Join us Dec 19 for the Art Spiel 2025 Brooklyn fundraiser featuring 200+ artists’ works RSVP here

New Home

  • Frances Smokowski at Cavin-Morris Gallery

    Frances Smokowski at Cavin-Morris Gallery

    In Dialogue In 2017, during post-concussion recovery and before considering any public audience, Frances Smokowski began drawing as part of her wellness routines. She knew even then that the work could one day be useful and inspiring to others, and she never felt it existed only for her. Pandemic-era synchronicities later led to gallery representation, confirming that this is the moment for her bio-glyphics and energy-scapes to come forward.

    Continue reading

    ,
  • Reinventing the Grid: A Conversation with James Gold

    Reinventing the Grid: A Conversation with James Gold

    The paintings in James Gold’s solo show, Infinite Scroll, act as intermediaries between past, present and future. These glimmering grids at Morgan Lehman gallery toggle between his deep reverence for history and his active aesthetic imagination. Talking with the painter about his wider practices in collaged artist books and archeological renderings revealed new means of perception and applications of art-making.

    Continue reading

    ,
  • Aleksandra Scepanovic: Site Seen

    Aleksandra Scepanovic: Site Seen

    In Dialogue Aleksandra Scepanovic’s story begins in then-Yugoslavia, where the stark presence of brutalist architecture shaped her early sense of form and space. As a journalist during the 1990s she reported on the Balkan conflicts, bearing witness to the fractured landscapes of cities such as Sarajevo.

    Continue reading

    ,
  • Ashley Garrett: Psyche at September

    Ashley Garrett: Psyche at September

    Psyche, Ashley Garrett’s exhibition of paintings at September Gallery in Kinderhook, has a mix of large and small oil paintings, and pastels. The small works have a restless energy emphasized by Garrett’s staccato mark-making. The large canvases give Garrett’s brush plenty of room to deliver longer, more fluid gestures. This freedom allows her paint strokes to slide over and under each other in a flow that can give her compositions a quiet intensity, like tall grass seething in a high wind. Garrett has lightened up her palette to include more pinks and a range of whites and pale grays.

    Continue reading

    ,
  • Double Vision: One Artist, Two Solo Shows, Double the Stripes

    Double Vision: One Artist, Two Solo Shows, Double the Stripes

    In early September, painter Deborah Zlotsky pulled off what few artists even attempt: two solo shows opening at once, on opposite sides of Manhattan. The Light Gets In filled McKenzie Fine Art on the Lower East Side, while Genealogies took over Kathryn Markel Fine Arts in Chelsea. A double dip in one city, on one calendar page. It might sound like a scheduling accident, yet standing in front of her candy-striped canvases, the simultaneity feels deliberate. Zlotsky thrives on overlap: order brushing against disorder, geometry trembling at its edges, patterns that carry memory while stumbling into the present.

    Continue reading

    ,