Month: March 2024

Solo Shows

Kosuke Kawahara: A heady stew of inspirations

Contributed by Michael Brennan / For a few years now I’ve been following Kosuke Kawahara’s art, which I’ve mostly seen in underground spaces such as Brian Leo Projects, Super Dutchess (now closed), and Culture Lab LIC. These presentations were uniformly fine and intriguing but also truncated and segmented, as was Kawahara’s previous on-line exhibition with RAINRAIN, which has now mounted “Exotic Star” – the artist’s and the gallery’s first true solo exhibition, and the gallery’s inaugural show at its new location on the edge of Chinatown. About a dozen paintings, works on paper, and small sculptures populate this rectangular space, occupying about a half-dozen distinctly crafted stations. It’s a revelation.

Out of Town Solo Shows

Nicole Wittenberg’s vacationland

Contributed by Katy Crowe / Upon entering Fernberger Gallery, a welcome transplant from New York, the faint smell of oil paint introduces Nicole Wittenberg’s “Jumpin’ at the Woodside,” the gallery’s inaugural show in Los Angeles. The title references a Count Basie composition, and the work does have the freewheeling feel of jazz. 

Studio Visit

Twofer: Patrick Neal and Zach Seeger

Contributed by Sharon Butler and Jonathan Stevenson / Last month we stopped by the LIC building where Patrick Neal and Zach Seeger, two formidable painters, have studios. Both write on occasion for Two Coats of Paint, and we hadn’t seen what they’d been up to since we saw their solo shows – Zach’s “Sports” at Gold Montclair and Patrick’s “Winter was Hard” at Platform Project Space in DUMBO.

Gallery shows

Hudson Valley (and vicinity) Selected Gallery Guide: March 2024

Contributed by Karlyn Benson / As warmer weather moves into the area many new exhibitions are opening. One of the highlights is a show of drawings and embroidered works by Allyson Mellberg Taylor and Jeremy Seth Taylor at LABspace in Hillsdale. There are three notable exhibitions opening at KinoSaito in Verplanck, including Kikuo Saito: Unraveling, Alina Tenser: Wrk Frm Hm, and Bel Falleiros: Navel-Knot // Root-Rise. On March 16 Elijah Wheat Showroom in Newburgh reopens for the 2024 season with Loves Cats, Hates Catastrophes, a solo show of paintings by Michael Hambouz, a Palestinian-American multi-disciplinary artist and musician. Art Omi in Ghent presents a solo exhibition of work by Olalekan Jeyifous, a Brooklyn-based artist whose work examines the relationships between architecture, community, and the environment. Finally, there is still time to visit the Wassaic Project to see their winter group exhibition I Should Have Been a Pair of Ragged Claws before it closes on March 16.