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Abdolreza Aminlari and Drew Shiflett at Storefront Bushwick

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Abdolreza Aminlari, Untitled (gold thread on paper, 11" X 8.5,"  2011) 

James writes:

Storefront gallery, now called Storefront Bushwick, has been at the center of Bushwick’s burgeoning arts scene since opening 2½ years ago. Now under the sole directorship of the painter Deborah Brown, the gallery has a knack for exhibiting the neighborhood’s best young talent alongside midcareer artists who largely came of age in Williamsburg.

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Drew Shiflett, Easel Sculpture #2 (paper, fabric, glue, cardboard, wood, polyester stuffing, styrofoam, wire, 54" x 43" x 24", 2000)

The gallery’s program shows the continuity of what is sometimes called DIY (for Do It Yourself) art—work that is unslick, irony-free and made by living, breathing artists rather than studio assistants. The latest exhibition of art by Abdolreza Aminlari (b. 1979) and Drew Shiflett (b. 1951) demonstrates how impeccable the gallery’s cross-generational pairings can be. Mr. Aminlari “draws” abstractions with string stitched through paper. Ms. Shiflett creates abstract sculptures of paper, fabric, cardboard and other materials. Both artists match the ideal and the homespun, the ethereal and the craft-based in ways that seem indicative of an outer-borough aesthetic.

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 Abdolreza Aminlari, Composition 5 (black thread on paper, 22" x 30", 2011) 

It’s hard not to see golden carpets flying through the intricate work of the Iranian-born Mr. Aminlari—and, in Ms. Shiflett’s sculpture, the magical loom that created them. With an intense pencil-drawing by Lauren Seiden (b. 1981) peeking out from the gallery’s project space, this delicate show lifted me up and had me floating down Flushing Avenue.

Details:

Abdolreza Aminlari and Drew Shiflett
Storefront Bushwick
16 Wilson Ave., Brooklyn
(917) 714-3813
Through July 1

--adapted from An Improv of Color And Threads of HopeThe Wall Street Journal, June 23, 2012

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Julie Torres at Taller Boricua

Two 12 Hours with Austins

Julie Torres, My 12 Hours With Austin Thomas (Acrylic on 55 Sheets of 9 x 12 Inch Paper, 2011) & Another 12 Hours With Austin (Acrylic on 3 sheets of 38 x 48 Inch Paper, 2011)

James writes:

Every schoolkid knows that painting can be fun. Julie Torres (b. 1971) does not let us forget it. This Brooklyn-based artist is an evangelist for the radiant line and the colorful schmear. Much of her work is the result of marathon studio sessions that are part performance and part product. By painting a wall of works in a single day, often in the company of other artists, she tweaks what an abstract artist is supposed to be. Rather than labored, secretive and solitary, her work is ad hoc, transparent and communal.

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Julie Torres, Assorted Paintings and Drawings. Gouache, Acrylic, Watercolor on Paper and Sketchbooks, 2011- 2012. courtesy Paul Behnke/Structure and Imagery

Taller Boricua, a nonprofit gallery in the Julia de Burgos Latino Cultural Center in Spanish Harlem, captures this exuberance. The show also demonstrates how New York’s alternative arts scene now includes Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx and northern Manhattan. Here, Ms. Torres carries her improvisational style to the carefree placement of work. Paintings of bright shapes and bold colors bend around corners, appear at ceiling height and floor level, and on two doors hidden in the gallery. Mounted with pushpins, these works on paper in acrylic, gouache and watercolor are all left unframed.

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Julie Torres, Assorted Paintings and Drawings, Acrylic on Paper, 2011 - 2012. courtesy Paul Behnke/Structure and Imagery

Not everything performs at grade level. A few too many rainbows are scattered about. But underlying the apparent simplicity is smart paint handling. Ms. Torres’s most resonant work is “My 12 Hours With Austin Thomas” (2011). More than 8 feet tall, composed of 55 individual paper sheets, this is abstract art in mural form. The painting has a message, and the message is to paint.

My 15 Hours with Geddes Levenson- Taller

Julie Torres, My 15 Hours With Geddes Levenson, Acrylic on 42 Sheets of 9 x 12 Paper, 2011

Details:

Julie Torres: Bold As Love
Taller Boricua
1680 Lexington Ave.
(212) 831-4333
Through July 14

Julie Torres will next show at Storefront Bushwick, opening July 6

--adapted from An Improv of Color And Threads of HopeThe Wall Street Journal, June 23, 2012

Paintings and Drawings 1- Taller

Julie Torres, Assorted Paintings and Drawings. Gouache, Acrylic, Watercolor on Paper and Sketchbooks, 2011- 2012

Sketchbook- Taller

Julie Torres, Assorted Paintings and Drawings. Gouache, Acrylic, Watercolor on Paper, Sketchbooks and Playing Cards, 2011- 2012

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Giuseppe Penone at Marian Goodman

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Giuseppe Penone, Nel lengo (2008)

James writes:

Arte Povera was a reaction to the Italian economic miracle that followed World War II. Countering the industrialization of the 1950s and early '60s, Italian artists turned to "poor" materials and craft. The results took many forms, not all of them lasting, but Giuseppe Penone (b. 1947) has endured for his unique take on nature.

Raised on a family farm outside Turin, the home of both Fiat and Slow Food, Mr. Penone connects fingerprints, tree rings and marble veins in a sculptural riff on the parlor game "Animal, Vegetable, Mineral." At Goodman are works from 1968 to the present: photographs; radiographs; vegetal pigment on canvas; grass juice on paper; acacia thorns on silk; and sculptures in wood, bronze and—whew!—white Carrara marble.

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Giuseppe Penone, Propagazione (2011)

Mr. Penone starts with diverse materials and draws out their intrinsic similarities. In the spare "Propagazione" (2011), a fingerprint's swirls are extended by concentric ink lines to form a drawing, 13 feet across, that resembles the rings of a giant tree. The stagy "Tra…" (2008) is a bronze sculpture made to look like the broken halves of a tree trunk. The trunk splits at eye level, allowing just enough space to walk through. It's a long setup for a so-so punch line.

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At left: Giuseppe Penone, Tra... (2008)

Far better is "Nel legno" (2008), where Mr. Penone carves around the growth rings of a milled block to reveal the remnants of the younger tree within—the process uncovering the true nature of the product.

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Detail view: Giuseppe Penone, Nel lengo (2008)

Details:

Giuseppe Penone

Marian Goodman Gallery
24 W. 57th St., (212) 977-7160 Through June 16

--adapted from "Course of Nature and Faust," The Wall Street Journal, June 8, 2012

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