Jedediah Caesar

New York D’Amelio Terras Los Angeles-based Jedediah Caesar, in his second solo show at D’Amelio Terras, has taken a step away from projects that overtly demonstrate their “process-oriented” approach, moving simultaneously toward and away from the intellectual precision of Minimalism and the masculine romanticizations of Land Art.

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Rashid Johnson

New York Salon 94 Rashid Johnson’s “Our Kind of People” presented two facing installations — Sweet Sweet Runner and Watch Out—and two competing narratives, The first story, in the Afrocentric Sweet Sweet Runner, suggested achievement, domestic order, and upward mobility.

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Jay Kelly

New York Jim Kempner Fine Art Anyone familiar with Jay Kelly’s photorealist paintings of rusting cars and trucks, used tires, and industrial waste sites will be startled by the transformation in his recent sculptures and drawings.

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Willard Tucker

Cleveland The Sculpture Center A tangle of camera tripods, copper rods, and jerry-rigged, crackling electrical connections presides over one side of a windowless gallery, like a lightning-blasted tree. This strange hybrid stands sentry amid rows of cotton bolls, picked at historic plantations in Tennessee and now sprouting from the ends of rusty welded steel stalks.

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Catherine Grisez

Seattle Traver Gallery “Lick,” a term normally reserved for gustatory treats like ice cream cones, was appropriated by North- west artist Catherine Grisez as the title of her recent exhibition, where it was used to suggest wounds, orrather, the healing thereof.

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Maria Nepomuceno

London Victoria Miro Gallery Climbing the stairs into Maria Nepomuceno’s recent exhibition was like entering a lush clearing in the Amazon rainforest of her native Brazil, complete with a carnival of bright, vibrant colors; sensuous, slightly sinister shapes resembling fleshy, carnivorous plants; a hammock, perhaps made from jungle creepers by a passing Indian hunter-gatherer; and

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Jen Pepper

Syracuse, New York Everson Museum of Art There is a moment at the top of a leap when we are neither ascending nor descending. It’s a weightless moment full of coiled kinetic energy when something is about to happen—something either momentous or inconsequential (supposing that energy has no consequence).

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Herb Rosenberg

Akron, Ohio Emily Davis Gallery, University of Akron Herb Rosenberg’s interactive installation Dialogue with an Ancient Forest, which was selected as the first solo exhibition at New Jersey’s new Perth Amboy Gallery Center for the Arts (PAGCA), recently appeared at the University of Akron’s Emily Davis Gallery; additional venues are scheduled for 2011.

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Christian Boltanski

Paris and Val-de-Marne Grand Palais and Musée d’Art Contemporain du Val-de-Marne Christian Boltanski, one of France’s most significant contemporary artists, will represent his country in the 2011 Venice Biennale. Born during World War II, Boltanski has spent his career exploring the horrors, consequences, and mixed legacies of that time, particularly the Nazi occupation of France.

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