Notes
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Notes
October 9, 2024
DRIVE: The Garage – TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Jason Rhoades
Hauser & Wirth / Sept 13, 2024 - Jan 5, 2025
I miss Jason Rhoades. Not that I knew him (so back off, you oddly territorial, middle-aged art mob), but this show makes me feel it. The garage installation – a sagging, claptrap, cardboard husk surrounding a very real, but very useless Ford V-8 engine, no car in sight – makes me think of heart and body, and whether one can function without the other. Container and soul, in tension. Nearby, the stack of silent crates again reminds me of empty bodies, or, rather, empty bodies waiting to store an empty body (the installation). It all makes me somewhat sad. Having seen the entirety of Rhoades’ DRIVE series here at Hauser, I now consider the first chapter (The Parking Space) the strongest because we got the most Rhoades. We got to chase his twisting and unrelenting ideas down a freeway (via Obrist’s video), ideas that always led somewhere, even and especially when I thought they were going nowhere. That video painted a portrait of the artist as heat center, as a spirit kept alive through his rabid pursuit of… art? Ideas? Himself? While the show’s texts often refer to the readymade, to value, and to humor in conceptual ways, the more I watched that video, the more it became clear that the concept holding things together was Rhoades, himself, and nothing else. With Rhoades there to convince me, I looked at those four vehicles and imbued them with all the wonder in the world because I wanted to see what he saw. And so I did. In The Garage, though, Rhoades is absent, and glaringly so. The closest we get to him are his handwritten letters, sketches, and notes on the far wall. With the artist missing, we lack what’s obviously a vital hook, and the installation doesn’t quite land.
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October 6, 2024
Ted Gahl/Lydia Enriquez – THREE POINT FIVE STARS
Ted Gahl and Lydia Enriquez
Sarah Brook / Sept 14-Oct 12, 2024
Not much to say except that this is a very solid show. The two artists never talk over one another. Gahl’s paintings suggest limits but resist their certainty, making them casual and seductive. Enriquez’s pigmented plaster works are more finished – especially with that glaze, and on those black plinths – yet still they’re curious materially, landing somewhere between synthetic object and organic form. (The dark plinths are formally useful, too, giving some of Gahl’s lower contrast paintings a bassline off which to riff.) Gahl has a few works that are really, really fantastic: Shangri-La (In Reverse), whose soft red seems to come from miles away; Figure in Hole, whose figure emerges as if from water, Degas meets Baselitz; and Kismet, where things can only be made out from quick suggestions of paint and left-behind pencil. Gosh, even Sinker, whose line is insistent, plays well with its de Keyser-ish notes. I have reservations about Enriquez’s cotton twine wallworks, though that might be because they’re hidden around a corner. More confidently positioned, I might like them. Anyway, this show needs no conceptualizing, can be met on its own terms, and succeeds.
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Alibis – FOUR STARS
Maggie Friedman
As It Stands / Sept 20-Oct 26, 2024
We understand your concerns. Alibis is a quiet, humble show that doesn’t render very well online. Read formally, the paintings are basically just an exercise in value (tonal), and that’s not nearly as pick-me as, say, Jordan Wolfson thrashing his chained-up, displaced puppet self around the room. And, yes, Friedman does pantomime the ‘signature style’/appropriation bit that was popular in 2000s New York, understood. However, I do think the work is up to something more, especially with its emphasis on the digital frame. In flattening once-dynamic masterworks into green/non-green representations of their photographed image (void of brush strokes, of the artist’s hand), these paintings nudge us in the direction of the binary, of cybernetic processing. The green is consistent and specific, the same color found on early phosphorescent computer monitors, in the digital rain of The Matrix/Ghost in the Shell, in military-grade night vision goggles. If we take these hints, then, Friedman’s work doesn’t represent how she sees things, but, rather, how she and the machine see them, together. And, unlike a lot of post-internet work, these paintings find expansion and even optimism in tech, by stoking energy from the binary’s folds… Zeros and ones open up to much more. So, I think of Ray Kurzweil’s note (from 1999) that 21st century machines – designed after patterns of human thought – will seek to “connect with their spiritual dimension.” Perhaps these paintings inch us toward that singularity, toward a more ecstatic capacity of the machinic.
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nativemanson – THREE STARS
Arthur Jafa
Sprüth Magers / Sept 14-Dec 14, 2024
Jafa counts on us to be chronically paranoid in order to get his point across, and this works in the art world, because we are. Or at least we know we’re supposed to be. Sometimes (often?), though, his moves feel like slogans for pop-apocalypticism. This applies to most of nativemanson, and the whole second floor. However, BG (the Taxi Driver video) does have moments that treat things with a lighter frame, specifically the long single shot of Scar (Jafa’s Black ‘Sport’). Framed with a soft edge and flooded with warm amber, the shot is fresh air in contrast to Scorsese’s oddly-staged, tinny-sounding shootout scene (regardless of Jafa’s interventions). That the 73-minute piece essentially alternates between these two scenes -- between Scorsese’s static claustrophobia and Jafa’s motion-blurred sweetness -- continually affirms our desire to get back to Scar, to get back to safety (the Black space). Without telling us the answer, or expecting us to already have it, here Jafa makes it inevitable.
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Home Again – TWO STARS
John Divola and Megan Plunkett
Timeshare / Sept 14-Oct 12, 2024
Divola’s two almost-twin photos (with the red chair) form the best moment in this show. They prime us to look again at what we’ve already seen, vigilantly. Are these different images? Or did we just close one eye and open the other (i.e. is it a question of perception)? I hunt through the rest of the work because of them. And when I do, I just don’t find the images doing more than affirming their own construction. Timeshare’s text does hedge against this with the line about ‘paranormal’ being a mistranslation of ‘supernormal,’ but it also alludes to the unexplained and false realities, so it feels ambivalent. I’ve mainly seen Divola’s work on Instagram, in the feed, by surprise. Between travel photos and memes and whatever else. Positioned by the algorithm, Divola’s photos take on associations far more powerful and far more personal than they could in a gallery setting. This, really, is where his work makes the normal feel not so normal, and yet still normal.
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September 27, 2024
Killing the Precedent – ZERO POINT FIVE STARS
Indecline
Superchief / Sept 21-Oct 20, 2024
When sneakerheads discover electoral politics. Sort of spectacular, though? Like how they’d depict activist art in DC comics.
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September 24, 2024
Fruiting Body - THREE OR THREE POINT FIVE STARS
Piper Bangs
Megan Mulrooney / Sept 14-Oct 26, 2024
I find it hard to believe that none of the writing on this Piper Bangs show talks at all about animation. How is this possible? We’re plainly looking at narrative paintings of pears that lounge around and wonder and protect each other, all very human in their imperfection. Sure, Bangs takes on the art historical thread of the still life here, so it’s perfectly fine to allude to 17th century Dutch painting and the like, but is the art world so full of its own pretense that we can’t also acknowledge Disney’s countless animations of plants and fruits, and the fantasy imbued within them? Does any of this happen without him? (I challenge you to make the case for yes!!) I’d argue that the blending of these Disney-ish palettes and moods with a more classic approach to underpainting and line makes for an even more contemporary, relevant read on the work, and, in fact, enriches it. Perhaps Disney isn’t en vogue, or it’s overused, or it’s already so embedded in our lives that it goes without saying. Maybe that’s it. Anyway, I liked this work far more than I thought I would, which means that something comes off the canvas in person that doesn’t in the online renderings. Maybe something to do with Bangs’ handling of the paint, the quiet layering, the staccato of the impasto (gosh, I loathe the rhyme but I’m writing quickly so we’ll keep it moving). The watercolors are just sublime and emphasize the power of Bangs’ atmospherics, which again pulls me away from classical references and towards the lush imaginings of C.S. Lewis, videogames like The Elder Scrolls, and CCD imagery of galactic phenomena... Though I know everyone would rather talk about Rococo paintings and Francisco de Zurbarán, so I’ll stop there.
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My Soul is Full of Barking Dogs - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Gabriel Madan
Gattopardo / Sept 14-Oct 19, 2024
ATTENTION, PLEASE!, these paintings shout at us, and they needn’t. We already waded through the virtual muck to find that post with those hours for this show. We braved the streets of Glendale, world champion of uninsured drivers. And now we’re here, by choice, a willing audience... and yet we’re still harangued for attention. By the lurid color, the barrage of source material, the incessant references to Wachtel, Rauschenberg, Kippenberger, et al. Which isn’t to say these are bad paintings – they’re well composed and technically precise – but they do feel overdone, a bit too keen on impressing us with how good they are. Even moments of chance in the paint, on close inspection, reveal themselves as carefully mapped reproductions of risk. Cynicism creeps into view, then, and I trust the paintings less. (An aside: across town, at Elliott Hundley’s studio, Chris Lipomi has some paintings up that cut in on printable perfection with erasure and loose overlap. They have a gentle vein of indecision, and they’re more seductive because of it. Though dated, we liked them, so we’d say they’re worth seeing, but we got an ostensible cease-and-desist in the DMs, so “don’t” go see those). I think of Michel Majerus because the paintings here at Gattopardo are maximal, superflat paintings that remind me of Murakami, the maximal, superflat god who reveres him. What would Majerus have to say about this work, to Madan? Probably something to cool it off, to pare things back. And then maybe something to question its certainty... “What looks good today may not look good tomorrow.” Of course, he would also certainly say the same to me, and likely to you, and to everyone, so…
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WE ARE: Explosion Event – ZERO OR FIVE STARS, DEPENDING
Cai Guo-Qiang, PST:ART
The Getty, LA Memorial Coliseum / September 15, 2024
War games brought to you by Bank of America at the Coliseum. Edgiest work I’ve seen all year. Aerial bombardment, wildfires, and pollution to remind us of aerial bombardment, wildfires, and pollution. The boardroom strikes again.
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September 20, 2024
IF YOU DON’T GET YO SORRY ASS UP - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Oshay Green
C L E A R I N G / Sept 13-Oct 26, 2024
Green’s show has just the right amount of uncaring to make it curious. The question then becomes whether it can carry its own nonchalance, whether it attracts or repels under the weight of a closer look. When successful, the work is unelusive in a coy way, keying us with material hints to help us finish the sentence it started. This is most present in Green’s combine/scrapwood sculptures that swerve toward anthropomorphic (or phantom) while also sidestepping representation. In form and position, they punctuate the spatial rhythms set by the nearby wall-bound works, and far from telling us the answer, they never even let on that there is one. Green’s plywood works do the opposite, and are less successful. Those come emblazoned with RIFF file data – making them illegible to humans – and one completely blocks an entrance to the gallery. It’s clear that they’re meant to resist accessibility, and Green doubles down on this resistance with his 5-page press release, also composed entirely of RIFF data. It’s a strategy that turns a heavy hand on the show because it closes itself to interplay with the audience. Unlike, say, some of Hammons’ work – particularly his 2019 Hauser press release, just a paragraph of squiggled lines – Green’s RIFF work has a correct answer. We see the code and we know: this is representational work, it means something specific, we simply need the proper program. Its resistance is not up to us to decode and consider. In that way, Green strips the viewer of their agency and loses the thread of the show.
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September 18, 2024
One day this will be a long time ago – FOUR STARS
Andrew Cranston
Karma / July 25-September 14, 2024
To look at one of Cranston’s paintings is to long for a place that doesn’t exist, and then to realize all of a sudden that you’re already there. It happens this way almost every time, especially if you watch, rather than look at, the work. Cranston’s high-contrast, frame-within-a-frame compositions attract the eye to bleached bright voids, which, over time, let the indistinct -- what lingers in the shadows -- come into soft focus. (Useful here is Elderfield’s note on Bonnard that some things, in low light, are seen more clearly in the periphery.) All this and the subject matter gives the work a sensory feel in the Vuillardian sense, where the viewer assumes an agential and phantom-like stance in a space that isn’t their own. In Voltaire and Rousseau, for example, we look out a window at an overcast, still bright skyline. As our eyes adjust to the coal-grey interior, we notice a caged bird in the dark (maybe the titular Rousseau, a bad boy... the cat above being Voltaire). So, already, we’ve gone from inside to outside, or at least entered a state of inside outside (or outside inside?). Regardless, we can follow Rousseau’s gaze to find another bird, camouflaged against the silhouette of distant buildings. This bird is outside looking in at Rousseau. To rehash, then: we’re inside, though effectively outside to a bird who’s doubly inside looking doubly outside to a bird looking inside. The (invisible) film of the window thus acts as a site of curiosity here and in many of Cranston’s paintings, a stage for the story’s thematics to unfurl. Specifically, windows contain moments of connection and possibility that can’t be realized to the degree we wish they could. And Cranston’s paintings further stoke that longing in us, since we, too, look through a frame (at the work), a physical window through which we cannot pass. And yet we imagine, and so we can.
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Erasing A Flower – TWO STARS
Nick Aguayo
Vielmetter / July 20-September 7, 2024
Recently in Cultured, Susanne Vielmetter blamed her skidding sales on an art market contraction. That’s either a delusion or an excuse; it’s also a convenient truth. Having seen all her shows this year, I can say with confidence: in Ms. Vielmetter’s case, it’s not the market. Aguayo’s show here is probably the best of the bunch in that it’s not deliriously monotonous (Vielmetter’s expansive spaces contribute to this, no doubt), but it ultimately falls short because the work is unconscious of its own conceit. In other words, it advertises a commitment to ecstatic painting – the boundless colors, the allusion to improvisation, the naïve shapes – yet Aguayo doesn’t actually paint ecstatically. Or even playfully. It really just seems like he’s painting his drawings, which makes things feel contained and sober, like he’s trying to evade the mess entirely (the mess being precisely the place where ecstatic paintings thrive... to find a painter in the mess, tacking his way out of it, ought to be the joy here). Perhaps somewhat ironically, Aguayo’s black and white paintings are his most ecstatic because they indicate a chance taken, a decision followed and stuck with. Regarding these, the exhibition text references Op art and Franz Kline, which is fine, but really only serves as a misdirection from or some sort of feigned ignorance toward the fact that the artist is chasing (though certainly uncomplicating via Joe Bradley) Charline von Heyl in much of his work – her thematics, shapes, stenciling, and, yes, especially her black and white paintings full of warped triangles.
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September 9, 2024
Session - THREE POINT FIVE STARS
Lily Lady and Siena Foster-Soltis
Private Residence / August 2024
Hot girls, almost naked. This is Session’s first, and perhaps most essential, move. SPOILERS FOLLOW. Long before the play begins, Lady and Foster-Soltis (co-writers, co-stars) use the allure of femme bodies to sell tickets: Session’s promotion consists entirely of implied nude, Richard Kern-ish photos of the two. Maybe this is the best/only way to do it, considering the algorithm in 2024. More likely, this is how it’s always been done, to a degree (the twin flames of sex work and work work yet again entangle). No matter, Session’s marketing functions as the first act in an expanded theater piece, and primes the audience to think of bodies (specifically Lady’s and Foster-Soltis’), to anticipate the X-rated. As the play escalates, however – mainly through rhythmic, at times too-neat dialogue – the titular and graphic promise evades us. Neither protagonist ever appears as they do in the adverts. In fact, the opposite: we see naked men, sad men, and violence. Though a wanton chemistry does emerge between Lady and Foster-Soltis that evokes the Maries in Chytilová’s Daisies (or even at times the brothers in True West), the play has a fictional layering that stops these moments short of being genuine. The fantasy is continually undermined by the introduction of new realities, new players who wield power and lose it. In Session, then, the bottom is also the top, and neither is ever fixed. At the end of the play, the final boss (as it were) emerges. He was in the audience the whole time, our surrogate in secret. He feels let down, things didn’t go as expected. He bares himself emotionally -- not the nudity we were promised, but something far more poignant -- and we’re left thinking about our own ideal. Can we ever reach it? And what about when we don’t? In about an hour, Lady and Foster-Soltis flip the object from the accessibility of their bodies to the inaccessibility of our ourselves. Clever.
