July/August 2015

Ariel Schlesinger and Wilfredo Prieto

Tel Aviv Center for Contemporary Art “Hiding Wood in Trees” was developed collaboratively by Ariel Schlesinger and Wilfredo Prieto, though most of the works were authored individually. The whimsical title calls attention to a quality shared by their post-Minimalist approach—a belief that art is all around us, and inspiration, or sources of humor, can be

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Juan Batalla

Buenos Aires Centro Cultural San Martin Since 2001, Juan Batalla has been involved in the Argentine art scene as an artist and curator. Always concerned with the interdisciplinary, his work navigates religion, contemporary art, and the humanities, with a special interest in African artistic expressions.

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Fran Bull

Rutland, Vermont Chaffee Downtown and Castleton Downtown Gallery “STATIONS,” Fran Bull’s recent, dual venue exhibition, featured gigantic, wall-hung tableaux of figures rendered in high relief, along with one floor piece. Her dreamers, wrapped in white Venetian plaster bedclothes, represent iconic expositions of ourselves, draped in mystery, with as much hidden as revealed.

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Sui Jianguo

New York Doris C. Freedman Plaza, Central Park Sui Jianguo, who is best known for his “Mao Jacket” and “Dinosaur” series, which figuratively and symbolically comment on China’s Cultural Revolution, ventured into new territory with Blind Portraits.

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Carol Ross

New York Rooster Gallery Carol Ross’s small but strong show featured a series of abstract paintings and three large relief sculptures, the latter acting, in some ways, as the center of the exhibition. Made of light- and dark-colored veneers, the organic quality of these works—evident in their general outlines and in the interlocking shapes of

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“Artists in Residence,”

Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Biennial 2014 Mattress Factory The Pittsburgh Biennial was inaugurated in 1994, when Murray Horne, curator of the Pittsburgh Center for the Arts, aspired to showcase diverse local and regional talent. The 2014 Biennial was the ninth and largest iteration to date, with eight organizations participating, including the Carnegie Museum of Art, the Andy

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“Art in Nature”

Short Hills, New Jersey Greenwood Gardens Art and nature coexist very well amid the sumptuous scenery of Green­wood Gardens. Once under private ownership, Greenwood has been made available as a public site since 2003. Originally home to two wealthy families, the grounds of the house were decorated first with lush annuals and perennials, later with

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2014 Sculpture Symposium

Lincoln, Montana Blackfoot Pathways: Sculpture in the Wild International Sculpture Park For its inaugural symposium, Black­foot Pathways: Sculpture in the Wild International Sculpture Park brought an impressive roster of sculptors from Ireland, Denmark, Finland, and the U.S.

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Alma Allen

Los Angeles Blum & Poe Alma Allen’s sculptures are handsome, poetic, and uncomplicated. A tribute to the aesthetics of 20th-century abstraction, they hew closely to its classic values, as represented by several generations of artists, including Moore, Hepworth, Noguchi, and Bourgeois.

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Ben Jackel

Los Angeles L.A. Louver Gallery Ben Jackel’s works are splinters off the American culture of violence—hyper-real portraits of instruments of power and aggression. Although the objects originate in a concrete world of specific function, they are re-envisioned as luxury objects borrowed from their industrial and martial origins, and repurposed and valorized as sculpture.

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