Jonathan Goodman’s take on Alan’s kaleidoscopic views– abstractions of the natural world- in Field Viewings is worth a read. They’re small
#alanprazniak

Jonathan Goodman’s take on Alan’s kaleidoscopic views– abstractions of the natural world- in Field Viewings is worth a read. They’re small
#alanprazniak

is in the Whitney and MOMA’s collections and- like I. Rice– has work in Labyrinth of Forms.
#rosalindbengelsdorf

has new work up at Nicelle Beauchene Gallery.
More (interview in NYT when he was in the ’12 Whitney Biennial- looks like we share a view that only history is the filter of what is Art).
#andrewmasullo

Two Coats Gallery Guide is the best (except for the fact that I don’t actually live in NYC). Among many others they note Stephen’s newest at Alexandre.
#stephenwestfall

Pace is presenting Materialism: Past, Present, Future, a solo exhibition by DRIFT, featuring three new central works.
(More about DRIFT)
#DRIFT

Shows here in Raleigh with Charlotte Russell Contemporary. There are some really nice ink gestures in her IG feed (see below).
#maggieperrinkey

Tony is an artist living and working in New York, who has produced a large and significant body of abstract work based on principles of color usage, organization and randomness. His paintings tackle phenomenological questions that explore historical problems associated with representation, the visual, and ultimately visibility itself. He’s also in Point of Departure at the Sheldon Museum in Lincoln.
#tonybechara

Algernon (like Ellsworth) is a father of Afrofuturist art. Educated at the School of Visual Arts (1965-67) and The New School (1967-68) during America’s cultural revolution, Miller’s Downtown art world included happenings and Pop, Fluxus and Warhol films, the Beat poets and jazz. Uptown, he absorbed African drumming, African-American dance, and Afrocentric fashion.
#algernonmiller

Ellsworth (the subject of the recent show Ellsworth Ausby: Somewhere in Space,” paintings from the 1960s and 70s, at Eric Firestone Gallery) was a significant African American artist whose works were concerned with exploring the “infinite possibilities of two-dimensional space.” He experimented with supports and surfaces, creating multi-part shaped canvas constructions arranged directly on the wall. His work is connected to Afrofuturism and the music of visionary Sun Ra.
#ellsworthausby