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August 28, 2024
At Los Angeles Galleries... - ZERO STARS
Jonathan Griffin
The New York Times / August 28-?, 2024
EMERGENCY REVIEW: My god. Say what you want about Mark Rodriguez’s show at Chris Sharp. Whatever, who cares. That’s not our concern here. Today we train our lens on the work of Jonathan Griffin, an art critic for The New York Times who recommended Rodriguez’s show a few hours ago (along with four other LA shows), and was presumably (nay, regrettably) paid for it. Tl;dr: he lifted his work almost entirely from the exhibition text. To quickly recount Griffin’s reporting, by paragraph: (1) description, (2) placement of work between painting and sculpture, (3) context of artist’s career, including a reference to Ken Price, (4) discussion of the vanity of the “Forever” designation, deeming it “hubristic.” Got it? Pretty solid, right? Okay. Now let’s look at the exhibition text for the show: (1) description, (2) placement between painting and sculpture, (3) discussion of the vanity of the “Forever” designation, deeming it “hubristically eternal,” (4) a reference to Ken Price. Remind you of anything? Of course, I’m simplifying: the exhibition text contains nuance and pumps the work up to stoke curiosity. Griffin’s review echoes and distills the text in such a milquetoast way that it makes me admire the ranks of middle management for their vanguardism. Very few thoughts here seem to be his own, that is unless he authored the press release, too. (At the very least, right-click > synonyms for “hubris,” my brother in Christ.) Griffin does make a point about the art market downturn as it relates to a “forever” concept, and that has some utility, and I liked the part about Rodriguez’s bootleg cassette works. Those are not in the press release. Everything else is. I know none of us are without fault, but when you ask how we got here, this is it.
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August 26, 2024
Reality Show - FOUR STARS
Peter Shear
BLUM / July 13-August 30, 2024
A good lover loves back, and this is what Peter Shear’s paintings do. Maybe ‘love’ is too strong (and vacuous). Shear brings these works to life, so they live. They mingle with you; they return your serve; like the limousines in Holy Motors, they probably have a lot to say to each other at night, in the dark. These are small paintings that happen in front of you, all of a sudden, and permanently. Yes, there’s the provisional painting thing, but I think that’s a bit off because these feel more assessed and less risky. And there’s definitely an Avery connection, though that, too, doesn’t quite land because Avery’s are somewhat more worked. Shear’s paintings are probably most energetically tied to Ilse D’Hollander’s, even if, still, she takes her paintings materially further, by two or three steps. I guess what I’m trying to say is that Shear’s work has an economy to it that both feels right as an impulse, and practically. A style in approach. I don’t know Shear, but I’ve read he lives in Indiana and is self-taught, and so, being in L.A. with its million-watt sun and loud everything, I wonder about the light in Indiana, the landscape, and the tone of life there. I wonder where Shear got his feedback from, being an autodidact. He posts paintings that he likes on Instagram, so I presume the feedback he got was from them. In my little imaginary, he might show one of his paintings to, perhaps, one of Avery’s (Shear’s painting propped up by a wine bottle sitting directly across from Avery’s on a laptop) and he watches them talk. Do they? And how? Shear takes their vibration, maybe adds another line or smudge to his work, then sits them down together again. He repeats this until, I guess, it feels right. That’s what the artist does. So there’s a slow care to them, even if they communicate something about speed. And there’s precarity, too… uncertainty. Maybe then they remind me of Bresson’s Four Nights of a Dreamer, a film where I can feel the process of indecision through comparatively untight editing and moments of soft darkness, which somehow makes the film more sure of itself than it would be otherwise.
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Display - THREE STARS
Coleman Collins, Ali Eyal, Joseph Jones, Ghislaine Leung, Nevine Mahmoud, Arthur Marie, Louis Blue Newby, Yuri Pattison, Pamela Ramos, Erin Calla Watson, Abbas Zahedi
Ehrlich Steinberg / July 27-August 31, 2024
As far as group shows go, this is pretty good, and it’s not, you know, just a bunch of paintings performing variations on a theme. With group shows, though, it helps to have a gravity center and some sort of weave, whether it be thematic, material, or otherwise. This show, when pressed, lacks both, so it’s difficult to unlock. I find it hard to relate, for example, Ghislaine Leung’s list of jobs to Joseph Jones’ Rainbow Cat painting. One is a labor critique redirected through performance score, and the other a more straightforward, light-wash oil painting of a cat. And while I can connect Leung’s piece to Yuri Pattinson’s clever decay work – which comingles danger and allure with its use of a Geiger Counter, smoke alarm parts, and a Rolex watch – I struggle to find a passthrough from there to Arthur Marie’s figurative and staid pencil drawings. If we’re to take the text’s light exploration of “display” as the show’s thematic weave (which, I will say, feels like a bit of a cop out since every exhibit, to a degree, could fall back on that (and we already have plenty of shows exploring opacity, etc.), but okay) then the closest thing to a gravity center is Pamela Ramos’ Boys Bundle, a work that pushes and pulls with ideas of (in)accessibility, (im)penetrability, and (in)visibility. That piece, though, doesn’t commit in the way the adjacent pieces by Leung and Jones do. It requires more time, more energy, and more space to be untangled. So, as it’s positioned, its charge is deadened by its proximity to conceptually louder works, and we lose the key we need.
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floating over the silent world – TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Steve Roden
Vielmetter / July 20-September 7, 2024
A decent survey, though sort of positionless (understandably… it’s a survey). Roden’s Surface of the Moon sculptures – made of carved wood, wire, and wax – are installed in a way that makes me nervous for them. Balanced like corks on a very thin shelf. I wonder if they went down in the earthquake. Anyway, the work’s miniature items and overwhelming scope generate a physical pull: I get down to the floor to inspect things, and even crawl around to see more. Rarely have I been this low to the ground, for this long, with such sustained curiosity, since I was little. And so I think of age, and of time passing, and then, of course, the absent Roden, who died last year. So that is sad. I guess the scores Roden uses to make work are somewhat compelling, too, if only because they’re endlessly generative in a way mankind is not. And so, again, I think of life and its absence.
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August 24, 2024
Pressure Cooker - TWO STARS
Tucker Aüdie, Christopher Belhumeur, Daniel Healey, Jonah Ifcher, Chris Velez, Anja Salonen
Spy Projects / June 28-August 2, 2024
I won’t say anything about the show except this: it belongs at the Hegelian E-Girl Party. By which I mean it aspires to a proto-dimes square scene that no longer exists, accelerating and self-consuming to such a degree that by the time we actually make it to the inauguration the hosts have already dosed all the K and publicly announced that the movement is over. ‘Aspires’ being the key word here, because the only proven way to avoid being derided as the ironic cuck-object of the mainly online Landian meme demons is to move first and fast, so if you’re following (i.e. if you’re aspirational, if you want to be at the party) you might as well be dead. And to chase the dragon from the opposite coast?… Probably not as hard as it sounds, honestly, given the internet, but get out of edgelord angelicism already, it’s mainstream. If Spy Projects, though, wants the danger-red-alert territory it so desires (the text mentions the atomic bomb and how technology ‘has replaced nature as our collective sword of Damocles’), then they need to think ten, maybe twenty steps ahead. Best idea I’ve got: stage a live remake of our martyr Linda Lovelace’s Dogarama, but make it elegant, and use it to champion the equal rights of animals (voting, reproductive, etc.). And name the dog ‘Damocles.’ That’ll hold the downtown pneumatic necropigs at bay, at least for a little while.
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August 19, 2024
GO WILD! – ONE POINT FIVE STARS OR MAYBE FOUR STARS ACTUALLY
Kenny Scharf
Honor Fraser / June 29-August 24, 2024
Matthew Barney could spend ten years wading through a river of his own fundament and still not come up with an installation as dynamically sadistic as this. What’s that, Matthew? You recreated a single football tackle in slow motion for an hour? Awww... In that time, Kenny could do a hundred paintings of Jane Jetson and cover the walls with so many of those demonic grinning amoebas that you’d start to feel like you were inside a sheet of blotter paper for the worst, most lurid trip ever. Then he’d build the tiki bar from the childhood nightmares you never knew you had, and, in the remaining fifty-five minutes, he’d go find a PT Cruiser and ruin it with one of his KARBOMBZ. Kenny Scharf is the id of the art world and I’ll put that on everything.
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Something Bit Me Bad - THREE STARS
Jake Fagundo, Hans-Jörg Mayer, Michael Williams
Curated by Taylor Harriett Payton
Temple Projects / July 13-August 15, 2024
What does it mean to lift a style, completely? The largest and loudest paintings here are by Jake Fagundo, who plainly bites Kippenberger’s aesthetic, yet the text openly frames the show around mimesis and postmodernism (the show’s title is Something Bit Me Bad, after all), so the question really is: to what end do we so explicitly bite? And it’s not a question, really, of appropriation or homage, here, but rather of remake. While remakes, nominally, don’t exist in the art world as they do in cinema, they certainly exist in form, and in our era of speed and image sharing and repetitive scrolling, remakes appear more often, and more quickly, than ever before. Artists, emerging especially, either hide their influences or cite them, but they don’t remake them. In this show, Fagundo remakes Kippenberger, the painter’s painter (along with Oehlen, also being bitten here, just less). A Kippenberger, of course, is impossible to remake because it’s packaged with the artist’s reputation and persona. Fagundo, then, not only fails by recognizably copying (art world heresy), but also by failing to precede the work, by failing to capture the essence of the artist he remakes. And in that failure, Fagundo curiously reaches a different project. Like Gus Van Sant remaking Hitchcock’s Psycho shot-for-shot, to reskin Kippenberger in this naked way is to make a statement about the vanity of remakes and the impossibility of aspiration... to point out the aura lost in an appeal to the aesthetics of yesterday. That Kippenberger’s success came in his performative failure is not lost on me. Fagundo has not failed to fail, so maybe this is the end of his explicit bite?... Cut for time, but it isn’t clear why Williams’ work is included in this show. Mayer’s work is fantastic and adds contours to the mimesis discourse. The show is crowded; could use less to be more precise.
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Tough Joy - THREE POINT FIVE STARS
Christopher Culver
Michael Benevento / June 22-August 10, 2024
Have you ever been to the Tiki Adult Theater? The ticket window there is foggy and scratched and covered in post-it notes, which effectively disembodies the cashier as he asks how many hours you’d like inside. The opaque window magnifies the sense that – though there are others around, in theory – you, ma’am, are most certainly alone. Of course, LA reminds us of this all the time, being a city full of drivers stuck in traffic together, alone in their cars. But it is in withholding the body that the ticket window at Tiki haunts us in way that the more transparent (and body-full) windows of automobiles cannot. Culver’s pastel and charcoal drawings play with absence in similarly untethered ways, yet perhaps without the shame. The bodyless scenes here are polluted, yes (implicit in Culver’s use of pale mustard and ochre and tinges of green; explicit in his depiction of, say, turtles swimming through a stream of radioactive yellow water), but they’re polluted in a way that appears even, or unjudged. The work has a filmic grain and sense of frame that push it further toward this understanding: these are compositions staged for subjects who never showed up, documented by a camera left rolling. The gentle push/pull of the vérité allows the work to be at once personal and indefinite, hinting at critiques of modernity while also simply living under its rule. There are moments, however, that do feel somewhat overstaged, like Needle on the Ground, where a syringe and a rabbit doll lay side by side, injecting the show with a more didactic dramatism than it needs. The single ‘ripped’ edge on some drawings, too, feels materially melodramatic. Things, in those instances, are a bit neo-Bukowski: we feel the artist’s hand, we question the honesty of the narratives being spun. Otherwise, it’s a sedate, honest show whose arrangement is spare in an evocative way.
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Elana Bowsher – TWO STARS
Elana Bowsher
Hannah Hoffman / June 29-August 10, 2024
Stained glass if it didn’t glisten. Bowsher is most successful in her work that’s less O’Keeffe, like Pelvis, which is somewhat mesmerizing in its evasive study of anatomical shape within an abstract color field. Very few other paintings charm the way that one does. The rest, in their more plain abstraction, fail to find any textures or gestures or color arrangements that surprise me at all.
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August 16, 2024
Turning Tables – THREE POINT FIVE STARS
Eric Wesley
Timeshare / July 19-August 10, 2024
It’s rare for work to be this nihilistic and purposefully evasive, yet somehow steer well clear of sterility and actually elicit joy. Comedians do this, if they’re successful, so I guess that makes the show sort of a joke. The setup is deadpan: a handful of table-sized, parallelepiped wood sculptures and a few binders that, per the attendant, “unlock the sculptures,” though they mainly contain index cards with throwaway, Prince-ish one-liners. (Notably, the show is without a corresponding text.) The wood works are painted to resemble stacks of blank index cards, each ‘stack’ tarnished in some way (spilled wax, condensation ring, cigarette burn). A walk around one reveals that it’s missing a side, plainly exposing the woodcraft inside, which evokes the false fronts on Hollywood backlots. To do the math here: we have a cluster of blank indexes, physically empty, used as anything but indexes (candle support, drink coaster, ashtray), with corresponding binders (indexes) full of index cards with no clear organizing principle. It’s wordplay that hovers above non sequitur. In semiotics, indexes are the signifier of the signified, yet Wesley, here, gives us the signifier without the signified, or at least a signifier of another signifier. It’s a setup without a punchline, but with a very long pause. Turning Tables, as a title, then makes sense. These works, in a sort of Hammons-ian way (or, more apt, Kaufman-esque), throw viewers in the deep without the raft of laughter, without the comfort of knowing. An affront to institutions that make sense of work prior to viewing. I question, though, almost anyone’s ability to get there. Most will probably look, flip through a binder, and leave unchanged, so it’s ultimately a show with an audience of one. The artist.
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August 14, 2024
Singles - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Antone Könst
CASTLE / July 27-September 18, 2024
Without Pan Immolating – a loose painting of a shadow Pan playing his pipes, licked in flames – this is an overly cohesive, rigid show. The rest of Könst’s paintings feel staged, drafted, and refined. In other words: they’re communicating an effort or expertise that doesn’t mesh with their subjective aspirations. Yes, the paintings are successfully illustrative of tenderness, of metamorphosis, of curiosity, yet those feelings are by and large absent in Könst’s style, which is over-certain (and at times overworked) in its contouring and color. The painter is perhaps too attentive to logic. Still, I love the wrench Könst’s Pan painting throws into the gears of the show. It’s foreboding, joyful in speed, and it amplifies the show’s mystique, functioning almost as a cliffhanger. (Pan is a hectic guy, god of the wild, etc., so it fits...)
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Forever - ONE POINT FIVE STARS
Mark A. Rodriguez
Chris Sharp / July 20-September 7, 2024
Middle C played over and over, moderate tempo, consistently. Does it qualify as music? Maybe. Music-al? More likely. But it hardly makes an album, let alone a song, a chord, or even a dyad.
