Chad Robertson at Sixspace (Pulse)

UPDATE: a description of the painting’s material specifics, furnished by the gallery, has now been added below the image and the comment from Caryn Coleman includes a general description of Robertson’s works in series

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Chad Robertson Mash Up 3 2007 oil on paper 21″ x 30″ (25″ x 33″ framed)

Several entries back I wrote about Heather Cantrell’s work in the L.A. gallery Sixspace‘s booth at Pulse and referred in passing to the work of Chad Robertson. This will probably be my last post on the February New York art fairs, but I really thought I should upload this image before wrapping things up, since I don’t see it anywhere else, even on the gallery’s own site. I’m assuming it’s a very recent painting, but because at the time I was so distracted talking to artists, gallerists and friends (with some overlapping there) and, yes, with scanning a certain amount of art as well, I didn’t manage to get the specifics on this medium-sized, somewhat apocalyptic-looking canvas.

Shaun O’Dell at Inman (Pulse)

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Shaun O’Dell Song of 60 Million Buffalo Ghosts 2006 gouache on paper 29″ x 69″ [installation view]
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[detail]

Houston’s Inman Gallery showed this awesome large drawing by San Francisco-based artist Shaun O’Dell in their booth at Pulse. For a number of reasons, a few I suppose not directly related to the art itself, I found it very difficult to walk away.

Chris Duncan at Jeff Bailey (Pulse)

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Chris Duncan Seriously, It’s Dark Out 2006 India ink, latex paint, gouache, wood putty, marker, graphite, colored pencil on panel 71.75″ x 96″ [installation view]

First, I have to apologize for the highlights at the top of this image, but when you’re perched inside an historic armory dedicated to a noble citizen militia neither a gallery nor a photographer can entirely control of the ambient lighting. Fortunately the beauty of this large painting by Chris Duncan is evident even with lighting that is less than ideal.
Jeff Bailey showed this grand painting at Pulse. There are a many more images of the artist’s work on the gallery’s site.

Heather Cantrell at Sixspace (Pulse)

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Heather Cantrell A Valentine 2006 ink-jet print on silver rag paper 18″ x 24″
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Heather Cantrell Circus Family 2006 ink-jet print on silver rag paper 24 x 30″

L.A.’s Sixspace had another great booth at Pulse New York this year, including new work by Chad Robertson, gouaches by Kozyndan and some drawings by Wendy Heldmann, but I thought these photographs by Heather Cantrell were especially remarkable, even before I learned anything about the artist or the work.
I enjoyed relying on my own imagination and associations, but the gallery supplies some context with this excerpt from a press release which introduced the artist’s solo show last fall:

Heather Cantrell has continuously explored issues of family, tribes, cults, subcultures, and the historical (both worldly and personal) as a way to parallel metaphors with states of realism and folklore. Influenced by the portraits, photography, and painting at the end of the 19th century, she continues her exploration in Century’s End by utilizing staged scenes of her “community” (mainly artist friends, mentors, and musicians) to create a body of work that deals with the polarities of fact and fable.

[images from Sixspace]

Paul Pagk at Moti Hasson (Scope)

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Paul Pagk Lexicon Series #60 2006 oil tempera on linen 26″ x 25″ [installation view]

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Paul Pagk Lexicon Series #16 2004-05 oil tempera on linen 24″ x 25″ [installation view]

Moti Hasson was showing a number of gallery artists in their booth at the Scope fair, but as Paul Pagk hasn’t yet shown up on these pages and I haven’t yet seen his current solo show in the gallery, I was anxious to show these two paintings now.
I have however seen enough of his work elsewhere to confirm that they are always even more beautiful than these images suggest.

Satoshi Ohno at Tomio Koyama (Armory)

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As I’m admiring these Satoshi Ohno images (from the artist’s “acid garden” and “prism” series), and several other pictures of his work which I am not uploading here, I’m reminded of the hazards, at least for the visitor, of a crowded art fair booth, and especially a busy one. Tokyo’s Tomio Koyama Gallery had a large number of pieces by Ohno at the Armory last month, and while the installation succeeded in attracting a lot of attention in the midst of the serious competition arrayed over these several acres of concrete, sometimes a good drawing or painting just needs to be left [more] alone*.
I apologize for the lack of documentation on the drawings. The fault is at least partly my distraction and my haste.
If the installation of which they were a small part was a little overwhelming, I have to admit these two images aren’t really going to be enough to represent a good artist, even in their poor capacity as reproductions of three good drawings. So maybe we should think of each of these shows as essentially just another market fair in an important market town. Certainly one totally appropriate approach would then be for those who rent the stalls to show us everything they’ve got; we can sort out the fresh produce for ourselves, until we drop from fatigue.

*
don’t ask me why this doesn’t apply to the salon-hung, and definitely-not-for-profit walls of our apartment, but my answer would probably be not much different from that which a for-profit gallery might advance: leaving more luxurious areas of white space would mean having to hide that much other good talent under a bushel basket

Eliezer Sonnenschein at Sommer (Armory)

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Eliezer Sonnenschein By the Book 2007 oil on wood 31.5″ x 47.25″ [installation view]

A number of exciting artists, including Israelis whose work isn’t seen nearly enough on this side of the Atlantic, could be found at the Armory once again this year in the booth of Sommer Contemporary. Among the pieces shown by the Tel Aviv gallery’s director, Irit Mayer-Sommer, was this beautiful painting by Eliezer Sonnenschein, whose work had first excited me in 2004, when it was part of Sommer’s invitational at Lehman Maupin, and who I remember as someone whose output is not easily compartmentalized.