Imaginary Future is a group exhibition in the time of Corona where the works have been rendered into the NY streets and other random places. Click on images to reveal details. For additional info contact [email protected]
seen from China

seen from Canada

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from Brazil
seen from United States

seen from Argentina

seen from Canada

seen from Chile
seen from Chile
seen from China
seen from Argentina

seen from Belarus
seen from China
seen from Canada
seen from Sweden
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Saudi Arabia
Imaginary Future is a group exhibition in the time of Corona where the works have been rendered into the NY streets and other random places. Click on images to reveal details. For additional info contact [email protected]

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Imaginary Future is a group exhibition in the time of Corona where the works have been rendered into the NY streets and other random places. Click on images to reveal details. For additional info contact [email protected]
Gallery review (6/23): Half Gallery, Unix, Bryce Wolfowitz
Each Friday, our writers review a few choice (New York) gallery openings from the night before.
by Elinor Case-Pethica, Staff writer
Jay Miriamās āCatch the Heavenly Bodiesā at Half Gallery
Art critic Clement Greenberg was known for a maneuver he would do each time he encountered a new work of art: covering his eyes and turning his back, and then rapidly removing his hands and spinning around to face the piece. The trick was based on the idea that aesthetic judgements are best made instantly and devoid of unnecessary context, with fresh eyes. This spin-and-reveal is very much how one feels walking into Half Gallery for their new show, Catch the Heavenly Bodies. Located at the end of a narrow and secluded walkway, behind an un-marked door and up a flight of stairs, the exhibition space is impossible to predict. It is with fresh eyes, then, that one takes in Jay Miriamās Ā paintings arranged around a decidedly domestic-looking gallery, which is complete with a fireplace and spiral staircase. The paintings themselves are clearly riffing off some of the greats ā DeKooning and Matisse to name a fewā but with a distinctly feminine authorship that spins the familiar genre in an unfamiliar direction.
Catch the Heavenly Bodies will be on view until July 27th.
Jay Miriam, āFountain of Youthā, oil on linen, Ā 64" x 50"
KwangHo Shin at Unix Gallery
Any student of painting learns early on that the material texture of paint is almost always more alluring that the subject matter it is used to depict. KwangHo Shin has taken advantage of the naturally seductive nature of oil paint for his most recent solo show at Unix Gallery. The bright and lustrous oil paint that adorns his canvases is, in places, as much as two inches thick off the surface, and satisfyingly swirled like a the frosting on a cupcake. The majority of the works are explorations in color and texture, confined within the silhouette of a portrait-bust. The sheer volume of paint in the show is somewhat hypnotic: to quote a fellow gallery-goer, āItās hard to go wrong pushing materiality.ā The best of the works included are indeed mesmerizingly physical. However, the show could have benefitted from tighter editing. Three of the more figural pieces in the front room were of a markedly different quality level than the more abstract heads, and felt like a post-script saying āI can paint illusion too!ā rather than contributing to the force of the central works. Regardless of thisā the overall experience of the young artistās work is compelling and tactile.
KwangHo Shinās work will be at Unix Gallery until July 30.
KwangHo Shinās collection at the Unix Gallery
Evan Robarts āSuper Reliableā at Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery
Super Reliable by Evan Robarts cleverly references art history in a playful and fresh way. Inspired by his time as a superintendent, the show is made up of a series of paintings on linoleum tile made by mopping watered-down plaster over them repeatedly, as well a glass sculpture with black rubber hose winding through it in lethargic loops. Robartās use of grids, lines, and bold primary colors is reminiscent of artists like Sol LeWitt. His industrial materials combined with an element of gesture, however, add an interesting new level by inviting parallels between the work of the artist and the work of the manual laborer. Both formally and conceptually, the show is tidy and elegant.
Super Reliable will be on view at Bryce Wolkowitz until July 29th.
Evan Robartsā collection at the Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery
Jay Miriam @ Ornis A, Amsterdam
suggested by Armin Boehm
-
Copyright of the Artist - Courtesy of the Artist and Ornis A. Gallery, Amsterdam Jay Miriam Blue paintings of women Ornis A. Gallery, Amsterdam 18 October 2014 - 22 November 2014 More details on:Ā http://ornisagallery.com/exhibitions-images/?time=2&id=634