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August 12, 2024
The Miraculous Arms - THREE POINT FIVE STARS
Karimah Ashadu, Mohamed Bourouissa, Salim Green, Senga Nengudi, Christelle Oyiri, Pol Taburet, Minh Lan Tran
Curated by Martha Kirszenbaum
François Ghebaly / July 27-August 24, 2024
This show has, maybe by far, the best video viewing room I’ve encountered. Plush rug, muted walls, 5:1 surround, crisp projection, near perfect darkness. (Kordansky had a black box viewing room built in 2020, I think, and that was good, too.) Karimah Ashadu’s videos in here are absolutely the highlight of the show, especially Machine Boys (2024), a short, essayistic film about okada riders in Lagos. In that film, the artist’s cinematography is aggressive and patient at once, and her editing (specifically the duration of her portraiture) allows precarity to bleed through the characters’ hostile fronts. Salim Green’s paintings are a nice counter to the noise and scale of Ashadu’s video work. His small paintings on felt are like Robert Ryman with a Joe Bradley update, though there are moments of color and texture that are unique to him. I’m not sure if the Tetris-style presentation is effective, though: it feels a little too random, and I can’t tell if it’s one work, or nine, or twenty-six (if I counted correctly). I’d prefer something more serial to highlight his moves as a painter. Mohamed Bourouissa’s photos are great and play with fashion aesthetics in a way that’s resistant. Anyway, it’s an exhibit loosely framed around post-colonial identity that’s less didactic, more international, and to be explored, which makes it fresh in its approach.
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August 5, 2024
Time After Time - THREE POINT FIVE STARS
Kelly Wall
Various Small Fires / June 29-August 17, 2024
There’s an authority to this work. It’s outside and plain, a casual affront to work that hedges and hides and explains. That’s okay, it says to Art That Cares, go on without me, I’ll chill here. Wall’s lawn chairs are lawn chairs – their frames sometimes seem to be actual frames – and yet, because of their stained glass weave and entwined shapes, they’re also definitively not lawn chairs. If they were sat in, they’d at once shatter and maintain form, and that tugs them toward a curious un-identity. The chairs are then somewhat open and slippery, and so I think of how Rosalind Krauss described the linguistic I, here, and now as “vacant seats” to be filled by those who speak them. You very much see what you choose to see, and that shifts as you move with the light. Wall’s chairs can be typically American, typically summer, typically yard, but as we know chairs can connote all sorts of things. One time on the internet I saw a lawn chair used as a weapon outside a Kenny Chesney concert. Stained glass confuses all that, with its ties to the church and things more medieval. And then, because it's glass, and we’re outside under the sun (the siting of this work is superb), you literally see yourself reflected in these objects while also seeing through them, to the ground, which is not the ground but a mediated, colored image of it. The personal is further emphasized by Wall’s solitary circle of aluminum objects, which encloses nothing, or rather, which encloses a vacant space for you, presumably to be yourself, a chair, with other chairs in the backyard. So there’s agency here, and freedom, and that’s refreshing at a time when art is nothing if not constrained and on defense.
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Cruising - ONE STAR
Dabin Ahn, Stephen Aldahl, Mario Ayala, Tyler Christopher Brown, Drew Escriva, Brittany Fanning, Mark Flood, Zhamak Fullad, Shana Hoehn, Raffi Kalenderian, Mikael Kennedy, Nathaniel Matthews, Liz Markus, Jasaya Neale, Estevan Oriol, Michael Rikio Ming Hee Ho, Jacob Rochester, Sam Sae Jin Chun, Adam Stamp, Eleanor Swordy, Wolfgang Tillmans, Georgina Trevino, Daniel Tyree Gaitor-Lomack
Alabaster Projects / July 13-September 22, 2024
If I made a show called Dick and only included portraits of people named Richard, I would be doing a disservice to dick. Cruising does something similar here by almost exclusively (and redundantly) showing work about cars.
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Lumber – ONE POINT FIVE STARS
Maxwell Hendler
The Landing / July 13-August 24, 2024
If your aesthetic is ‘conceptual Cabela’s’ and you’ve got $40k, boy do I have a show for you. Hendler – known for his excruciatingly precise, realist paintings dating back to the 60s – here shows very little effort as he mounts pieces of wood to the wall. That’s it. Some wood does appear to be sanded or scratched (though perhaps in transit, rather than by the artist), and one work has a handful of nails in it. Yes, when you think of commercially sourced wood you think of Sherrie Levine’s knot paintings or Donald Judd’s plywood sculptures. There is, however, more intention and intervention in those works than Hendler’s, plus they were done in the 70s and 80s, years ago. I also think of more blunt readymades like Merlin Carpenter’s pallet works from a few years back, but, again, those are armored by a concept steeped in Marxist theory and art-labor critique. As far as I can tell, Hendler is interested in the act of noticing and inspecting, of letting material inform artistic choice rather than vice versa, and those are beautiful ideas, and necessary. The work, though, is not.
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August 3, 2024
Worlds Within Worlds – TWO STARS
Srijon Chowdhury, David Muenzer, Erin Jane Nelson, Veronika Pausova
Gene’s Dispensary / July 20-August 31, 2024
Good works by Erin Jane Nelson and David Muenzer. I actually really like Nelson’s quilted wallwork over the contoured stretcher, probably because I like Cosima von Bonin’s work and Mike Kelley’s shaped paintings. The work has a balance that allows it to be felt almost abstractly, and immediately, and enough going on to lure me in for a closer look, an inspection of surface, of staining, and of the photos collaged. I guess all of the stuff here is good, honestly, just the sum of its parts doesn’t amount to much for me.
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Signal Fires – TWO STARS
Tanya Brodsky, Eduardo Consuegra, Yaron Michael Hakim, Saj Issa, Hilja Keading, Hings Lim, Muna Malik, Nobuhito Nishigawara, Hayley Quentin, Sarah Rosalena, Lenard Smith, Claudia V. Solórzano
Tanya Bonakdar / July 20-August 30, 2024
I’m not sure if these works really have much in common. Things feel shoehorned together. I like Tanya Brodsky’s Deadbolt, and Hings Lim’s Flaming Tower… rare to see burning candles in a gallery space.
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August 1, 2024
Valley of the Dolls - THREE STARS
Julia Thompson
Dries Van Noten Little House / July 27-August 31, 2024
There’s something sickly about this work – about the low-lit plastics, the entombed beauty products, the overdose of undersaturated color – and it’s too forward to write off as unintentional. People will dismiss it as “pretty,” or even aspiring to be pretty and failing. That is wrong. Things here are diseased, libidinally. Makeup doubles as an asphyxiant, calcified in wax that creeps along the floor toward us, like runoff from a landfill. The waste of desire. That link to the unconscious, of what’s beneath us, frames the coincidence of phallic and embryonic form in Thompson’s drawings, and the claustrophobic shelves and sublevels in her arrangements. To investigate Thompson’s work, further, is to realize it will probably decay at some point that isn’t now, but might be soon, which relates it more to a sort of anticipated jaundice than something more suddenly nightmarish. And so the potential of decomposition is cleverly (dare I say also accidentally?) positioned here, in the heart of WeHo, the preservation capital of the world, at a luxury fashion boutique that prizes youth and beauty. To imagine a PR exec heading down to Dries from Soho House, expecting to see some pretty Kelley Kandor colors, only to be met with a degenerating, subconsciously startling, sort-of-ugly alchemical beauty installation where teeth become nipples become unplaceable, insidious sinews... well, it’s a lovely little thought. Anyway, nothing is that new here, per se, nor do things feel terribly precise or spirited, and I think the video is a stretch, but situationally I love the show’s potential to meet an audience that least expects it.
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July 30, 2024
Dogs & Dads - THREE STARS
Taylor Marie Prendergast, David Sipress, Karl Haendel
Diane Rosenstein / July 13-August 24, 2024
Prendergast’s video is the highlight of this show, and the gallery undersells it: it’s hidden behind a wall, on a very small monitor, with wireless headphones only for the audio. In a way that the rest of the show is not, the video (Father, Daughter, Holy Spirit) is unending, out of control, lurid, and brash. And, in all of these ways and more, it shakes the exhibit from its didactic and authoritarian middle to chafe at the fringes of what it means to be a father, or, rather, what it means to be absent of one. Instead of coloring and countering the monochrome wallworks with Prendergast’s video, however, the gallery chooses to center Haendel’s video on a big screen with stereo sound, a video that is structural, if not plain, and that merely rehashes the rest of the exhibit. Haendel’s audio, echoing throughout the space, actually simplifies the wallworks, which aren’t really all that simple... i.e. it makes them drab. So, if you want to realize the show’s potential, put on Prendergast’s wireless headphones and take a walk around. (The headphones have good range.) It flips everything. Her audio is leering and unstable, psychosexual and unpracticed – a bit McCarthy, a bit Trecartin, a bit something else. It gives the show the punctum that it lacks, and throws things out of balance in a wonderful way. It’s combative, agential, and alive. And it should fill the space, rather than be sequestered as it is now. I wasn’t around in the 1960s, but I imagine this is how all those people felt when they watched The Wizard of Oz go from black-and-white to technicolor, right there on the television in front of them.
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Flight Paths - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Sarah Cunningham
Lisson Gallery / June 20-August 24, 2024
These paintings speak to concerns of an era we are no longer in, which is how I feel about much of the current run on abstraction. Beautiful, but without updates, aesthetic or otherwise. Cunningham’s most successful works here are less finished and fast, and leave empty or open space unadorned. You can see this in Ghosts in the Throat – where an aggressive, thick stripe of canton rose disrupts an otherwise balanced blue – as well as in Coral Chorus and Sonnets (paintings with mirrored compositions). There are moments in these paintings when subsurface textures run counter to the gesture of the paint, and those are strong, too. Cunningham’s color and movement (and gestural blurring), together, evoke a durational sense of nature, which gives these paintings a more filmic feel in that they’re sculpting in time rather than capturing it. Ultimately, though the works are more than decent, and everything coheres, things just aren’t being pushed forward.
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Progeny - TWO STARS
Chiffon Thomas
Michael Kohn / June 20-August 17, 2024
Are we starting to see through this type of stuff yet?... Work that violently panders to biennial curators and museum boards? It’s art with a very specific aftertaste, something like museum fatigue if it were a drug administered by HR-compliant employees doing the Brat dance at lunch. Which isn’t to say Thomas’ work here is bad. It’s not. It’s good. But it’s the type of good that’s “right,” i.e. it affirms a worldview and elicits nods of approval from the already-converted. Regardless, Thomas has some strong impulses, including two structural interventions, and a material interchange of stained glass (fragile, protected) and human skin-like silicone (resilient, under threat). These moves make me think about visibility and value in new ways. In sheer scale, the inverted cement obelisks are impressive, even if they’re a bit overt in their symbolism and their allusion to Bourgeois’ Femme Maison. Overall, in Thomas’ work, there’s a palpable (and explicit) desire to critique the invisible architectures and erasures that have informed our present, and that’s admirable. It’s hard, though, to see how that can be done here at Michael Kohn, a rich, cavernous gallery that uses a residential back entrance in lieu of its now-locked main gate on Highland, presumably to prevent the people living in tents out front from wandering in and spoiling our view of Thomas’ institutional critique.
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July 29, 2024
Hail Mary - FOUR STARS
Marie Angeletti
Gaylord Fine Arts / July 6-August 17, 2024
We need many more shows like this. Many many many. In The Poetics of Space, Bachelard describes daydreaming as the act of fleeing a nearby object and ending up “in the space of elsewhere.” Angeletti puts us exactly there by gently, yet decisively reframing the room with her found aluminum sheets. To me, the show emphasizes things held together -- Angeletti is even explicit about the rivets in her poetry-as-exhibition-text -- while also asking us what exactly is being held together. To watch the light change over the bronze-ish aluminum sheets -- to watch it overexpose and deflect, to notice how it recasts otherwise ordinary moments on the wall -- is to be brought into the room, to be made more aware of where I am. It also makes me more aware of where I am not, which, by way of the art, is curiously also here. The bracket sculptures in the entryway, in framing absence, further accentuate this point. Angeletti does well to place the work here, at Gaylord Fine Arts, an apartment-turned-gallery on the top floor of a 14-story building on top of a hill in LA. It’s a position we’re seldom in (LA being a horizontal city, full of white cube galleries with searing artificial light), so for Angeletti to make it strange rarefies an already rarified space.
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Crisis Actor - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Brad Urman
Alias Books East / July 12-?, 2024
Dreamcatchers of downcycling…? There’s probably something more substantial going on in the work – like, they’re each made from a single shirt, it seems, so maybe there’s a ‘mutation of the whole’ thing going on. I like that they’re sited in a used bookstore: the webbed fractals encourage a wandering, or an attention to wandering, that feels a lot like scribbling in the margins of a book, or coming across someone else’s notes, as you weave through narrative. Good bookstore.
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Heat – ONE POINT FIVE STARS
Maiya Lea Hartman, Manal Kara, Emma Beatrez, Julia Garcia, Cameron Patricia Downey, Christina Ballantyne, Ish Lipman, Rachel Collier, Tynan Kerr
Curated by HAIR+NAILS
Easy Does It / July 11-August 24, 2024
More of a showcase than a show. I think it’s mainly artists from Minnesota. Julia Garcia’s paintings are always worth a look, but I never feel like I gain much that I can’t see on Instagram. Except for scale, I guess. Other than her work, everything here is skippable, or at least positioned in a way that makes it feel skippable.
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Animal Urns and Evocations – TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Nina de Creeft Ward
South Willard / June 30-?, 2024
I always forget if this place is a gallery or not. And not in the sense that their work is so wildly avant-garde that it dissolves the idea of a gallery, just that it sometimes feels like a showroom or design studio. Anyways, fantastic ceramics here, even if they’re repetitive. The stuff is soothing and clever, and the raku firing gives it a forever feel.
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Stage Presence – TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Lacey Lennon, Arlene Mejorado, Andrea C. Nieto and Emilianna Vazquez, Sasha Phyars-Burgess
Curated by Keko Jackson
Fulcrum Press / June 29-August 4, 2024
A decent show that asks you to spend time in it. I’m most struck by Arlene Mejorado’s photographs, which wait patiently on sunlight to cut through almost entirely natural scenes. As I look, though, her images sort of rise from their own shadows and reveal something unnatural, or something incorporated which doesn’t naturally belong. In El Patio de abuela (Grandmother’s Patio), for example, it’s that plastic bucket at the base of the tree. These objects and the image compositions – as the show title would suggest – clue us into the ‘staged’ elements of the photographs, or at least get us wondering to what degree they are staged. For some reason I think of Martel’s La Ciénaga, probably because Mejorado has captured something lush, and still, and tainted, all at once. My only complaint is that Mejorado’s photos are a half-step too high contrast, and a little too clean, and so they feel decided... or decidedly dramatic, actually. I guess by knowing what an artist wants me to feel, I struggle to feel it.
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Dandelion – TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Seth Lower
Fulcrum Press / June 29-August 4, 2024
Nothing here really rakes me in. A good show ought to rake you in. Maybe I was raked in? I go to the books first, and then to the corner, then back to the books. I flip through one. I look up at a couple framed photos on the wall. Insofar as Lower was digging when he took these photos, I feel like I am digging more. I’m trying to notice what he noticed, but I don’t have his eyes, and he’s not really showing me – he’s not using light or line to direct my eye. So this is similar to slow cinema, but for photography. And, while slow cinema can be passive and even encourage a drifting of the mind, this type of slow photography really requires an activity, a searching… and it encourages a sharpness of the mind, or at least more caffeine. Emotion is subtle for me here, but it is there. Gosh, I don’t know.
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Hyperobject: Art in the Age of YOLO – ZERO POINT FIVE STARS
Ryan Crudgington, Chandler Dangaard, Mae Noland, Violet Treadwell Hull, Peña Espinoza Peña, Felix Quintana, Gabriel Tolson
Curated by Emma Diffley
Fellows of Contemporary Art
“Art in the Age of YOLO”???
