Gregory Crewdson

The color and lighting of Gregory Crewdson’s new photos can be traced to his interest in how painters of the 19th century and prior drew viewers into their paintings with detail and tones that could be appreciated from both near and far. The photos’ suspenseful and melancholy mood might be attributable to major life changes, which have included a new gallery, a divorce and a move out of New York. (At Gagosian Gallery’s 21st Street location through March 5th).

Gregory Crewdson, Woman at Kitchen Window, digital pigment print, 45 1/16 x 57 9/16 inches, 2013.
Gregory Crewdson, Woman at Kitchen Window, digital pigment print, 45 1/16 x 57 9/16 inches, 2013.

Vanessa Prager at The Hole NYC

In person, the subjects of LA painter Vanessa Prager’s heavily painted portraits only faintly emerge from their textured backgrounds; in photos, they materialize more readily. The implications of being more visible on a screen aren’t lost on Prager, who has installed peep-holes through out the gallery to carry on a conversation about the absence and presence of images today. (At The Hole NYC on the Lower East Side through Feb 29th).

Vanessa Prager, Night Gaze, oil on panel, 48 x 48 inches, 2016.
Vanessa Prager, Night Gaze, oil on panel, 48 x 48 inches, 2016.

Chris Killip at Yossi Milo Gallery

Photographer Chris Killip’s iconic images of the North of England, shot between 1973 and 1985, give meaning to the stereotype, ‘It’s grim up north.’ How will these two young girls survive their grey surroundings? (At Yossi Milo Gallery in Chelsea, through Feb 27th).

Chris Killip, Two girls, Grangetown, Middlebrough, Teeside, gelatin silver print, 16 x 20 inches (approx.), 1975.
Chris Killip, Two girls, Grangetown, Middlebrough, Teeside, gelatin silver print, 16 x 20 inches (approx.), 1975.

Amy Sillman at Sikkema Jenkins & Co

“I don’t care about beauty at all,” New York painter Amy Sillman has declared about the imperfect figures and heavily worked canvas of her paintings. Recent works at Sikkema Jenkins & Co are titled after the German word for metabolism, a nod to the process of changing paint into images that land provocatively between abstraction and figuration, suggesting both bodies and furniture in a color palette that simultaneously soothes and excites. (In Chelsea through March 12th).

Amy Sillman, Table 2, oil on canvas, 75 x 66 inches, 2015.

Irving Penn at Pace Gallery

From the 1940s onward, the fashion world embraced the elegance of iconic photographer Irving Penn’s highly visible commercial work, but it sometimes took longer for his personal projects to gain traction. In the iPhone era, his investigation of the wonderful in the banal seems prescient, especially in this particularly charming shot of an eerily face-like wad of chewing gum found on the city street. (At Chelsea’s Pace Gallery through March 5th).

Underfoot XXXIII, New York, gelatin silver print, image 19 1/8 x 18 ¾ inches, 2000.
Underfoot XXXIII, New York, gelatin silver print, image 19 1/8 x 18 ¾ inches, 2000.