Dennis Maher at Black and White Gallery / Project Space

“In his first New York solo exhibition, Buffalo-based artist and architect Dennis Maher explores un-building and re-building as a transition; a movement from one position to another, a relationship.”

Based on that press release description, it shouldn’t be too big of a leap to see why I responded to Maher’s work on a thematic level. If only I could just flatten everything I own into patterns and re-arrange until beautiful! Sounds much better than shoving dressers and searching for a Phillips head screw driver only to lock myself out of my apartment for 5 hours on Saturday…but that’s another story.

More to the point, while locked out I had a chance to see some of the neighborhood galleries I missed the night before. Lucky me, because I came upon Dennis Maher’s work at Black and White Gallery /  Project Space. Inside the gallery is a room of large prints that seem more concerned with evocative pattern-making than than depiction. Composed of digital photographs of the contents of rooms re-arranged in square patterns, they felt like (an attractive) Frankenstein of a home.

This one above, not surprisingly, is titled Kitchen Floor, broom included.

All the prints interact nicely with the installation behind the gallery (pictured top). It shares the concern with textures and colors and relational positioning. The agglomeration of elements seems suited to the debris of the neighborhood’s streets as well as the work inside. Sometimes home does seem like a tenuous burden of re-shifting things that only gradually take on the full significance of “home.” Or at least that’s how I interpreted it.

Williamsburg 2nd Fridays Gallery Crawl

It’s not all crowded subway trains in my neighborhood

What do you know? I moved to Williamsburg just in time for the 2nd Fridays gallery crawl. It will be great to see a bit more of my new neighborhood, an a few galleries I like (Slate Gallery for example) are having events and some I’m not familiar with (Graphite with a new show by Tae Hwang) come recommended.

Full list of events and spaces if you are so inclined:

  • Tae Hwang In Between at Graphite
  • “Exploring 100 Years of Figurative Art: Part II ” Including the Realists” at Figureworks
  • Sarah H. Paulson Your point will change… at Alice Chilton Gallery
  • Chino Amobi Pregnancy Pact at Like The Spice
  • Artist Talk: Barbara Thomas The Floating Color Series at Slate Gallery

And then there’s also:

Gitana Rosa (Can’t forget the show name: Hung: Checking out the Contemporary Male)
19 Hope St. #7 (b/w Roebling and Havemeyer)


Black and White Gallery (less than a block from my new apartment)
483 Driggs Avenue (between N 10th and N 9th)

Hogar Collection (recommended to me)
362 Grand Street (the corner of Marcy Ave)

Pierogi ( <3 )
177 N. 9th St. Brooklyn

Right up my alley: Parisian flat containing €2.1 million painting lay untouched for 70 years

As my friend put it when he emailed me this article, this seems right up your alley. Dead on.

An apartment kept although never visited. An exquisite Boldini portrait and old Mickey Mouse toys found. All discovered after the owner’s death under a thick layer of dust. More from the Telegraph here.

The portrait discovered there has since been attributed to Giovanni Boldini and went for a nice 2.1M Euro at auction, spurred on by the discovery that the never-before seen piece had been painted of the artist’s muse, actress Marthe de Florian.  Boldoni (1842–931) was an Italian genre and portrait painter who was known as the “Master of Swish,” because of his flowing style of painting. He painted many high society people.

Portrait of the dandy Robert de Montesquiou

Traces of glamor come through even under dust an inch thick.

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