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July 22, 2024
Markus Lüpertz - Pierre Puvis de Chavannes - FOUR POINT FIVE STARS
Markus Lüpertz and Pierre Puvis de Chavannes
Michael Werner / June 22-September 7, 2024
Brilliantly paired. There’s patience, and a sense of being out of time. Or maybe apart from it. There’s also joy. Aggression. I think I’d get all this from Lüpertz anyway, especially as he gets older, but the pairing with Puvis adds something immortal. I see ghosts everywhere. They’re brought out by gesture. By canvas left unmarked. By Lüpertz’s pallid, sculptural figures. By Puvis’ fragmented arms and torsos. And by the rushes of painters long gone, scattered throughout. The whole show sort of devours and spawns itself, at once. You have Lüpertz paintings that are also plainly studies of Puvis’ studies for his paintings (murals) that served as studies for Gaugin, Picasso, et al, whose paintings fed into the lineage that created Lüpertz. It creates this referential timewarp through art history that allows Lüpertz to meet himself with fresh eyes.
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Salt Water - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
MJ Torrecampo
Steve Turner / June 29-July 27, 2024
Steve Turner is the Death Star of art made for Disney adults. He’s never seen cartoon-adjacent figuration he didn’t like. And I say this respectfully: Turner has three or even four shows running at once, in a labyrinth-like space, with apparently massive storage capacity, so he’s either making good money or about to run out of it. Anyway, this show is one of the few Turner shows that I don’t consider completely skippable. Torrecampo’s paintings are narrative-forward and heavy in proportion play, and each fills into a greater emotional whole that complicates ideas about distance, warmth, and sorrow. Most affective in Torrecampo’s work is their use of an elevated, floating perspective, which makes me think of the space where my long-gone relatives must hover when they’re watching over me. For the artist – who is alive – to paint from this angle adds to a feeling of joy you cannot touch, or despair you cannot heal. I have an urge to comfort the subjects in the paintings, or to reassure them, which reminds me of how I feel when I look at Tetsuya Ishida’s work. The paintings edge toward Nicole Eisenman, too, though definitely without Eisenman’s aggressive style play, and so my mind wanders: can we blame Eisenman for that decade of figurative painting delirium we just had? So many painters aspired toward her work, but lacked the pastiche or the skill or the education to come anywhere close, and for gallerists that was okay, because they’re salesmen and they’ll find a mark (“you see, it creates empathy, and it… um… recapitulates the colonial gaze…”). Enter the Facebook millennials passionate about comic franchises, Corporate Memphis, and, of course, Disneyland, and you have a figuration bubble that has thankfully burst.
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I Never Promised You A Rose Garden - ONE STAR
Brittany Fanning
Steve Turner / June 29-July 27, 2024
How can an artist paint such meaningless paintings and then do it over and over again? Over and over and over again? To what end? I don’t think she’s using seriality as a concept here; I don’t think it’s a redirected critique of labor. She can paint in more meaningful (or at least more striking) ways, I’ve seen it. These feel like pattern tests for wallpaper.
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Sleeping with Ghosts - ONE STAR
Giorgio Celin
Steve Turner / June 29-July 27, 2024
Not really that exceptional. I’m sure people will like them and hang them in their homes. They would also look good in a children’s book, or on Instagram, or in a magazine shoot. In a gallery like this, nothing really feels that special or specific, is what I’m saying. Everything is there to be sold, spaced perfectly and manufactured consistently like products on a shelf.
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July 16, 2024
The Science of Last Things - THREE POINT FIVE STARS
Audrey Leshay
Human Resources / July 12-14, 2024
Ohhh how refreshing. All these small paintings are thorough and tricky, yet still plainly ask us to look and decode. They’re not really hiding behind a thing. (Everyone’s always hiding these days...) In a way the show reminds me of the nakedness and cumulative effect of Frampton’s Nostalgia, with each image (and its duration) reframing and also evading your experience of the image prior. An afterthought of a red notebook page in one painting – with the artist’s schoolish practiced signatures and a pencil sketch of an eye – integrates with petrified wood in another, cocooning the personal with the almost eternal, and sort of flipping them, too, through the act of painting. The whole show is hyper-focused, like the artist is proving that a single, very very small dot on a page is not only actually three-dimensional, but also intimate. I can’t really explain it better than that. I probably could’ve done without the sculpture and some of the paintings, but it’s a big space. It works. That the show was only up for three days further serves its point. I also love the artist’s exhibition text, which functions as a part of the show, rather than a supplement to it.
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Thirst for Silence - THREE STARS
Will Sheldon
C L E A R I N G / June 22-July 27, 2024
A bit contrived, though I guess it’s risky work. Or is it risky-kitsch? Either way, it toys with the puritan strands of the art world, and that’s good... The content alone is unlikely to scare anyone, so any effective horror (or taboo-stoking) here has to surround Sheldon’s position and the viewer’s perception of it. In a sense, the exhibition has to perform without us clocking it as a performance. By and large, in the front room, I buy it. It’s creepy. Sheldon’s subjects are almost all pubescent girls, rendered lifeless with black voids for eyes (think Modigliani or Laurencin), stilted and smooth like porcelain dolls (Bellmer), in private and intimate moments. His tonal arrangements are sickly, too, specifically his use of dirty nickel yellows in tandem with green ochre against desaturated pink. Naturally, I consider the artist: how he wields power in his imaginary, how he mixes the macabre with erotics and youth, and how he titles the whole thing Thirst for Silence. Sheldon sews doubt, and sparks a dilemma of acceptability around that age-old question (of the last decade)... you know the one: cAn YoU sEpArAtE aRt AnD aRtIsT? Which is a drab question, but Sheldon is cagey enough to prompt us to think about the contours of the question without attributing the ask directly to him. And then we have the back room... the back room sours the show. It has a small painting, styled after Bacon and also Goya’s Saturn, that shows a seated man (presumably a stand-in for Sheldon himself) tearing the blouse off one of the girl-dolls with his teeth, as she lies limp and unconscious across his lap. Though it’s a strong painting on its own, in the frame of the show it’s a letdown... an unearned, self-conscious bid for shock. Horror illustrated, rather than embodied. With it, Sheldon pulls the ripcord on all the discomfort and tension built in the front room, and reveals his hand as a troll or second-rate edgelord. Like a thriller that waits until the last scene to reveal it’s actually all fake. Play by the rules you set. Don’t be scared.
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Written on Water - THREE STARS
Park McArthur, Diane Severin Nguyen, Evelyn Taocheng Wang, Cathy Wilkes
Matthew Marks / June 29-August 17, 2024
A cold show. There’s a lot of distance in here; nothing’s immediate. McArthur’s strange polyurethane monoliths are fantastic. They’re large and centered, and they cue me to think of density and material – and also time and shifting form, because they seem to be used, or unsquished – and that thread runs through the rest of the works seamlessly. They’re also very basic readymades, which unlocks Wang’s approach to the Agnes Martin imitation paintings as a pseudo-material inquiry, as well as a more subjective one.
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Weird Rain - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Daisy Parris
James Fuentes / June 8-July 20, 2024
I can’t quite figure out how to engage with these paintings. They’re awake, yes, and Parris saturates them with punches of yellow that imply electricity or sickness or violence. I like that. And then there are the words and poems, scrawled on scraps of canvas and pasted over the abstractions. The scraps stick out – literally, formally, and materially – so, for me, they’re the focus, immediately. And though the press release argues that these text pieces are a “painterly gesture” and “another form of brushstroke,” they’re actually decisively foreign and internally coherent on an otherwise enigmatic surface. They’re superficial. Their message dictates my read, and overwhelms Parris’ work. They close the paintings. Which is not to say that I don’t like the content of the fragments: they’re at times romantic, urgent, playful, and painful. Just, as a whole, I wonder how I’d feel if things were a bit more incorporated, or obscured, as they are in Your Final Shape, where I have to fight for words erased, and look to the whole painting to make sense of the words that aren’t.
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It Never Entered My Mind - ZERO POINT FIVE STARS
Lindsay Adams, Greg Breda, Grant Czuj, Shanique Emelife, Alexander Harrison, Braden Hollis, Michael Igwe, Harminder Judge, Mario Moore, Taj Poscé, Harmonia Rosales, SANGREE, Hammzat Tahabsim, Thiang Uk, Chantal Wnuk, MELO-X
Curated by Michael Sherman
Sean Kelly / May 18-July 27, 2024
I’m offended immediately upon entering. I get that it’s July, and we’re chilling, but what gallery lets their associates blast Chief Keef (and I like some of the Chief Keef songs...) over the Sonos during open hours? Apparently not this one, actually. Here it’s intentional... somehow worse! The Chief Keef is on a playlist -- which also includes John Coltrane, Fela Kuti, and many others -- that’s part of the show, framed as “music direction” by someone named MELO-X. If this sounds bush league, that’s because it is, though it’s somehow still more lucid than the haphazard show it accompanies, which includes a ceramic vase with Nike symbols on it, colorfield-type abstraction, collage works, and portraits channeling Black speculative fiction. Someone please save Harminder Judge (and Chantal Wnuk, I like her work) from this horror.
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Days of 2024 - ONE POINT FIVE STARS
Eve Fowler
Morán Morán / June 28-August 17, 2024
Fowler puts 2024 in her title and nowhere else. Her show may have been useful in the early aughts, or perhaps seen as timely around 2017, but today it feels late. Though, really, the show is two shows: there are the new text-based paintings, and then there’s an entirely separate video installation that showed over a year ago in New York. So it’s hard to approach her show as a singular, current thing. No matter, the video piece (Labor) is strong. It’s frantic and disjointed in a way that’s somehow soothing. The nine monitors highlight women artists at work – painting, folding, molding, sketching – and, taken as one, it’s hypnotic with a beehive-like perpetual motion. The rest of the show drags; the work is redundant and on defense.
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Diving for Pearls - TWO STARS
Bradley Bell, Pippa Garner, Reverend Joyce McDonald, Andrés Monzón-Aguirre
STARS / June 26-August 10, 2024
The works don’t relate. The Pippa Garner drawings and sketches are engaging. STARS doesn’t even bother with an exhibition text. The show knows what it is. It’s summer. Carry on.
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At the Lace Shop and Other Light Drawings – TWO STARS
Lisa Oppenheim
Tanya Bonakdar / May 11-July 13, 2024
History moves fast so we tend to forget about what we forgot. This exhibit tries to remember it. Not much going on, though.
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July 15, 2024
Monuments - TWO STARS
Eli Russell Linnetz
Jeffrey Deitch / June 29-August 3, 2024
When I see Linnetz’s Mount Rushmore pizza oven, I want to stuff his entire show in there and incinerate it without prejudice. The whole thing is a spectacular failure. Has everyone seen Kiyan Williams’ sinking White House at the Whitney Biennial? Well, it’s more obvious than Linnetz’s sinking Statue of Liberty, sure, yet somehow still far more interesting, and it’s objectively not interesting. I’m not being hyperbolic. Everything here feels like oversized merch. Which I guess is sort of what fine art is... And, I mean, if this is “the point” of “the show,” then the artist needs to “get” a “life.” More likely, though, Linnetz really does believe he’s saying something consequential, probably about American consumerism and icons and narrative production of the “end times.” Unfortunately, those bases have been well-covered (in much more subtle and effective ways) since at least the 1920s, definitely the 1980s, and especially (though redundantly) over the past decade. (And, of course, in the final scene of 1968’s Planet of the Apes). While Linnetz’s fiberglass sculptures would function more efficiently at a megamall or county fair, his paintings would function nowhere: they’re monochromes that ignore the durational capacity of monochromes. In other words, they’re meant to be ignored. I spend most of my visit trying to find something I like. What about the color of the walls? Yes, I like that. It’s a matte-fluorescent red, and it’s the key to the show. Up close I see the paint roller tracks and the white wall below. This makes me think of cheap things, and work done quickly with the intent of being undone just as fast. Which reminds me of Los Angeles, a city built to be rebuilt, or taken down, and I think this makes sense in the context of Linnetz’s show, which feels like an examination of American icons through the lens of someone who’s tragically and archetypally “LA,” with a scope so narrowly on trend that they miss out on everything else.
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Gas Station Dinner - ONE POINT FIVE STARS
Isaac Psalm Escoto a.k.a. Sickid
Jeffrey Deitch / June 28-August 10, 2024
That Jeffrey still brings street artists into the fine art space is admirable. He’s historically good at it – so I don’t doubt he’ll have collectors to sell to – but the shine from his Art in the Streets show over a decade ago is wearing thin, and fast. And he understands this: the press release is composed and signed by Deitch himself, and written in the first person, which says to me that he feels the need to personally advocate for work that is otherwise meeting a pretty tired market. Escoto’s work is killer on billboards and walls because it's fast and pure and stumbled upon. Out there his characters interact with everything around them – fire escapes, advertisements, patterns in the brick. They grow out of the fabric of LA’s sprawl. His gallery-exhibited paintings are much different. They’re planned and precise, and lack the loose finish that makes his city work so compelling. In here, his narratives are confined to a formal frame and unspontaneous encounters.
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Tone Poem - ZERO POINT FIVE STARS
Aiste Stancikaite, Alexis Mata, Alison Blickle, Amy Lincoln, Austin Lee, Ben Sanders, Eric Shaw, Charline Tyberghein, Daniel Byrd, Felipe Pantone, Gavin Lynch, Jackie Head, JJ Manford, Joe Reihsen, Laurens Legiers, Luke Diiorio, Marina Kappos, Matt Phillips, Michael Craik, Nathan Ritterspusch, Nick Thomm, Peter Mohall, Paul Riedmüller, Richard Burton, Russell Tyler, Ryan Crotty, Sally Kindberg, Seffa Klein, Thomas Trum, Tim Biskup, Tim Brawner
The Hole / June 29-August 17, 2024
No one asked The Hole to make a show more transcendentally awful than their last one, but they did it anyway. I’d rather look at hand-me-downs from Storage Wars, or unsold paintings from the South Beach galleries that sell Alec Monopoly and Kaws. Any synthesis here is nominal: it’s “art.” The Hole defends it all by saying something about a “tight tonal range” (an innuendo?) and by callously referencing monochromatic painting. The jury sees right through this. Just admit you’ve gone to the Hamptons, thank you.
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The Outside World - ONE STAR
Alexa Guariglia
Moskowitz Bayse / May 18-July 27, 2024
Not worth seeing. Reminds me of the style you see in “art deco” restaurants or in old New Yorker issues. Or an imitation of that type of thing. At its worst, it feels like Corporate Memphis.
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Possibility of Misunderstanding - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Aaron Elvis Jupin
Moskowitz Bayse / May 18-July 27, 2024
Why is this not in the main space? Jupin’s show is much more compelling than what’s up front, and it’s cramped back here in the viewing room. His airbrush paintings of layered masks have a subtle spirit, even if something is lost in the digitally drafted feel... and they do get stuck a bit in genre, I guess. Whatever: they’re fun to untangle. The drawings don’t do much, but they’re gentle, and they dissect, maybe, what we’re seeing in the paintings. Masks as a subject are sort of overtread at this point, so I like that there are suggestions of the work moving somewhere else, like the oversized aluminum chair wall decal. His Lighten Up work also edges in the right direction. Anything that gets this work moving away from ‘variations on a theme’ is good. I could do without the sculptures. Please turn the air conditioning on in this gallery.
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Laps of Chrysalis - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Lila de Magalhaes
Matthew Brown / June 28-August 10, 2024
The gesture of working with bedsheets implies intimacy and sensuality, so while de Magalhaes’ wallworks aren’t really dynamic on their own, they do function as a narrative bed for her ceramics to spring from. These ceramic vessels are the show’s forte -- they’re grotesque and nightmarish, and express a dark or even sick counterpoint to the more fertile and “becoming” scenes embroidered on the bedsheets. They collide the unnatural with the seductive, depicting what I think amounts to the poisonous side of being in love... or maybe the euphoric, yet simultaneously dreadful part of it... there are vessels labeled “fertilizer,” “pleasure nest,” and “ON!” overrun by maggots, drunk rats, and dying flies, respectively. So there’s this play between erotics and dread, and then, in the show’s final red room, we get a denouement, a respite from the frantic ceramics and tangled wallworks. The show thrives in its own disjointed, narrative logic.
