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Here's a list of shows to see further down the tracks, in NYC. Drawing is alive and well with Rackstraw Downes's exhibit at Betty Cunningham. Downes renders his austere forgotten landscapes with poise and grandeur. A.C.M.'s mixed media assemblages are wonders, and Rigo 23's ink drawings of predator drones, on recycled elephant dung (it's apparently available in Thailand), are a strong dose of reality at Andrew Edlin. Right next door at Lori Bookstein's almost new Chelsea space, whose shows have so far consistently wowed me, are Louise Kruger's not so folksy fabric wall hangings and carved wood figures.
Small, though rare at Jack Shainman, is good with Leslie Waynes's organically shaped sculptural paintings. It's a very unique process, with some very interesting results. Another interesting result with paint is at Lehman Maupin and Allison Schulnic's thickly impastoed painting Rug Girl. She's totally exposed and vulnerable, with a come-hither, confident beauty. Also in this show is a wonderful woven straw piece by Brazilian artist Maria Nepomuceno that seems to have sprouted from the gallery wall across the floor and may inhabit the whole space by August. Continuing with the exposed theme is Kelli Williams at Leo Koening: snakes and lace and flesh, oh my!
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And many prints -- it may be because of the economy, but they're still in the 20k range: Sikkema Jenkins has a new suite of aquatints by Kara Walker and Amy Cutler, Elizabeth Peyton, and Lisa Yuskavage at Senior Shopmaker. Looking forward to a Thomas Nozkowski works on paper show there in February. Lastly for this post, a monumental 60s Mark Di Suvero at Paula Cooper: gotta love big industrial. My postings are growing scarce with summer upon us, but there is much to see and I'll try my best to post, including advanced lobster research in Maine this week.
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