Picks (3/27-4/9)
Ofri Cnaani: A Tale of Ends continues at (Le) Poisson Rouge Art Gallery until April 13th. Cnaani uses ink and spray-paint on mylar to explore power relations and gender roles in her series Two Dimensional Days, which is accompanied by a video installation and a site-specific installation at the gallery’s entrance in this unique artist’s solo exhibition.

(Exhibition announcement for Ofri Cnaani - A Tale of Ends. Courtesy of Le Poisson Rouge.)
The artwork of video and performance artist Shana Moulton has been included as part of the inaugural exhibition of the Bluecoat’s new gallery spaces, 4 x 4. Four Galleries, Four Exhibitions, One Venue, in Liverpool. Moulton plays an anxious hypochondriac who seeks solace in new age remedies and shamanic rituals in her video series Whispering Pines, selections from which are featured in this exhibition.

(Shana Mouton, Film still from Whispering Pines, 2002-2007. Courtesy of the Bluecoat.)
Diaristic at times, Amy Wilson’s work uses personal elements to address broader issues of femininity and politics. In Amy Wilson: “There are always such beautiful things…”, now in its final days at the Hunterdon Art Museum in Clinton, New Jersey, Wilson combines paper cutouts and text in both two and three dimensional formats to get her point across. This show ends March 29th.

(Installation view of Amy Wilson: “There are always such beautiful things…” Courtesy of Hunterdon Art Museum.)
Longtime feminist and advocate of gay and lesbian rights, Louise Fishman currently has a solo exhibition up at Cheim and Read in Chelsea. The show, titled Louise Fishman, displays a selection of the artist’s recent, large scale works, and will be on view until May 2nd.

(Louise Fishman, Paragraphs of Wind, 2008. Oil on canvas, 32 x 30 inches, 81.3 x 76.2 centimeters. Courtesy of Cheim and Read.)
2007 MacArthur Fellow, Joan Snyder brings abstract expressionism, feminism, and surface additives such as herbs and straw to her paintings in a way that is uniquely her own. Her work is currently on view in Joan Snyder: Selected Paintings at the Carl Solway Gallery in Cincinnati. The show runs until April 18th, so if you are in the area be sure to stop on by!

(Joan Snyder, Motherlove, 1999; Oil, acrylic, papier-mâché and wooden dowels on canvas; 73.5 x 85.5 inches. Courtesy of Carl Solway Gallery.)
Drawings and Watercolors, a group exhibition closing April 4th at Senior and Shopmaker Gallery in Manhattan, includes the work of Polly Apfelbaum, Wangechi Mutu, and Elizabeth Murray among others. Apfelbaum and Murray are also included in Burning Down the House: Building a Feminist Art Collection, which is in its final weeks here at the museum.

(Polly Apfelbaum, Plus 2 Posies, 2007. Marker on synthetic silk velvet, 28 1/2 x 22 inches. Courtesy Senior and Shopmaker Gallery.)
The artwork of writer/feminist/painter Mira Schor is currently up at Momenta Art in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. In “Suddenly,” New Paintings by Mira Schor, the artist’s first solo-exhibition in New York in over a decade, Schor interprets language as image, representing a loss for words often created by personal and political happenings. This show will be up until April 20th.

(Mira Schor, From “Suddenly,” New Paintings by Mira Schor. Courtesy of Momenta Art.)
Carolee Schneemann: Painting, What it Became, curated by Maura Reilly, closes this Saturday, March 28th at P.P.O.W. Gallery in Chelsea. Be sure to make it over to see this insightful unification of Schneemann’s early, abstract paintings with her later, feminist artwork.

(Carolee Schneeman, War Mop , 1983, mixed media, Sculpture; 24 x 62 x 20 inches, TV: 12 x 18 x 10 inches. Courtesy of P.P.O.W. Gallery.)
Stephen Sollins: Letters Home also closes this Saturday at the Arthur Roger Gallery in New Orleans. Sollins combines found paper, envelopes, and embroidery to create quilt-like patterns in his work. Definitely worth a look if you happen to be in the area!

(Stephen Sollins, Jack’s House, 2008. Found printed paper and acetate from envelopes, 60 x 48 inches. Courtesy of Arthur Roger Gallery.)
This Friday is the last day to see Better Than Ever: Women Figurative Artists of the ‘70s SoHo Co-Ops at the Salena Gallery in Brooklyn. The exhibition’s next stop will be at the Dishman Art Museum in Beaumont, Texas, and then on to the Rowan University Art Gallery in the fall. Included in this group exhibition is Dotty Attie and Sylvia Sleigh, among others.
(Better Than Ever: Women Figurative Artists of the ‘70s SoHo Co-Ops announcement image. Courtesy of Salena Gallery.)
And if you haven’t already, don’t forget to check out Burning Down the House: Building a Feminist Art Collection before it closes April 5th!
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