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Stray Animals - THREE STARS
Charles Snowden
Nazarian / Curcio / June 8-July 13, 2024
These ceramics are dryly and precisely fun. They veer toward camp, yes (somewhere between Sontag and Kelley camp, as in it’s not a calculated misfire, but also not accidental), but the camp is only used as an initial hook. For example: I see the Addams family hand in many of the works, and it makes me want to disengage. It’s a level of genre in an art space that, when presented as sincerely as it is here, makes me cringe. An ‘alive,’ disembodied hand, again and again, in an art show? Still, I keep looking. Yes, it’s a hand, but it’s unpainted and unglazed, so it’s more like a surface that’s shaped like a hand... an adjective to a noun. Already, it’s slipping out of camp. And I spot some small glazed ceramics fixed to the hands – again, the hands are neutral, so the glazed bits pop – but they’re tiny tiny, and I can’t see them, so I move closer. And in that moment Snowden has won. This is a sign of good art: you move closer, necessarily. Up close, his ceramics favor a sort of allusive, enchanted arithmetic. I decode glossy chains full of icons and gnomes and animals and mushrooms that seem to evade or even counter their own associations rather than sit neatly within them. That said, the ceramics could be less ‘perfect’ – they seem to almost be factory made, like ceramic toys – and the show is a bit one note. But also, man, it just works. The same way the camp works, the same way the psychosexual allusions work, the same way the religious iconography works. It’s sincere and it’s curious, and it’s not quite as it seems.
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July 8, 2024
M Y S T E R Y V I L L A No. 1 - THREE POINT FIVE STARS
Pedro Alejandro Verdin, Nick Stewart, Frances Stark, Ross Simonini, Kevin Bouton-Scott, Edward Salinas, Jools Rothblatt, Monica Noonan, Lana Nichols, Ruby Neri, Will Milner, Dirk Knibbe, Raffi Kalenderian, Tristan Hirsch, Luke Weapon Haeger, Emily Marie Fick, Joe Fastiggi, Matt Correia, Mia Carucci, Mikol Brinkman, Ida Badal, Negashi Armada, Orion Shepherd, Andrea Franco, Joshua Miller, Paul Pascal Theriault
SALA Mount Washington / July 7-?, 2024
Some good art, some bad, in a rundown house. There’s very little steering the ship and we like this. Maybe we love it. It offers hope for a counterpoint to the hyper-professional, ultra-fluorescent gyre that is the LA art scene. To be clear: there’s something about it that comes a little too close to Burning Man, and it does feel insular. It’s more of a supplement to the art world at this point than a foil, but whatever. Make your own. Make it better. Invite everyone. Absolutely pitch perfect placement of Dirk Knibbe’s blue steel sculpture, by the way, washed with sunlight in the overgrown yard. The sculpture slips around somewhere in the abstract design realm, but anthropomorphizes in the vines and makes itself strange. Negashi Armada’s painting is peculiar and fast and well-placed, too. I also like work by Joshua Miller, Ross Simonini, Tristan Hirsch, Pedro Verdin, and Ida Badal. Orion Shepherd’s paintings feel a little too uncomplicated to warrant an entire room, but his aluminum cast crab shell works make up for it. The whole show interacts with overgrowth and decay and passing light in a way that feels delightfully syncopated.
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Time Force - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Negashi Armada and Reese Riley
Quarters Gallery / June 29-?, 2024
Riley’s collages are worth poring over – they have the levity of something like Kelley’s Reconstructed History drawings, but they seem more mediated, more symbolic or allegorical. They’re to be inspected and also felt, and I think that’s not common. They also have a material instinct and a layering that would probably translate well to installation. I’m interested to see more. Armada’s drawings may have similar allusive aspirations, but they don’t accelerate beyond their anime roots. Fun, though.
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The Theory of the Green Painting - TWO STARS
Theodore Svenningsen, Nick Taggart, Eve Wood, Alaïa Parhizi, Ming C Lowe, Nadège Monchera Baer, Cyril Kuhn, Tulsa Kinney, Michael Falzone, Narsiso Martinez, Alicia Piller, Emily Elisa Halpern, Serena Potter, Ada Pullini Brown, Cameron Masters, Lucinda Luvaas, Mark Acetelli, Jill Sykes
Curated by Theodore Svenningsen and Alaïa Parhizi
Wonzimer / June 21-July 19, 2024
This is a good not-good show. There’s enough holding it together that it makes sense, even though the individual parts aren’t that impressive. It’s aware of what it is. I did like works by Nick Taggart, Jill Sykes, and Mark Acetelli.
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Rainforest Cafe - ONE POINT FIVE STARS
Frances Stark, Ben Quinn, Karin Gulbran, Mia Scarpa, Melvino Garetti, Javier Ramirez, Sonya Sombreuil, Maija Peeples-Bright, Jason Meadows, Matthew Sweesy, Nina de Creeft Ward, Athena Paola, Julianne Lee, Ava Woo Kaufman, Rossana Romero, Thomas Linder, Jack Alving, Lara Karadogan, Ava McDonough, and Oskar Peterson
Curated by Higinio Martinez
Guerrero Gallery / June 1-July 6, 2024
A messy, messy summer group show, and wildly overhung. Not sure what’s going on in the backhouse space, either. No continuity. Works worth seeing here are by Frances Stark, Jason Meadows, and Melvino Garetti. Side note, and also relevant: Sianne Ngai talks about art being fundamentally gimmick-prone, and that’s no more evident in LA than at Guerrero Gallery. They’ve painted the floor here with a latticework of leaves and vines, and for their previous show they painted the building like a gift-shop... it all feels a little Mickey Mouse and a bit pick-me, like those Spring Break art fairs that coincide with Frieze every year. To follow the thread a half-step further: creating a contextual facade in this way (“immersion” as the gallery calls it) shows a lack of faith in the art, curation, and/or audience. It’s unnecessary hand-holding by the gallery, and prevents a more layered engagement. Propoganda for the exhibition text. Take out the gimmick, remove half the works, and you probably have a show.
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Soundings - FOUR STARS
Bruce Richards
Sea View / June 2-August 10, 2024
Richards’ paintings are precise and alive and essentialized. The cherry paintings add a sublime counter to the flame works. There’s a little Robert Bechtle in there and a little Ruscha, too, but his work is pretty distinct so ignore that. The gallery spends a lot of time trying to position him within a lineage of his peers at UCI in the 70s, which isn’t really useful. He’s not as innovative as someone like Burden, but that doesn’t really matter because his inquiries are more subdued and, in a way, more immediately accessible. The works also operate at a level of abstraction that’s satisfying: unlike a lot of disaster-core art today, Richards’ work deals with fatal imagery obliquely and without a direct referent. It’s peaceful because of it. Sedated, even. And also stirring. A good show and the space is refreshing as well, being Jorge Pardo’s artwork/house that MOCA exhibited once upon a time.
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California Suite - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Kim Fisher, Lecia Dole-Recio, Nora Shields
La Loma Projects / June 22-July 28, 2024
A solid, yet not quite inspired show. We know what Fisher brings, and it’s gentle and cool. Great. And Shields toys with material in a way that, while not yet risky, is freewheeling enough to keep me engaged. Dole-Recio, though, plays with the boundaries of her process, and, while that’s nice to see, it feels stiff and fatigued in the modernist frame of the show. Her work nakedly observes its labor -- her work is her labor -- and that’s intellectual, not immediate. It reminds me of Thom Andersen’s note that in New York everything is sharp and in-focus, and in LA things dissolve into the distance. Dole-Recio’s work does not dissolve, the subject is precisely the object’s being, and things are parsed through and figured out. Any entropy left by Fisher’s work (and even Shields’) is resolved in Dole-Recio’s and that’s just no fun.
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Abstraction of the Stream - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Bethany Czarnecki and Dan Levenson
Bozo Mag / June 15-July 13, 2024
This pairing is radically misguided, though aesthetically it does work. Yes, the artists share a formal exploration of line through color – Levenson’s is more ‘masculine,’ Czarnecki’s more ‘feminine.’ This is, it seems, where the gallery has drawn a surface-level link between the two. The artists are up to completely different things, though, in substantial ways. Probably aware of this, the gallery tries in the text to draw a more conceptual parallel, but it’s untenable. Czarnecki’s work is very O’Keeffe-y, with less dimension, and it never really rises out of its smooth, spritely comfort zone. It’s work to be gazed at. Levenson’s work is much different -- it’s highly conceptual -- and so I’m confused about the pairing. His project is far more coarse, more of a meta-questioning of knowledge production through worldbuilding than a formal inquiry (though that is there, too). Essentially, he’s made up a defunct art school (the State Art Academy, Zurich), and he imagines the work they created there, their assignments, their furniture, their names. It’s like if Beuys took on a project of reimagining Bauhaus or Black Mountain College to erode the myth of it all. Whereas Czarnecki aimlessly reaffirms (or recycles) the tenets of modernism, Levenson actively questions the process that engenders them (and their offspring). I do wonder about the depth of Levenson’s project, though. As in, how far can he take this? At what point does a concept questioning the contextual framing of art become the contextual frame for the art? And once it does – which it seems to have done – then what? Then he just exhibits alongside painters performing modernism for the market?
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Subjective Color - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Stan Brakhage, Sarah Crowner, Rosha Yaghmai, Julian Hoeber
Probably Gallery / June 15-August 17, 2024
There’s something fresh about this exhibit in that it’s efficient. It teases out ideas about diffusion and dimension of color in a way that feels essayistic, even loosely academic, with each piece referring back to the Brakhage video that grounds the show. The show also tugs each artist away from their sweet spot, marginally repositioning each work as something more than an aesthetic object. It’s hard to explain, but, for me, the Brakhage activates everything else. For example, whereas I usually view Crowner’s work as referring to Ellsworth Kelly and composition, I now see the work as a more active experiment in color and perception. The road doesn’t go both ways, though. The Brakhage is not enriched by the works around it, so its inclusion in the show feels like a bit of curatorial overreach. Nevertheless, it is used wisely, so... okay.
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June 29, 2024
The Hovering Life - TWO STARS
Amedeo Polazzo
Bel Ami / June 4-July 20, 2024
I’m not sure what this all adds up to. Do the still lifes work on their own? Hard to say because the artist painted fresco murals throughout the gallery, so the show becomes about something else. What that is, I don’t know. Material ephemerality? Maybe, but the paintings on canvas will live on, so that’d be a contradiction. The composition and erasure effect in Polazzo’s canvas paintings is skillful and satisfying enough, and the content strings together a loose narrative that I enjoy piecing together. Individually, Lost Flowers, Interiors, and Kitchen Ghost are strong. Single Mother doesn’t fit. I’d like to see this show without the frescos, and with less paintings.
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Flhat Earth Falling Water - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
David Shull
Noon Projects / June 21-July 27, 2024
Fine art that uses the American West imaginary as a conceptual springboard for identity exploration. No matter how good the work is, the motif is overcoded at this point and locks me out of an accurate read. The drawings are somewhat clever.
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Becoming a Swan (Going Through the Veil) - TWO STARS
Darren Cortez, John Erwin Dillard, Kristan Kennedy, Michael Lombardo
Noon Projects / June 21-July 27, 2024
It doesn’t make sense why these artworks are together. Maybe something about the earth? It’s not offensive, though. Boring but it works. I like the paintings on tablecloth.
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A Rose By Any Other Name - ONE POINT FIVE STARS
Jerry Peña
Charlie James / June 1-July 6, 2024
On the wall towards the back is what looks like a white monochrome painting. It contrasts drastically with the rest of the exhibit, which is full of multimedia ‘street’ paintings made with stencils and broken glass and airbrush. I was fascinated by the monochrome painting. I looked at it up close, then from a distance. I noticed it had hinges on one side, and I remember a series of Josh Smith monochrome paintings with hinges that opened up to reveal cabinets full of ceramics or jewelry or something. So I approached the attendant to ask if this was that, if I could open up the monochrome painting. She said what monochrome painting. I pointed and said that one, right there. She said, “It’s part of the wall. Not a painting.” “But it has hinges,” I said. She looked at me, did not respond, and went back to working on her laptop. Point taken. I spent the rest of my time in here wondering how far behind the curve Charlie James is, mounting shows that belong in 2018 or even 2017. Maybe he doesn’t get out much. I guess if you don’t live in a city, or don’t participate in a city’s cultural fabric, this type of stuff is novel? I don’t know.
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Between the Warp and Weft - ONE STAR
Patrisse Cullors
Charlie James / June 15-July 20, 2024
Cullors refers to her art objects as “spiritual,” which I’d refer to as “a stretch.” They’re arrangements of items you’d find at a flea market -- mud cloths, shells, antique knives -- in wood frames, each one a banal variation on the last. To look at the work is to be unmoved. What’s more, it’s hard to reconcile the implicit capital drive of a gallery like Charlie James with the stated activist, anti-capital ethos of artists like Cullors. Or maybe their juxtaposition makes it easier to associate the two. Things are murky; I’m not sure. The dissonance is made more pronounced on my specific visit: as I read about Cullors’ self-described “sanctuary of reflection and empowerment,” the gallerists upstairs discuss the euphoria of popping zits. “If there’s anything on my body that’s a little bit raised – a bump of any kind, man – I squeeze it so hard and pop it and it feels soooo good.” The statement resonates as the only honest thing in here. Make sure you notice Cullors’ Abolitionist Handbook by the door, which, again, is a door to an art gallery owned by Charlie James (a former consultant for Microsoft; likely taking 50%) in the heart of LA’s Chinatown, which was built after the city demolished the original Chinatown to make room for Union Station. Not that it matters to me... but to an abolitionist?
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H O R S E S - TWO STARS
Noah Dillon, Mack Ludlow, Vanessa Zarate
Pio Pico / June 16-July 14, 2024
A far from cohesive group show. And maybe that’s by design? Each artist occupies a different room, so I question the degree to which they want these artists to be in conversation with one another. Using logic, it seems like they don’t want it at all. The question then becomes why? What’s the effect of segregating the works, which all deal figuratively with horses? Are they trying to make a statement about the differences in the artists’ views of horses? Or is it, like, an ironic critique of the one-room group show, of the mindless spattering of disparate objects thematically tied to the same idea? Most likely they’re just trying to make it easy for collectors – “Dillon in that room, Zarate there, Ludlow the next.” Dillon’s work is fashion photography in colorful resin frames (likely lifted from Matthew Barney), if you’re into that. Ludlow’s sculptures – and there are a ton of them, too many – can be curious if you’re able to focus on just one. Zarate has a couple decent paintings of horses. None of it is all that compelling, mainly because of how it’s curated.
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history as hypnosis V03 - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Alison Nguyen
Murmurs / May 30-July 6, 2024
Overtrained and overcritted, palpably. As in, I feel like Nguyen would have an answer for every question in a pit crit. The concept, the material choice, the layout – it’s all near bulletproof. Things are clear, concise, based in equal parts personal and ancestral history. So the work is justified (and looks good in documentation), but to what end? Ultimately, the show falls flat because it’s too reliant on the conceptual scaffolding and leaves very little room to feel. The crux of the issue is Nguyen’s video, the centerpiece of the show. It’s a three-channel narrative film that references alienation, geopolitics, and cultural memory. Again, the concept is strong, but the video suffers because it’s too considered, too essentialized. It’s self-certain in a way that inhibits the journey of discovery. (And the acting’s bad.) I’m more taken by Nguyen’s physical objects – especially the cigarette case work – because they act as hints and clues rather than answers. They’re ‘loose’ in a way that allows me freedom to explore. The artist’s strongest moments are the ones where she gives agency to the audience, where she activates a more inquisitive, scavenging mode. When the show slips into narrative/wonky/scripted/road-movie/sci-fi mode, it prompts too many questions – questions about form, about cinema, about hybrid filmmaking, about mimicry – that don’t serve the show.
