Curious Crystal of Unusual Purity P.S.1
by Roger WhiteArtSeen
As Im writing about Curious Crystal of Unusual Purity, Bob Nickass latest group show manifesto at P.S.1, WLNY is broadcasting Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986), in which the crew of the Enterprise, now middle-aged in Stardate 2286, must time-travel back to San Francisco in 1986 to retrieve a pair of humpback whales, repopulate the species on Earth of the future, and save mankind from an alien whale-seeking probe.
German Drawings and Prints from the Weimar Republic (191933)
by Stephanie BuhmannArtSeen
Though overshadowed by the superb collection and exhibition program housed in the nearby Neue Galerie, an institution that solely specializes in the art and design of the German and Austrian Expressionist movements, two small shows at The Metropolitan Museum of Art offer a glimpse of the conflicting visions of German culture in the interwar period.
Karel Funk 303 Gallery
by Nick StillmanArtSeen
Karel Funks show of eleven untitled acrylic paintings at 303 Gallery is very much realistic portrait painting in the old school sense.
Six From the Seventies
by Farrah KarapetianArtSeen
To your right, as you walk into Howard Greenberg, Frank Gohlke makes a few poker-faced jokes about parking lots, planting a bush in the center of his frame or leading you in with a few well-positioned arrows painted on the road.
Counter Culture New Museum of Contemporary Art
by Sonya ShrierArtSeen
If nothing else, Counter Culture is a clever solution to the transitional state that the New Museumalong with most museumsis in: it is an effort to find a middle ground between the new $20 admission at MoMA and the Star Wars exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum.
Darren Bader Rivington Arms
by Ben La RoccoArtSeen
Darren Bader seems preoccupied with the point of intersection between the real and the fictive. Hence his fascination with film, his interweaving of myth and personal narrative. Hence his use of real world objects, primarily food, as sculpture at Rivington Arms
Yeardly Leonard Elizabeth Dee
by Tomassio LonghiArtSeen
The tradition of American geometric painters has tended to aspire to a less idealized order of Platonic absolute.
Bush League Roebling Hall
by Ben LaRoccoArtSeen
Bush League wades the well-swum waters of expressly political art with a group of paintings, sculptures, and videos that levy a critique of current politics and policy in America.
Joanna Pousette-Dart Charles Cowles Gallery
by Michael BrennanArtSeen
How do two planes meet? Forget Henny Youngman for a second, this is the kind of question that painters often worry over.
Field: Science, Technology, and Nature Socrates Sculpture Park
by Tom JohnsonArtSeen
Fields are supposed to be wide open spaces, but Field: Science, Technology and Nature at the Socrates Sculpture Park this summer was just too wide open for its own good.
Margrit Lewczuk All of Me Maier Museum of Art, Lynchburg, Virginia
by James KalmArtSeen
Margrit Lewczuks new paintings, the Phosphorescent Paintings that make up this exhibition at the Maier Museum of Art in Lynchburg, Virginia, are a trip into an artistic terra incognito; a realm without signposts or guiding historical precedents, literally, a walk in the dark.
DoDo Jin Ming
by Jonas MekasArtSeen
May 20th Saw DoDo Jin Ming photography show at Laurence Miller Gallery. Incredible stormy ocean photographs.
Seeing Other People Marianne Boesky Gallery
by William PowhidaArtSeen
What do the curatorial selections of fifteen gallery artists reveal about their own contemporary practices? The obligatory summer group show at Marianne Boesky gallery presents everything from narcissism to thoughtful reflection about the nature of artistic reciprocation.



