Attila Richard Lukacs

Vancouver Winsor Gallery Known for realist paintings of virile, eroticized figures during the ’80s and ’90s, Attila Richard Lukacs has since moved on to a psychological realm of submerged illusions and maze-like puzzles. Classical and mythological evocations are layered throughout his recent body of work: fountains, urns, and columns merge with impressions of the dead,

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Gerald Beaulieu

Oshawa, Ontario McLaughlin Gallery There is a god of maize in the British Museum, an artifact that represents an enduring Central American myth from the Popol Vuh in which corn becomes the main ingredient in the creation of the first people.

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“Civic Action”

Queens, New York Noguchi Museum and Socrates Sculpture Park Noguchi Museum and Socrates Sculpture Park “Civic Action,” though much smaller in scope, celebrated the same spirit of activism and social engagement on view at Documenta XIII in Kassel, Germany, and Manifesta 9 in Genk, Belgium, last summer.

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Wang Xieda

New York James Cohan Gallery Based on the title of Wang Xieda’s first New York solo show, one might expect a focus on figurative or narrative content. Describing a grammatical construction, “Subject Verb Object” seems to imply the depiction of subjects engaged in actions that further involve objects.

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Jim Osman

New York Lesley Heller Workspace In a very smart show, Jim Osman has taken the cast-offs of his earlier projects in wood and stacked them together to create frontally oriented, open sculptures. The seemingly offhand manner in which he fashions his square or rectangular constructions belies their sophistication.

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Roy Staab

Garrison, New York Garrison Institute Roy Staab’s recent large-scale, ephemeral sculpture Wheel of Time, created in May 2012, is made up of hundreds of drilled and pegged, intersecting bamboo poles harvested from the Garrison Institute’s 100-acre woodland.

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Murray Dewart

Boston Boston Sculptors Gallery In Guardian of the Vows, a small, serene bronze with an architectural presence, two tiny towers flank a patterned, rectilinear center. The tops of the towers screw on and off; you can put things in them, provided you roll them up, like your wedding vows, your will, or even a recipe,

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Ruth Laxson

Atlanta Museum of Contemporary Art Georgia An endless fascination with language defines Ruth Laxson’s work. She combines mathematical equations, musical annotation, graphic symbols, and text to create a unique syntax. “Hip Young Owl,” her recent retrospective, traced the evolution of this language through sculptures, paintings, etchings, prints, artist books, and mail art spanning more than

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