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Udaya - THREE STARS
Gabriel Mills
François Ghebaly / June 20-July 20, 2024
This show makes manifest all the tropes you’d expect from a material-first, formalist approach: brooding and physical, with aspirations toward ‘transcendence’ and ‘sublimation.’ Lots of pretense. Which is not to say that the paintings are bad – there are really some striking compositions in here (specifically Qhelia and Gethsemane), their textures a joy to inspect – they’re just trying too hard to be spectacular. Still, Mills is one of the better young painters I’ve seen feeding the art world’s return to modernism. He can, with just a thin, cloudy wash of white, quell an otherwise chaotic painting entirely. And he’s precise: at times you get the sense that if he’d just chosen a slightly different shade of blue, or combed through the paint at a slightly steeper angle, he’d have ruined the entire thing. So, in a formal sense, the work is balanced, but it’s a predetermined, studied balance, not an inevitable balance. There’s very little evidence of risk or chance here. And so, the longer you look, the more labored the work reveals itself to be. They are the paintings of a perfectionist. I’d be interested in Mills letting his work get away from him. Let it ruin, make a move or two, and it’s done.
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American Gothic - THREE STARS
JPW3 and Grant Levy-Lucero
Night Gallery / June 22-August 31, 2024
I expected not to like this show... I’m oil stick averse and I’ve seen way too many glazed ceramic shows. But in American Gothic, JPW3 breaks ever so gently from his oil stick approach and varies the register of paint in work like Dead Man Walking; Levy-Lucero’s cookie jars, too, feel substantial and conceptually precise. What I’m saying is that I like the work... yet I still don’t like the show. The problem here is the curation, which is loud and over-considered. There’s a one-to-one-ness that makes things feel cheap. A ceramic reaper beside a painted one... a star-covered wizard fronting a star-covered painting... Get it? I can feel the curator associating at the most basic level, even as the exhibition text insists that this is a big, serious show about desire and truth and ideology. To feel the gallery’s hand is to feel repelled, especially with artists like JPW3 and Levy-Lucero, who are less academic. What’s funny is that the rote curatorial approach establishes an expectation of association that can be broken. And when this happens it’s rejuvenating. I’m talking about the moments that feel fought for. Specifically, there are three: JPW3’s twig & aluminum car wheel piece (Cookie Cutter PTSD Positivity), his soil and storage bin piece (SMD Surface Mounted Device), and his smallest painting in the very back (2). None have an obvious associate. These works stand out because they are flippant within an all-too-logical curatorial rhythm. For me, they are the least rehearsed. Ultimately, what’s strong about both artists is the spirit they imbue in their work. It’s a natural one, and instinctive, and the gallery doesn’t amplify that.
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False Spring - TWO STARS
Kemi Onabulé
Night Gallery / June 22-August 31, 2024
Some moody paintings reminiscent of Gaugin’s Tahiti paintings. It’s ok.
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Seascapes, Snowscapes, Kukeri - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Iva Gueorguieva
Night Gallery / June 22-August 24, 2024
Rauschenberg but make it Frankenthaler. There are a couple strong paintings in here and a few curious works on paper, but the body of work isn’t that strong. The best works camouflage their material (namely gauze) in the gesture, line, and texture of the paint – I’m thinking of Kukeri: Zmei, specifically. Most of the paintings are too crowded, too ambivalent in their material intent, or simply too one-note. Kukeri: Devotion is all three. I simply do not understand what the video is doing in this exhibit – the gallery hides it in the back corner, so it’s hard to find anyway.
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June 24, 2024
Kentaro Kawabata / Bruce Nauman - ONE STAR
Kentaro Kawabata and Bruce Nauman
Nonaka-Hill / May 30-July 20, 2024
A disrespectful show if you like Nauman. The glazed ceramics market overfloweth -- to keep up, Nonaka-Hill is doing the “make it conceptual” move, i.e. shoehorning their decorative ceramicist (Kawabata) into a show with a master conceptualist. In theory, this endows Kawabata’s work with an associative jolt, justifying inflated prices for otherwise “meaningless” art. In reality, the results are no bueno. To start, the show is intensely claustrophobic. Nauman’s sculptures deserve 10x the space they’re given; Kawabata’s ceramics (aesthetically fascinating on their own) line the walls like tools on a pegboard. To grasp Nauman’s work is to understand the power of it being withheld, underexposed, and spare, so to fill a closet with it and call it a show saps its power. It’s a brazen, self-interested gesture from a gallery that does not represent him. Second, Nauman and Kawabata’s artworks really don’t inform each other, a point which the gallery seems to be aware of (they acknowledge it toward the end of the press release). Finally, it just feels like a plain old cash grab, and an effort to move Kawabata’s work away from the simply ornamental (which is where it truly lives) toward something more considered. It’s worth noting that all the Nauman pieces on display have been sold and re-sold at auction, so, to the extent that Nauman even knows about this exhibition, it’s almost certain he wasn’t consulted in its making. There is no logic to why these Nauman pieces are here. They are, most likely, just the works Nonaka-Hill could get their hands on (“sourced from a variety of locations” per the associate) -- some prints from the 2000s here, a sculpture from the 80s there, a couple videos from the 60s in the back. Nothing coheres. The whole thing is unfortunate because it really doesn’t strengthen either artist’s position. I respect the gallery less, now.
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My American Dream: City of Angels - THREE POINT FIVE STARS
Keith Mayerson
Karma / May 23-July 20, 2024
It’s hard to be plainly funny in a gallery show – not witty, or sarcastic, or smart, or ironic, but funny – because humor usurps art’s facade of “serious business.” Nobody’s paying 40k for funny, but they might pay it for deep meaning if you sell it right. And so here we have a show that is absolutely funny (though not only or even mainly funny), and equally as genuine, and I respect that. Mayerson takes risks with humor here the same way Sam McKinniss does with dramatics: through an almost cold, sincere lens. It’s a delightful approach that makes McKinniss’ dramatic work funny, and Mayerson’s funny work dramatic. That humor is especially apparent in the front room, where pop culture sings, though the back room has it, too, in a way that adds depth and currency to the figuration up front. Notably, Mayerson avoids repeating himself: each painting adds another note or rhythm to the show, ultimately spinning a narrative about psychogeography and the slippage of media, surveillance, and the extraterrestrial into a city’s fabric (specifically LA’s). None of this is possible without the initial dose of humor in paintings like Space Jam, where Michael Jordan really doesn’t look like Michael Jordan, and Cheech & Chong, where a desaturated approach flips Cheech Marin’s look from spaced-out to something more... normal.
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Sadamasa Motonaga - TWO STARS
Sadamasa Motonaga
Karma / May 23-June 20, 2024
Could be fun to look at.
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Space Between the Lines - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Alicja Kwade and Agnes Martin
Pace Gallery / May 18-June 29, 2024
Pace’s program is seductive in the same way I imagine leveling up an AmEx might be. And why is the gallery this far south on La Brea? Once you enter the right passcode, use the proper door, salute the guard on duty, and get past the gaggle of Big Little Lies associates, the show is ok. There’s some thought put into establishing line and bending it, and there’s an ease in spatiality and light that leaves room to think. I’d say the wall motif that runs through the exhibit is a bit heavy-handed, a sort of all-too-literal connection between the artists, and the melting mirror is an eyeroll. The marble snow piles are clumsy, too. Overall, things here feel like they can next be seen at the Faena in Miami Beach.
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Elements of Space - TWO STARS
Rachel Garrard
Nino Mier / May 18-June 29, 2024
Sort of minimal, transcendental-style paintings if the theme were “Santa Fe.” Not much here. Maybe something nice about the process of creating the pigments.
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Erzählerin - ONE POINT FIVE STARS
Kyle Staver
Nino Mier / May 18-June 29, 2024
I can see why Mier underpays his artists. Here you can get a look at the last gasp of the naïve-figurative boom of the 2010s. And to think that we thought it’d last forever...
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The Proliferation of the Sun - THREE POINT FIVE STARS
Otto Piene
Sprüth Magers / May 24-August 10, 2024
This is quick and precise, and yet quite affective when it’s viewed downstream of WWII and during the nuclear arms race. There is something lost by the projected performance being automated and not done live, but Piene is much more dead than he was in 1967, so this will do. Hearing him repeat “the sun, the sun, the sun” really does evoke the devastating end to the war, and also begs for a reprieve from that end. In the exhibition text, I saw photos of the original iteration in Cologne in 1967, and the space is small, like an unfinished basement, full of people laying together on the floor to watch the projections. There, the installation seems like shelter, it looks warm; here, in the empty upstairs at Sprueth Magers, it feels more sanitized, cold, and monumental. I wonder about this.
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The Perversion of the Visual - THREE STARS
Gretchen Bender
Sprüth Magers / May 24-August 10, 2024
It’s nice to look at the Pictures Generation because you can trace the lineage from Baldessari to Majerus to people like Wolfson/Ito without working that hard. It does seem, though, like the term is becoming a bit of a catch-all. While I can easily project 80s-laden media/capitalist dread onto Bender’s thirteen-monitor Dumping Core installation – replete with Benjamin and McLuhan’s semiotic entanglements, and the political considerations of someone like Barbara Kruger – I can just as easily see it referring back to the more plainly conceptual work done by Nam June Paik. Maybe it means more now than it did then. Ultimately, Bender’s work is just sort of a hypnotic and symbolic onslaught of consumerism from the 80s, and I’m not really sure if it’s the content that’s being addressed or how it’s packaged or both.
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Kirsten Everberg - TWO STARS
Kirsten Everberg
1301PE / May 18-June 22, 2024
I once saw a Diana Thater exhibit here and it was marvelous. There was also a Petra Cortright that year and that was great. This gallery tends to have good exhibits, this is just not one of them. And I like Everberg. What does it mean for her to go after the Hudson River School, at this moment in time? I don’t think that’s communicated. I can guess that it’s something about a reconsideration of nature, and our effects on it? I’m not really sure…
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June 18, 2024
The Flood, The Vessel, The Commune—how do we find each other? - THREE POINT FIVE STARS
Julie Tolentino
Commonwealth and Council / May 25-June 29, 2024
Reminds me of work from the 2021 New Museum Triennial: equal parts machinic and organic, and imbued with a tired fatalism. While ten years ago this type of work might’ve been foreboding, it now reflects the values of a sect of the art world too thick to adapt. No matter, it is absolutely engaging. Concept here is essential, and hard to explain. Basically Tolentino translates a previous performance into binary code, and then uses it to automate machines that dip clumps of hair into barrels of crystal-making chemicals. Over time these objects grow and start to look like spore clouds or crystalline chandeliers. While there’s something beautiful about the clouds, the show’s industrial aesthetics and acoustics – chrome wire, kettle black barrels, jarring automated clicks – urge a far more pessimistic read. Something about the inevitability of industry, or the triumph of modernity over personal and collective history. That the hair is collected from friends and family only serves to reinforce the point. The human body is entirely absent and, in fact, unnecessary: the show will go on without us. The work speaks to a matrix of ideas that erodes agency and amplifies despair. Of course, art doesn’t need to inspire, but, with work like this having spent over a decade in the spotlight, one begins to wonder about the salience of Tolentino’s ideas here. What can be added in 2024 that we couldn’t grasp in 2017? With a pretty spectacular material and spatial approach, Tolentino ultimately rehashes a lot that we already know.
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밤, 낮, 달, 비, Speaking in Tongues - ONE POINT FIVE STARS
Jesse Chun
Commonwealth and Council / May 25-June 29, 2024
Something is being communicated, but I can’t tell what it is. The mirrors on the floor feel unnecessary: they add dimension to the room but nothing else. The exhibit needs more context.
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Rumors - THREE STARS
Kim Gordon
O-Town House / May 17-July 6, 2024
This is a delightful little thing. The highlight of the show is upstairs, an “intake video” for Gordon’s long-running Design Office project. In it, Gordon talks to the gallery’s founder Scott Cameron Weaver about the space (which doubles as his home) as he takes her on a tour of it. In spite of the tongue-in-cheek premise, the video is pretty sincere and charming. It’s a sort of rhythmic diary film that activates Gordon, Weaver, and the space itself in equal parts. It has the same warmth and wandering patience that a lot of Mekas films do. There’s a fun doubling, too, that happens as you sit in the same space you see on screen -- you notice history (in the micro sense) and you’re a part of it. There Weaver is, on screen, smoking... and oh, sure enough, you can smell the smoke... and if you follow it he’s right there outside smoking, in real life. So, in a very basic way, the video produces space memory while also reflecting on it. It could be considered expanded cinema and, if it were, it would be considered a subtle, yet strong example of it. On the first floor is a more formal film -- Gordon’s ode, I guess, to Jeanne Dielman, just without the duration (which is, like, Dielman’s whole point). It functions, in a way, to ground the show in the ‘domestic,’ and that is about all it does. Also, don’t worry, Gordon’s drippy word paintings don’t make an appearance.
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Echo - ONE POINT FIVE STARS
Raphaela Simon
Hannah Hoffman / May 11-June 22, 2024
One painting in here sticks out: Frosch (Frog), the one with blue checker. The style is something like Charline von Heyl, but underworked and without the risk. I imagine the artist is most comfortable with this painting, though. As in, it’s the most precise with the least amount of effort. Every other painting is a counterpoint to this one, in color, composition, approach, and feeling. Those ones feel uncommitted, like the artist is inching toward an idea that should be surrendered to. In one of Simon’s monographs up front, she speaks in favor of intuition and is quoted saying that too much “intellect and will can make a painting illustrative.” Point taken and, well, these paintings are illustrative.
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John Byrtle and Nicky Lesser - ONE STAR
John Byrtle and Nicky Lesser
Chez Max et Dorothea
What the hell’s going on here? So this is a nonprofit focused on contemporary surrealism? Raising money to acquire Max Ernst’s former home in the south of France? And the gallery is in MacArthur Park, LA’s face of urban neglect? And it’s unironically called “Chez Max et Dorothea”? (?????) That ‘chez’ implies a home and that Chez Max is across the street from a park full of people without homes is not lost on me. I’m not even categorically against galleries moving to neighborhoods with lower rent -- especially if it’s all they can afford -- but it seems like Chez Max owns this whole building? It all feels very 2017, and fits into an unfortunate vein of art history that belongs to women like Dana Schutz and Laura Owens. Why not do this near Silver Lake or Toluca Lake or any other lake that’s giving Saint-Tropez more than MacArthur Park Lake? (They found a body in there last week.) “You know what this neighborhood needs?” we were all thinking, “Surrealism.” If this is some sort of performance piece, or a backdoor commentary on the vanity of art... it’s working. Anyway, I try and fail to focus on the art in here. There are these playful sculptures by Nicky Lesser, of dogs unleashed and unconcerned. They’re made of plush bathmats and rugs and towels. One of Lesser’s dogs rests peacefully on a very clean carpet, and that reminds me of the guy I saw outside sleeping with his head on the concrete. It’s incredibly hard to divorce this space from its context, which weighs on the art, which is probably why Gaga moved out of here in the first place.
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Ra Shu - ZERO POINT FIVE STARS
Roscoe Mitchell
The Pit / June 15-July 27, 2024
Come on, man.
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Garden of Love - ONE STAR
David ‘Mr.StarCity’ White
The Pit / June 15-July 27, 2024
I think they’re just trying to sell stuff.
