Loading...
New YorkJanuary 26, 2022 • View in browserPaintings that Honor the Privacy of GriefCrys Yin’s subject is grief, which, for all that takes place in public, is largely a private matter. | John Yau SPONSORED Jane Freilicher and Thomas Nozkowski: True FictionsCurated by Eric Brown, this exhibition at the Milton Resnick and Pat Passlof Foundation in New York is on view through February 26. Learn more. A Historical Art of Dissent for the Digital AgeIn Doomscrolling, Rob Swainston and Zorawar Sidhu assume the task Walter Benjamin set for the articulation of history — to “seize hold of the past as it flashes up at a moment of danger.” | Faye Hirsch Something Is Not Right With The WorldAlexi Worth’s paintings demand a double-take that allows viewers to look closer and begin dissembling the painting in order to understand what is being looked at. | John Yau Saying Maybe to the Yes MenAs much as I appreciate the collective’s culture jamming initiatives, I don’t know that their putative premise ever bears meaningful fruit. | Seph Rodney The Materiality of Memory in the Paintings of Eugène LeroyLeroy’s canvases seem to be about age and decay — about the process and limits of recollection made manifest. | Jake Romm Become a member today to support our independent journalism. CLOSING SOON Norman Lewis, "Eye of the Storm" (1973), oil on canvas, 51 1⁄8 x 87 1⁄2 inches (all images © Estate of Norman Lewis; Courtesy of Michael Rosenfeld Gallery LLC, New York, NY) Norman Lewis: Shades of Blackness Jiha Moon: Stranger Yellow Chie Fueki: You & I
|
Loading...
Loading...