NEW YORK The LAB Gallery Anne Ferrer’s Billowing Beauty (2011) first appeared in May at The LAB Gallery in Midtown Manhattan; in October, it filled the front window of Rupert Ravens Contemporary in Newark.
Michelle Lopez
NEW YORK Simon Preston Michelle Lopez’s recent show, which featured works exploring the history of contemporary American sculpture, was clearly influenced by the late John McCracken and John Chamberlain. Educated in literature and art history at Barnard College in New York, Lopez is perhaps unusual in her sensitivity to this narrative.
Clement Meadmore
NEW YORK Marlborough Chelsea Clement Meadmore, an Australian-born sculptor who moved to New York in 1963, is the kind of artist we don’t see much of anymore: a formalist who eschewed the myths of culture in favor of a purely objective art.
Anna von Gwinner
CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINE Projective Eye Gallery, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Berlin-based artist and architect Anna von Gwinner is probably best known for street-level video installations that entice passersby with hints of activity in inaccessible spaces. Among her recent projects are a Winnipeg building that appeared to be filling with water and bunnies doing what they do in the back of a Berlin van.
Martin Calcagno
BUENOS AIRES Elsi del Rio Contemporary Art The Argentine artist Martin Calcagno created his own cardboard and wooden toys when he was a kid. At the age of seven, while visiting an exhibition of Japanese art, he discovered that he was meant to be an artist.
Jean Dubuffet
BRUSSELS Musee d’Ixelles “Dubuffet Architecte,” a survey of Jean Dubuffet’s public artworks, displayed the evolution of his monumental sculptures (some realized, some not) through large-scale models, exploring space and dimensionality with a signature humanist flair.
Carsten Höller
NEW YORK New Museum Nauseous and uncomfortable, with pumping adrenalin, racing heartbeat, and itching skin—that describes how I felt leaving “Experience,” Carsten Höller’s first New York survey.
“E8: Sculpture”
WASHINGTON, DC Transformer In 2004, Transformer launched its “Exercise” program—a peer critique and mentorship program culminating in short exhibitions for participating artists. As last year’s roster attested, the program continues to thrive as a dynamic incubator.
Ellsworth Kelly
BOSTON Museum of Fine Arts Boston Unlike most Ellsworth Kelly shows, “Ellsworth Kelly: Wood Sculpture” was all brown. This first exhibition devoted exclusively to the artist’s works in wood bypassed the early painted pieces to focus on sculptures that celebrate the color, texture, and grain of the unadorned material.
Song Dong and Yin Xiuzhen
NEW YORK Chambers Fine Art For more than 10 years, the eminent Chinese artists Song Dong and Yin Xiuzhen (who had achieved individual acclaim before they started to collaborate) have been constructing an enduring project based on the chopstick. Their first “Chopstick” exhibition in 2002, which celebrated their 10-year anniversary as a married couple, engaged the eating implement as a metaphor for the personal bonds that connect them.