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Star Roving - ONE STAR
Dee Clements, Tamara Gonzales, Lara Schnitger, and Sydney Beach Zester
The Pit / June 15-July 27, 2024
Decorative?
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June 13, 2024
Ash Tree - THREE POINT FIVE STARS
Lucy Bull
David Kordansky / May 11-June 15, 2024
Bull’s horizontal paintings in the North Gallery make me wonder if her studio has windows in it. They’re sort of an all-out attack -- an unrelenting, Kingdom of Heaven-level seige, Lucy Bull-style -- and they leave very little space to wander. And so I was relieved to see what she had in the South Gallery: tall and open paintings, with time in them. These paintings – specifically 4:28, 16:23, and 15:17 – use pools of color to ‘keyhole’ the canvas, to let the viewer dip a toe into, or gain respite from, her hard-charging style. This is a clever tactic, and welcome, as for a while her paintings have lived off essentiality and motion, but I never got the sense that I could fall into them. With these ones I can, so there’s something worth chasing there. The show would’ve been stronger with less paintings, though it’s a commercial gallery, so whatever. Bull uses orange very, very, very well. Maybe better than any painter I’ve seen. She scorches the North Gallery with it (to a screaming degree); she tempers it into a gentle iridescent effect in 3:10; and she structures 1:24 entirely with just a sliver of it. Some people would say her mark making is what makes her paintings hers, but I’d say it’s that orange.
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L’esprit dans le temple de l’âme - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
David Altmejd
David Kordansky / May 11-June 15, 2024
There’s less going on here than in Altmejd’s prior exhibition at Kordansky, which I think was two or three years ago. That I’ve seen his work before is important: part of the appeal of Altmejd’s work lies in the initial physical and subconscious reaction to it. The first time you see it, his stuff is unsettling; you really do get the things are alive. Expecting or preparing for this feeling, though, dampens the experience. You know how they say, with for example a Rothko, “Awww shucks I could go back to it over and over again and never feel the same thing twice.” If Altmejd’s work doesn’t do that – if its effect is tempered on repeat visits – does that make it not worth going back to at all? The second room shows a new wrinkle in his practice – unfinished works, in all white, that hint at and adopt form, but remain in a sort of workshop limbo. That room – smaller, quieter – seems to suggest a welcome collapse of process, a self-interrogation. However, I’m not sure if it’s genuine: Altmejd’s works are so perfect that, even in their “workshopped” state, these works feel very resolved.
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June 12, 2024
Qualia: I Feel You - TWO STARS
Medrie MacPhee
Vielmetter / June 1-July 6, 2024
MacPhee uses second-hand garments as substrate and does so without apparently commenting on industrial processes and downcycling, and in fact rejecting these associations in the exhibition text. Weird. I’m not particularly enchanted by any of the compositions, though the underlying garments do create a chorus of textures and sheens that holds me for a moment. Whatever, they’re still recognizable as textiles – obviously so – and that makes me think about materials, their histories, and ultimately their politics. But that dog won’t hunt, because context is withheld by the artist. It’s, like, one of the few abstract painting shows with the potential to be socially suggestive without being overwhelming… and yet they don’t even want it to be. If you like the vibe of Gee’s Bend quilts or the blockiness of some of Sadie Benning’s work then you’d probably like these.
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Still Life Stories - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
John Sonsini
Vielmetter / May 18-June 29, 2024
Sonsini knows how to *just* finish a painting and go no further, especially in his portraits.
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Primordial Sounds of the Avatar - ONE STAR
Tâm Văn Trần
Vielmetter / June 1-July 6, 2024
There are windows on the door. You can use them to look at the show from the hallway.
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all doors opened - TWO STARS
Chloe Saï Breil-Dupont
Nicodim / June 1-July 13, 2024
Photo realism disguised as magical realism. Technically solid, but that ultimately works against the artist. Feeling is not really there; good training is on display.
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Passage - FOUR STARS
Coco Young
Night Gallery / May 4-June 15, 2024
There are five paintings here and, individually, only one is really worth remembering. It’s a painting called The Pond, of red swans in hazardous water. It’s a painting under attack, it’s the smallest in the show, and it’s flanked by two large landscapes, Monet-like takes on a marsh and a bog. All three paintings have roughly the same composition, which makes The Pond all the more startling. Its searing red takes the place of marshy greens in Bog at Dawn and Le grand ruisseau; its ochre-brown water subs in for their pastel-washed streams. This corner of the exhibit feels very intentional: the three paintings play with the curatorial equivalent of Eisenstein’s cinematic montage theory. And then there are two paintings that, were this intended to be a showcase of Young’s work, I would’ve left out of the show. The show’s titular piece, Passage, is undercooked and streaky, and Yasmin has formal shortcomings (namely, the hard line of the subject’s shin) that pull us out of its content. But, when viewed as part of a whole – as shots in a sequence of shots – the paintings work. The show can be read and felt. I drift from a day dream to an afterthought, then I refocus to reality. And then, with The Pond, I can go to a place that is violent and sweet... I can imagine a revenge, or a hardening... It’s a place we all go, whether we want to or not, and the exhibit gives us permission to go there and then to come out of it. Strong, strong show, gentle and staggering, and very well considered.
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I Blame Nature - TWO STARS
Clare Woods
Night Gallery / May 4-June 15, 2024
These paintings are best absorbed from a distance. At that range, the style communicates gesture and freedom. To approach the paintings is to be let down: it’s easy to see, up close, where the artist laid down stencils/tape and carved out the painting’s figures with a utility knife. This approach allows her to paint very dark and precise backgrounds and let the gestural paint of the figures sing atop the aluminum. For some reason knowing how it’s done bothers me. What started as improvisational and free becomes manufactured.
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What Will You Give? - TWO STARS
Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek
Sidecar Gallery / April 27-June 22, 2024
This was my first time in Night Gallery’s new Sidecar space. Did they really need another building in the exact same place? Anyways, this show. Not much here. It feels like it belongs at Sow & Tailor, or in a show with Alfonso Gonzalez Jr. Lek clearly considers using glitter to be worth doing more than once. I’m not sure if it is. Richie’s Liquor has a beautiful moment in the bottom left. I mean these are technically skilled painters, and the colors are vibrant, and the subject matter compelling enough, I’m just feeling forced a bit. Like, I know it’s a “human condition” show, and I know I’m being offered hope amidst chaos, but it all feels sort of vainly romantic. And constructed. (This place needs air conditioning.)
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Chaos Spawn - THREE POINT FIVE STARS
Ian Miyamura
François Ghebaly / May 18-June 15, 2024
A painter’s hoe phase comes just before they settle into a style, or at least an approach. The hoe phase is more visible than ever these days, mainly because galleries trawl MFA programs, scooping up underdeveloped, yet technically overtrained artists who are hyperaware of market trends. It’s so common that galleries have a rote formula for defending it, reminiscent of crisis PR: (1) acknowledge the “disparate” work head on, (2) comment on the myth of the signature style, (3) loosely reference the trail of art history, and (4) frame the artist’s gesture as an educated and formal act of subversion. No matter the gallery’s tack and tenor, though, their frame is smokescreen-y. Artists weilding multiple styles in one show are hardly ever precise (see: Brendan Lynch’s recent show at Good Mother).
Miyamura’s Chaos Spawn is a rare exception. The show is lean, and it’s coherent in spite of itself. The Mondrain-like grid paintings are painfully unpleasant on first look. They’re bleakly colorful in a show otherwise filled with relatively greyscale paintings, and are blatantly and unapologetically De Stijl/Neoplastic to the point of frustration. With time though, as I filter through the rest of the work -- the photorealistic Warhammer models, the impressionistic seagulls, the warped graphic text -- I keep coming back to the grids. They start to function as a tone setter, or a deep breath, or a sort of calibration that remind me of those color correction cards used in photography. This is, of course, what neoplasticism is all about – order and restoring it – and it allows the show’s more figurative works to traverse formal ideas about structure and freedom without feeling disjointed. Just as a painter dips into color theory to chase a desired effect within a painting, Miyamura dips into art history to chase an effect around a painting and within an exhibit. Things are in balance.
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hold shimmer wind - ONE POINT FIVE STARS
Maia Ruth Lee
François Ghebaly / May 18-June 15, 2024
This is the type of work fading into the haze of the 2010s: biennialed out, socially and self-conscious, expertly banal. Lee’s video work telegraphs what’s being talked about in the exhibit, namely an exploration of belonging/unbelonging and a connection to land. Something like that. The video is the strongest (and smallest) part of the exhibit, and without it the show’s meaning falls away entirely. In a big way. The abstraction is empty and quick. Like if Heather Day were masquerading as a conceptual artist whose concept was “Heather Day + Netting Shadow.” Netting appears in the sculptures and installation, too – thematics! – and it appears... curiously... brand new? Like brand brand new. Like it was bought at the Home Depot yesterday, installed today, and cleaned an hour ago. For an exhibit so explicitly tied to memory, dissolution, migration, and dislocation, the artist’s material expression is offensive.
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Spring Group Exhibition 2024 - ZERO STARS
Jose Alvarez (D.O.P.A.), Lisa Anne Auerbach, Judie Bamber, Deborah Brown, FriendsWithYou, Karen Carson, Nancy Lorenz, Marilyn Minter, Anthony Sonnenberg, Betty Tompkins, T.J. Wilcox, Rob Wynne
Gavlak / March 20-?, 2024
“Spring Group Exhibition 2024”???
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It Girl. - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Emily Ferguson
Nicodim / June 1-July 13, 2024
This is a poorly titled body of work. There’s just too much ‘it girl’ right now, generally. It’s an overcoded term. It’s Dimes Square, Dasha, and post-ironically in favor of the feudal system. It’s cigarettes and retinol. Modeled once for Eckhaus? It girl. Autofiction poetry? It girl. Made your bed? It girl. ‘It girl’ is ‘queen’ for girls with Vince Gallo on their vision board. It’s a woman’s to a man’s edgelord, yet somehow more and less vapid. Everything in this show refers back to the “it girl” -- the exhibition text, the content of the paintings, the press -- so it’s not *just* a title, it’s the show. And, in spite of the artist’s conceit that she’s complicating the “it girl,” one gets the sense that she’s actually just positioning herself as one. (Hard not to think of the hot girl painter trope here.) No matter, the title makes us compare this body of work to other recent “it girl” adjacent shows, most memorable (and effectively critical) being Catherine Mulligan’s Bad Girls Club at Tara Downs last year. This, I think, is not a good thing. What It Girl. really explores is Ferguson herself, in a soft, fleeting wash. Some of the self-portraits are satisfying and curious, especially the one modelled off Vermeer’s Pearl Earring. Her Heaven Sent work expresses a distant joy, an examination of the crowd and her place within (or without) it. We want more. These works feel intensely personal in a way that the paintings of characters like Carrie Bradshaw do not. The connection, then, isn’t really there, so attempting to engage with pop culture here feels like a force. The title sets an expectation of criticality and attitude that the work does not, cannot, and need not live up to.
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Maenads - ONE STAR
Maureen St. Vincent
Nicodim / April 11-June 15, 2024
Studied kitsch is something I least admire. This is a half-step from that.
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Broken Arm - ONE STAR
Vanessa Beecroft
Wilding Cran / May 18-June 22, 2024
The gallery is too small for the work. Just trying to make some sales. Nothing new here anyway.
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June 10, 2024
Páthos - TWO STARS
Nicholas Campbell, Grant Falardeau, Haniko Zahra
Curated by Grant Edward Tyler
Temple Projects / June 7, 2024
Why is Falardeau making work that looks relic-like? The Cloisters is cool because the stuff is old, not because the stuff looks old. Recreating “ancient,” like using optical illusions, can be a good hook/gimmick, but it’s a hook that doesn’t catch if the work doesn’t extend. These feel like props. Maybe Falardeaus’ work interacts with Campbell’s paintings in a positive way because they are sort of up to the same thing. Neither enliven Zahra’s paintings, which are vivid, yet overcooked, and seem like they belong at Steve Turner. Also, please dial back the Plato / Greek / True and Perfect Beauty Exists thing.
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Gazette - TWO STARS
Daniel Taylor
Ehrlich Steinberg / June 8-July 20, 2024
The paintings are, like, three-dimensional. But why? There’d be a little more whimsy in them if they weren’t. As they are, they feel planned. And why the sculpture? And what does this all really have to do with media consumption? The work isn’t good or bad. It’s fine.
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Chorus - THREE POINT FIVE STARS OR EVEN FOUR STARS
Phil Davis
Fernberger Gallery / May 18-July 3, 2024
If there’s one issue I have with this show it’s that everyone’s dancing around the subject matter of the paintings. The exhibition text alludes to the fact that Davis works from pre-existing imagery; Davis does too in his pas d’espoir zine, available right beside the checklist at the front desk; the gallery attendant even brings it up when I’m there, unprompted. Yet no one actually talks about the subject matter, they just gesture vaguely toward it. So, what’s going on, then? There’s probably a fear that the work could be construed as mildly offensive, specifically the two paintings of white children dressed in Native American costumes. This would be a lazy read of the work, but it’s there, and I’ve heard it being made. It’s funny to think that there’s something risky about a rather drab oil painting show that trains a nostalgic, albeit flat lens toward the past. Though, of course, the artist does choose to paint these images – and insists upon their being sourced – and so I think it’s not an invalid question: why these ones? And, maybe, why now? Personally, I wish they’d left all the source imagery nonsense out of the show at all. It feels defensive; it doesn’t serve the work. The images have heat. On their own, these paintings are in tune. And, as a show, they’re in harmony. They’re quick and innocent and loose, framed gracefully. Unfinished properly. They are inaccessible in a way that makes them instant, living only on the canvas, only in the moment that you view them. Subject to change. Most of all, on their own, Davis’ paintings make us wonder about who he is, and where his memories come from. That’s rare today, and it’s a weapon, and he should be aware of that.
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Until Someone Finds You - ONE STAR
Marenne Welten
Harkawik / June 1-July 6, 2024
I wonder how long these took to dry. That’s mainly what I’m thinking about at this exhibit. Which is to say Welten’s style is in question always, and isn’t really in service of a more subliminal purpose. Unless that purpose is thinking about birthday cake, which is the other thing I thought about. I really do enjoy A Room With Two Views, though, but maybe that’s because it reminds me so much of Van Gogh’s Bedroom. Still, it meshes content with form – the overloaded impasto works dimensionally, and the dripping pastels and whites frame a nice moment of autumn tones on the couch.
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In the Beginning - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Matthew Tully Dugan
One Trick Pony / June 1-?, 2024
I don’t know how I feel about Dugan’s obsession with Kendall Jenner. Part of me feels like it’s a device to catch someone’s attention (maybe Jenner’s tbh), to make a sale, etc. It’s also a bit gimmicky: he becomes “the artist who does the Kendall Jenner stuff.” That said, there’s something about it that’s enticing, or at least endearing. I’m generally attracted to artists who give into the gimmick, who pluck at a string that only vibrates for them until eventually it vibrates for someone else. With In the Beginning, Dugan starts to get there. Perhaps more importantly, the show is not afraid. Dugan doesn’t shy away from centering the muse, and he’s not scared to span mediums and styles. He’s also not afraid to be sincere about it. That sincerity comes through especially strong in the small framed paintings, which feel stilted, yet lush like a Rousseau can sometimes be. Even so, the show’s anchor (the Kendall centerpiece), while confident, doesn’t work with the others and has far too much visual and psychic pull. The other works are imbued with a delicate sort of early modern mysticism, and an interest in the allure of imperfection brought about by the hand. The Kendall billboard is perfect and hand-less, and, as such, doesn’t really activate like the other accents of the show.
