Jang Seungkeun “Flesh on canvas” @ Everyday Mooonday, Seoul
Jang Seungkeun’s paintings do not follow the familiar forms of objects. Instead, they capture fleeting impressions and sensations, unfolding them across the canvas. The shapes in his works gather and disperse, take form and then dissolve, softening the boundaries of the pictorial space. This process not only records traces of the artist’s gaze but also creates a dynamic, unfixed spatial experience.
Caroline Walker and “The Holiday Park”
GRIMM is pleased to announce The Holiday Park, a solo exhibition of new paintings and drawings by British artist Caroline Walker. The exhibition is on view at the New York gallery from March 28 to May 3, 2025.
Emily Pettigrew: Painting in the Catskills 2021 – 2025 @ Fenimore Art Museum, Cooperstown
A representational painter whose work is distinguished by sparseness, subtlety, and timelessness, Emily Pettigrew’s pictures emanate a quiet reverence for both history and nature. Pettigrew’s narrative paintings, which depict lone or small groups of figures, landscapes, and American architecture, had their inception in her formative years in Maine. Pettigrew explains: “My love for the starkness of the landscape of my childhood is reflected in a spartanism in my work. My foundational principle of painting is the removal of excess parts—a paring down to an image’s most beautiful elements.”
Danielle Orchard in Conversation with the Sculptures of Aristide Maillol
Lévy Gorvy Dayan is thrilled to announce an exhibition of new paintings by Danielle Orchard in conversation with sculptures by Aristide Maillol (1861–1944), on the Fifth Floor of 19 East 64th Street in New York. Staging a dialogue between painting and sculpture that is beyond time, the exhibition will represent visions of form, volume, and line explored through the female figure.
Katja Farin's “Tricksters”
Gaa is delighted to present Tricksters, a solo exhibition of new works by Katja Farin. Composed of a kaleidoscopic combination of new paintings and ceramic objects, Tricksters further communicates Farin’s reflection upon and theorization of humanity and human connection, centering cleverly layered narratives which exist somewhere between tangible and intangible realities. Tricksters marks Farin’s inaugural solo exhibition with Gaa.
In Sebas Velasco, The Morning Will Change Everything
Sebas Velasco’s paintings have an evocative power that’s akin to stumbling upon a hidden, nocturnal world—one that’s shadowed and raw, yet humming with a quiet vibrancy. There are the colors of the night and the echoes of youth culture, even in places that feel abandoned and empty. There is life here. There is movement and sound. Velasco has this way of capturing urban landscapes and portraits that almost breathe with life—there’s grit and romance, an authenticity that speaks to a world full of whispered stories and unspoken dreams.
Amanda Rodriguez: Free Transfer @ Entrance, NYC
For whom are the paintings of Amanda Rodriguez? A true story: In 2003, there was a bubble machine outside a coffee shop on Hennepin Avenue in Minneapolis. On one of the first fine days of spring after a typically brutal winter, a man in a gray business suit ripped down the sidewalk, head bowed into the wind. Encountering the cloud of iridescent soapy globes he startled, gnashed his teeth and mumbled, “GOD DAMN BUBBLES!”, swatting them away angrily with his arms.
The Garden is Open: Jocelyn Tsiah @ Hashimoto Contemporary, NYC
Hashimoto Contemporary is pleased to present The Garden is Open, a solo exhibition by Brooklyn-based artist Jocelyn Tsaih. The show will be Tsaih’s inaugural solo exhibition at Hashimoto Contemporary, in which she considers the idea of sanctuary and refuge. Largely inspired by community gardens, parks and botanical gardens found in New York City and the Bay Area, The Garden is Open reflects on Tsaih’s sense of comfort when surrounded by plant-life and color, as well as their direct impact on her personal state of being.
James Ulmer is in some “Situations” in Copenhagen
Over in Copenhagen this weekend, James Ulmer is opening a new solo show, Situations, with the good people of V1 Gallery in their V1 Salon.
Angela Fang Zirbes' “House & Ghosts”
Hashimoto Contemporary is pleased to present House & Ghosts, the debut solo exhibition of Angela Fang Zirbes. Set within the backdrop of an old rural house, ghosts and their haunted objects appear within carefully decorated striped and wood paneled interiors. Executed in a monochromatic palette, the paintings are reminiscent of an old aging photograph, like calling upon a long forgotten memory. Inspired by common decor typically found within old country homes, faux wooden frames encase relics and imagined memories of a life once lived, serving as memories of the ghosts past ‘in life’. These domestic depictions illustrate the restrictions of life through the use of traditional compositions, smaller scale imagery,…