Kent Fine Art

Kyle Staver’s large paintings at Kent Fine Art update legends and classical mythology with panache and humor, but her small terracotta studies stand out for their immediacy. Here, Venus tries unsuccessfully to persuade Adonis not to venture out on his ill-fated hunt in a compressed action scene that casts Venus as a solid earth-mother and Adonis as an ungainly and heedless youth. (In Chelsea through Oct 22nd).

Kyle Staver, Venus and Adonis Study (after Titian), terracotta, 13 x 10 ½ inches, 2016.
Kyle Staver, Venus and Adonis Study (after Titian), terracotta, 13 x 10 ½ inches, 2016.

Marianne Vitale at Invisible Exports

In a grouping of hand-painted wooden torpedoes, Marianne Vitale swaps out her signature bold, minimalist sculptures made with railway ties or battered wood for personalized weapons bearing ‘American’ symbols including USDA meat and Pollock-like swirls of paint. (At Invisible-Exports on the Lower East Side through Oct 16th).

 

Marianne Vitale, How’m-I-doin,’ pine, oil paint, hardware, approx. 13 x 8 x 8 feet, 2016.
Marianne Vitale, How’m-I-doin,’ pine, oil paint, hardware, approx. 13 x 8 x 8 feet, 2016.

Jeffrey Beebe at Bravin Lee Programs

In Jeffrey Beebe’s richly imagined worlds, he pits ‘the Uncles’ – leaders of the Rover clans – against the ‘Red Soil Boys’ – a bellicose neighboring group who initiated an attack that wiped out many Uncles. In this detail from a grid of lost Uncles, Beebe introduces one of his fantastical creatures – a 21 ft long giant whose horn ‘improved both echolocation and moral indignation.’ (At Bravin Lee Programs in Chelsea through Oct 15th).

Uncles Exterminated During the Tyranny of Manifest Fairnesses, ink, watercolor, gouache on paper, 45 x 72 inches, 2016.
Jeffrey Beebe, detail from ‘Uncles Exterminated During the Tyranny of Manifest Fairnesses,’ ink, watercolor, gouache on paper, 45 x 72 inches, 2016.

Sol LeWitt at Paula Cooper Gallery

Sol LeWitt’s Wall Drawing #368 appears to pulse and move as it surrounds visitors to Paula Cooper Gallery. In addition to the physical impact, there’s also appeal in imagining the various ways LeWitt’s instructions (as enumerated in the drawing’s title) could be interpreted. (In Chelsea through Oct 22nd).

Sol LeWitt, Wall Drawing #368:  The wall is divided vertically into five equal parts.  The center part is divided horizontally and vertically into four equal parts.  Within each part are three-inch (7.5 cm) wide parallel bands of lines in four directions in four colors.  In each of the other parts, three-inch (7.5 cm) bands of lines in one of the four directions.  The bands are drawn in color and India ink washes.  Red, yellow, blue, ink, India ink 3” (7.5 cm) bands.  First drawn by:  Jo Watanabe and others.  First installation:  Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN, January 1982. India ink. dimensions variable.
Sol LeWitt, Wall Drawing #368: The wall is divided vertically into five equal parts. The center part is divided horizontally and vertically into four equal parts. Within each part are three-inch (7.5 cm) wide parallel bands of lines in four directions in four colors. In each of the other parts, three-inch (7.5 cm) bands of lines in one of the four directions. The bands are drawn in color and India ink washes. Red, yellow, blue, ink, India ink 3” (7.5 cm) bands. First drawn by: Jo Watanabe and others. First installation: Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN, January 1982. India ink. dimensions variable.

Bruce Nauman at Sperone Westwater Gallery

In 1968, Bruce Nauman videoed himself slowly pacing down a narrow corridor, swinging his hips with each step into a pose reminiscent of Donatello’s bronze David sculpture. Once again, Nauman posits the human body – now older and fragmented by a screen with multiple splits – as subject for art in a new series of videos at Sperone Westwater Gallery, also on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. (On the Lower East Side through Oct 29th).

Bruce Nauman, installation view of ‘Contrapposto Studies, i through vii at Sperone Westwater Gallery, Sept 2016.
Bruce Nauman, installation view of ‘Contrapposto Studies, i through vii at Sperone Westwater Gallery, Sept 2016.