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Pantheon - TWO STARS
Henry Belden, Richard Bergh, Saoirse Bertram, Trace Black, Zoe Brezsny, Patricia Buckley, Amanda Drożdż, Jamie Fletcher, Ellon Gibbs, L l.8.l.8.l.8.l, Mario Miron, Bobby Morbed, Einar Nerman, D.F. Skelton, Valentina Vaccarella
Curated by Matthew Tully Dugan
One Trick Pony / June 1-?, 2024
A small group show in the back that lacks focus because there are so many objects. It seems like a combination of works that you’d see at No Gallery and Blade Study downtown, and maybe a few that hint at mysticism and ‘the ancient.’
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June 9, 2024
Perfect Angel Protection Force - THREE STARS
Lena Redford, Alana Cloud-Robinson, Meat Stevens, John Pelech, Siena Foster-Soltis, Kennedy Wright
5419 W. Adams Blvd / June 8, 2024
My first and (probably) last reading review, since the scene is sort of tryhard, but a friend brought me here so why not. It’s worth noting that everyone in this reading scene (as opposed to other, more frumpy/anti-racist book club/failed alt-comic reading scenes) is either (a) a hot girl (and I don’t mean hot girl in the physical sense, but in the sense that their affect is in some way modeled off the ion pack 2021) or (b) a non-hot guy (and here I do mean in the physical sense), who writes autofiction exclusively and explicitly about sex (that it doesn’t seem like they’ve had). Those are the categories. As for this specific show, Perfect Angel Protection Force, the best readings were exactly that: readings. Readings designed for the medium, read by readers who played with the form or at the very least inflected it. Best of the bunch was John Pelech who climaxed by singing a scathingly satirical, Zionist rendition of John Lennon’s Imagine. Lena Redford did well in her own way. There was also a girl who read in a handmade mask and seemed to parody the scene itself. Good. Toward the end there were a couple readers who simply read their writing with vocal fry. That was less interesting.
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June 7, 2024
Zanele Muholi - ONE STAR
Zanele Muholi
Southern Guild / May 18-August 31, 2024
I regret going in here. There’s a sort of signaling happening in this show – of empowerment, of activism, of agency, of mourning… something about pain and diasporic femininity (maybe?... likely something about gender, I couldn’t find the press release). The black and white tones, the spot lighting, and the larger-than-life chrome sculptures are all meant to be very dramatic and cathartic. That clear intentionality – with nothing around the corner, no surprises, no misdirection – gives it the opposite effect. The show feels contrived. Not to mention the irony of mounting a show about social justice in a real estate development that screams gentrification at Williamsburg 2014 levels. In trying to think of who might be into this kind of work, I could only come up with white women in their 60s who fantasize about what Edward Said calls ‘Orientalism.’ Muholi’s exhibit here overlaps with a survey of her work at the Tate Modern, which makes me suspicious both of the quality of work we’re getting (is this even the good stuff??), the timing, and the gallerist’s intent. What do we think of galleries that mount “socially important” shows only when the market is primed for them?
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David Zwirner: 30 Years - THREE STARS
Tomma Abts, Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Anni Albers, Josef Albers, Francis Alÿs, Mamma Andersson, Diane Arbus, Michael Armitage, Lucas Arruda, Ruth Asawa, Katherine Bernhardt, Huma Bhabha, Michaël Borremans, Joe Bradley, R. Crumb, Noah Davis, Raoul De Keyser, Roy DeCarava, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Stan Douglas, Marlene Dumas, Marcel Dzama, William Eggleston, Dan Flavin, Suzan Frecon, Isa Genzken, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Donald Judd, On Kawara, Toba Khedoori, Paul Klee, Barbara Kruger, Shio Kusaka, Yayoi Kusama, Sherrie Levine, Liu Ye, Nate Lowman, Kerry James Marshall, Gordon Matta-Clark, John McCracken, Emma McIntyre, Sarah Michelson, Joan Mitchell, Juan Muñoz, Oscar Murillo, Alice Neel, Chris Ofili, Palermo, Raymond Pettibon, Elizabeth Peyton, Sigmar Polke, Walter Price, Neo Rauch, Ad Reinhardt, Jason Rhoades, Gerhard Richter, Bridget Riley, Thomas Ruff, Robert Ryman, Fred Sandback, Raymond Saunders, Dana Schutz, Richard Serra, Steven Shearer, Josh Smith, Al Taylor, Diana Thater, Wolfgang Tillmans, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Luc Tuymans, Andra Ursuţa, Merrill Wagner, James Welling, Franz West, Doug Wheeler, Christopher Williams, Jordan Wolfson, Rose Wylie, Lisa Yuskavage, Portia Zvavahera
David Zwirner / May 23-August 3, 2024
For Christ. Terrifying. For those unaware, this is the real estate mogul David Zwirner’s new commercial development on Western. I wonder if, before the opening, Zwirner looked over his space and said Oppenheimer’s “I am become death” line. It’s a cavernous, cold, and labyrinth-like complex that feels like it was brought to you in part by Westfield Malls and Satan. The checklist was at least twenty pages long and maybe arranged by a third grader – adjacent rooms listed pages apart, floorplans oriented according to nothing in particular, staples piercing my fingers. The show itself, of course, is full of masterworks. It’s a showcase. Noah Davis, Robert Ryman, Joe Bradley, Elizabeth Peyton, Diana Thader, Jordan Wolfson, and Dana Schutz are all highlights among many other highlights. Jason Rhoades is getting more and more action recently, too. I can’t stand Isa Genzken’s Nefertiti works, but I can see why people enraptured by the Obama years would like them. Anyways, Here lies the LA art scene.
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‘Picnic at Hanging Rock’ Chapter I - ONE STAR
Maia Cruz Palileo, Nancy Evans, Rema Ghuloum, Roxanne Jackson, February James, Harminder Judge, Naomi Lisiki, Jess Palermo, Clare Woods
Sargent’s Daughters / June 1-July 20, 2024
Some good paintings by Maia Cruz Palileo, Jess Palermo, and Harminder Judge. It seems like we’re getting into summer group show nonsense territory, though: here we have a ceramic swan on a Valentine’s Day cake anchoring a show with abstract color field paintings, heavy impasto landscapes, and a massive February James painting that, in the right context, might prompt some sort of conversation about identity politics. This show is confused.
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Little Stars - TWO STARS
Loren Erdrich
SHRINE / June 1-July 13, 2024
I’ve seen Erdrich’s work on Instagram. For a lot of people, that’s where it lives. It is pretty much the same in person: there’s very little about this work that can’t be captured by a camera. The figures are overpowering and starting to look too Katherine Bradford-y. I’d rather Erdrich lean more into abstracting the subject, which she does very well in A Beckoning, a mustard-toned work that toys with colorfield but establishes enough structure and rhythm with spotty shards of bright turquoise that it stays somewhere satisfying. It’s an assertive painting. The others feel manufactured, and the artist leans too heavily on magenta.
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Wellspring - TWO STARS
Michael Angelo Bala, Tomasz Kowalski, Eric McHenry, Yan Xinyue
C L E A R I N G / May 11-June 15, 2024
As a show, there’s very little holding these works in conversation with each other. The press release argues that these artists all “codify space,” and, to be frank, I don’t know what that means. Context clues were not available in the exhibit. The Tomasz Kowalski paintings, especially leaves and siblings, were subtle and restrained and in fact expansive in their use of depth and shadow. So maybe this codifies space. Perhaps if Yan Xinyue’s colorful and (a bit too) allegorically inclined paintings were removed, the show would be a little more cohesive.
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June 5, 2024
SECONDARY: commencement – THREE STARS
Matthew Barney
Regen Projects / June 1-August 17, 2024
Maybe because he is so influential (and a man, and white, and inarguably pretentious), Barney isn’t mentioned as an influence very often. A lot of artists pretend not to like his work. Almost undeniably, though, artists straddling sculpture/installation/video/performance can’t really avoid his influence. It’s him if you like sharp things, and Mike Kelley if you don’t. Pipilotti Rist is in there somewhere. There are others, too, of course. Who cares. He may not have been the first, but he was ahead on transhumanism and he was ahead on mythos… two undercurrents that have run through every biennial in the last 5 years.
Anyway, this is a good exhibit with great sound design that seems to be entirely done by foley artists. As far as Barney’s work goes, his early stuff is best, so he’s working against that, competing with himself. There aren’t many surprises. Initially, the exhibit felt underwhelming because of the replicas. There is something a bit less about replicas, especially when they feel like props. Barney usually doesn’t veer into replicas, but he does here, specifically with the jumbotron (smaller; clearly not fit for a stadium) and eight-channel design (replicating the image). In my mind, monumental things ought to be loud and free and expansive -- Paul Pfeiffer’s The Saints comes to mind. SECONDARY felt contained and controlled and almost miniature. Telegraphed, even. Not loud enough. Not corporeal enough. Barney’s physical objects are usually warped or in some way removed from the ones in his corresponding videos, which activates them. Here, though, on the floor of the exhibit, is an exact replica of the Astroturf in the video. The biggest and most obvious aspect of the show -- the turf -- is a replica. And I know it’s a replica because Barney’s running the same exhibit in four separate galleries, all at once. Which means the exhibit is a replica, too. So Barney’s using his tendency against himself to underwhelm the audience -- we expect him to augment, and he instead replicates -- which is a sharp move considering the crux of the video lies in the media’s reproduction (replication) of Stingley’s hit -- in slow motion, on television, ad nauseum. Miniature. This is effective. So, I have very few gripes. Maybe that the paintings on aluminum feel a bit forced? As in, they’re made to be sold, and don’t cohere as well with the rest of the exhibit. Also, I feel like the Cremaster emblem is beginning to get a bit tired, even if it’s supposed to feel tired.
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Body of Work - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Marika Thunder
Reena Spaulings / May 10-June 22, 2024
There’s a discontinuity of style here that makes the paintings feel like they were done by multiple assistants trying to replicate each other, and coming up just short. In some paintings, like Canyons and Suzuki, there’s a sort of flatness and handedness that I like. I can almost track the work to see how they’ve been figured out; I can feel a discovery. Moments of color, in those ones, pop. Others, though, run smooth and look too essentialized (Frederick and Bernadette). Color in these feels incorporated, the focus is overworked, and I don’t like that. And then there are still others -- crystal clear closeups of exercise machines -- that don’t invite much curiosity at all, but they sort of ground the concept of the show. So I guess that left me confused. I don’t know Marika but maybe I would guess that she is just living life, and in flux, and that’s cool.
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Nectar - TWO POINT FIVE STARS
Jack O’Brien
Matthew Brown / May 17-June 22, 2024
Whatever a gallerist’s equivalent of conspicuous consumption is, the lamp installation here qualifies. I can imagine Matthew Brown using it as a lure for artists... “We get behind projects that other galleries won’t!”... But just because you can, doesn’t mean you should: the piece overpowers the show and doesn’t belong. The other works play with two trends -- trompe l’oeil and opacity -- in a way that feels refreshing, if still underdeveloped. They’re like those Seth Price paintings, but in reverse. Here everything really does exist – the polycarbonate film really is there, you really can touch the ribbon, there really is dimension to it all. And viewing is more physical because of it. The polycarbonate disorients, its ridges and crinkles refract and obscure. So, you move closer... And yet the work still disorients, albeit in a new way. Whereas more blatantly opaque works might draw the viewer close only to render things inaccessible (Hammons, yes, but also someone like Mimosa Echard), the works in Nectar draw us closer to start the search over again. This is nice, though I do get the feeling that there’s not much at stake.
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Mitty Mag - ONE POINT FIVE STARS
Andrew Kerr
Matthew Brown / May 17-June 22, 2024
A show that would make more sense in the Hudson Valley or Maine. It felt wrong to be able to see these paintings and Pink’s Hot Dogs (through the window, across the street) at the same time. I wasn’t taken elsewhere by the work, probably because I couldn’t stop staring at those god damn frames. Kerr works with fabricators in his home city of Glasgow to construct the frames that house his paintings. They often extend well beyond the bounds of the painted work, presumably to emphasize their presence. They’re also explicitly “part of the work,” but really they don’t feel like they’re part of the work, and that says to me that Kerr’s leaning on them for concept. This all ends up being rather distracting, but maybe necessary: I’m not sure the paintings would work without the frames, either.
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Hollywood Dream Bubble - ZERO POINT FIVE STARS
Adam Stamp, Aaron Curry, Adam Rabinowitz, Alfred Steiner, Allen Ruppersberg, Amir Zaki, Analia Saban, Bart Exposito, Benjamin Weissman, Bettina Hubby, Brice Bischoff, Carly Jean Andrews, Catherine Opie, Chaz Bojorquez, Chris Johanson, Dan Attoe, Dani Tull, Daniel Hawkins, Dave Muller, Deborah Kass, Dennis Hopper, Doug Crocco, Eddie Ruscha, Ellen Jong, Eric Yahnker, Frances Stark, Francesca Gabbiani, Friedrich Kunath, Gary Simmons, Greg Colson, Hamilton Press, Harland Miller, Jaime Muñoz, Jason Mason, Jason Rhoades, Jeffrey Vallance, Jennifer West, Jeremy Shockley, Jim Shaw, Kelly Wall, Kenny Scharf, Kim Gordon, Kristopher Raos, Lari Pittman, Lisa Anne Auerbach, Mark Hagen, Matt Murphy, Michael Bevilacqua, Michael Decker, Michael Ho, Michael Lombardo, Mike Kelley, Mitchell Syrop, Mungo Thomson, Nick Taggart, Nicolas Shake, Norm Laich, Pae White, Pentti Monkkonen, Pippa Garner, Raymond Pettibon, Renée Petropoulos, Ricci Albenda, Rives Granade, Rob Pruitt, Roni Horn, Ry Rocklen, Sam Durant, Senon Williams, Wallace Berman, Wendy White, and Zoe Crosher
Curated by Jessica Gallucci and Dani Tull
The Hole / April 27-June 15, 2024
In the exhibition text for Hollywood Dream Bubble, the curators acknowledge that the show is not a “tightly curated” one, and they are right about that. The show is packed with text-centered, pop-adjacent paintings, ostensibly positioning them somewhere in Ruscha’s lineage, though it’s never really clear where. Artist books – a foundation of Ruscha’s practice – are glaringly omitted. Another one of the artist’s foundations, the readymade, is so neglected that it makes the inclusion of Jason Rhoades’ Junk (Idol 36) (2005) – a sublime sculpture made from a hookah pipe, glass fruit, and other everyday objects – seem like an accident.
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Sturtevant - THREE STARS
Sturtevant
Matthew Marks Gallery / April 13-June 15, 2024
One issue with Sturtevant generally, and especially here, isn’t in concept or technique, but in affect. The viewer is so distant from the emotion of the initial idea, which Sturtevant has then “disrupted” through repetition (or copied, depending on who you believe), that the work starts to feel a bit cold. What is lost on the viewer is very likely the thing gained by Sturtevant for herself, which is the joy of the process of investigation and reinterpretation, rather than its product. That said, her reperformance of Paul McCarthy’s Painter is thrilling.
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June 3, 2024
Pluto - TWO STARS
Tallulah Dirnfeld, Federico Fellini, Luke Haeger, Jenny Holzer, John Kacere, Richard Kern, Yves Klein, Nicolette Mishkan, Andy Warhol, et al.
Curated by Grace McGrade and Luke Haeger
Kaspia / June 1-23, 2024
A group show at a caviar-themed restaurant on Melrose Place with works mainly behind or beneath glass. Much of the show seems to be from the owner’s personal collection – a Warhol edition, a Picasso print – though it does include work added by artists like Luke Haeger and Tallulah Dirnfeld. With the exception of Haeger’s work (which offers a playful, yet genuine reframing of Richard Prince’s New Portraits series), the show offers very little and feels more like it was put together to showcase the restaurant itself, which it probably was.
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