This week in Newly Reviewed, Martha Schwendener covers Dennis Kardon’s wonderfully strange paintings, Klara Liden’s green vistas and Sheryl Sutton’s mesmerizing movements.
Two Bridges
Dennis Kardon
Through Oct. 26. Lubov, 5 East Broadway, Manhattan; 347-496-5833, lubov.nyc.
Dennis Kardon has been painting bodies for more than 30 years, but his approach has changed significantly over that time, as you can see in “Transgressions,” a compact survey at Lubov. Some of the earliest canvases, made in 1990, capture fragments of models Kardon hired from advertisements in downtown newspapers.
There is also a wonderfully strange “Slashed Venus/Healed Venus” (1989/2024), painted after a photograph of Diego Velázquez’s “Rokeby Venus” (1647) that shows Velázquez’s painting after it was slashed with a meat cleaver by the suffragist Mary Richardson in 1914. (Interestingly, the same painting was targeted by climate-change protesters last year.) Kardon slashed his canvas, too, but “healed” it with thread, and made a few recent adjustments.
Other works similarly question the boundaries between bodies and paintings. “Seeing Through Paint” (2010) is an eerie depiction of a mannequin holding a kaleidoscopic orb. There are also paintings that recall the curious compositions of Paula Rego, with human and animal figures crammed into the rectilinear spaces of a canvas.
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Source: Elections - nytimes.com