“SPIRAL” MARCUS JAHMAL AT ALMINE RECH GALLERY
In Marcus Jahmal’s new paintings, purple hurtles along the continuum of human history. The figures that populate his washy fields wear little clothing or nothing at all, a self-abnegating refusal of millenia of class structure. They have become purple itself,…
MANI NEJAD AT KIPS GALLERY NEW YORK
Mani Nejad's paintings unite the languages of abstraction and figuration in a single canvas weaving togehter spontaneous tracks of composition that result in works that are organized in their own autonomous way ...
ROSS BLECKNER – THE VIABILITY OF PAINTING
Internationally acclaimed American artist Ross Bleckner offers insight into a body of work that has never been exhibited so far —not even in past retrospectives—and provides an intriguing and revealing debut look at his earliest years as a painter. Furthermore,…
A GLIMPSE OF TRANSCENDENCE – PAINTINGS BY ANNA CONWAY
American Painter Anna Conway’s process of conceiving and fully realizing her paintings without preparatory studies is stunning and necessitates continual additions and erasures. The tracks and traces of meticulous revision are present in each work and render visible the same…
“THE SWIRL” – PAINTINGS & DRAWINGS OF MANI NEJAD
Berlin and London based artist Mani Nejad has been developing his Brain Blitz series over a period of several years. It's a comprehensive suite of delicate works weaving together various media ...
“IDEALS OF THE UNFOUND TRUTH” GEORGE CONDO AT HAUSER & WIRTH
‘Internal Riot’ presents new paintings and works on paper by George Condo. Made during quarantine, these works reflect the unsettling experience of the absence ...
“An Eclipse of Moths” – Gregory Crewdson
For three decades, U.S. based Gregory Crewdson’s photographic series of houses, landscapes, and people have become canonical representations of the liminal and forgotten in America.
DEXTER DALWOOD – CONSTRUCTIONS OF HISTORY IN PAINTING
British artist Dexter Dalwood presents a new series of paintings at Simon Lee Gallery Hong Kong – with a look nearly four decades into the future. The exhibition’s title “2059” as well as the titles of individual works make reference…