To use the parlance of Herman’s Hermits, there was a kind of a hush that pervaded Ridley Howard’s exhibition, aptly titled “Slows.” The work resonates with a palpable silence that’s hard to pinpoint…
In Iranian artist Ali Banisadr's show of explosive, exuberant canvases it's hard to pinpoint the exact nature of the action, but there's a lot of it, and it's compellingly allusive. The exhibition's t…
The paintings in William Villalongo's exhibition, understatedly titled "Bathing Nymph," depict quasi-naturalistic playgrounds of decadence and depravity, combining so many references and symbols fro…
The works in "Blind enough to see," Puerto Rican-born Ivelisse Jimenez's solo debut at Diana Lowenstein, explore the notion of empty space and our ideas of how this space might be filled, both psych…
In pared-down paintings that intersperse nature imagery with urban scenes, 43-year-old, Brooklyn-based artist Frank Webster purveys an ethos of isolation. High-rise buildings and patterns formed by…
A complex hybrid of video and live broadcast coupled with sculpture and painting, JJ Peet’s first New York solo exhibition, “The TV Show,” was an unsettling mix of rough-hewn underground activism and…
Spanish artist Santiago Sierra has a long history of creating controversial works that explore issues of capitalism and exploitation in various historical and social contexts. His art often combines i…