The New York Observer
  • Betabeat
  • Politicker
  • GalleristNY
  • Commercial
  • VSL
  • PolitickerNJ
  • Observer
  • Betabeat
  • Politicker
  • GalleristNY
  • Scene

Gallerist NY

  • Happenings: This Week in New York
Follow @Gallerist_NY

9 Things to Do in New York’s Art World Before May 6

LAST
/
NEXT
By Rozalia Jovanovic, Andrew Russeth and Dan Duray 4/30/12 10:50am

Morning Links: Terry Richardson Shoots Marquees Edition

  • WEDNESDAY | Opening: Dana Schutz, "Piano in the Rain," at Petzel
    Start The Slideshow

    Frieze Week has arrived. The New York debut of the British fair runs on Randall’s Island May 4–7, opening to VIPs on May 3. But there is plenty more on offer over the next few days: satellite fairs like NADA and Pulse, sure, but also museum openings all across town, from the Studio Museum in Harlem to the Museum of Modern Art to the New Museum. Galleries are lining up new shows too. Yes, there are auctions, too. We’ll be reporting throughout the week—please check with us as you brave the coming days.

    TUESDAY, MAY 1

    “Science on the Back End” at Hauser & Wirth
    The artist Matthew Day Jackson selects five artists–Larry Bamburg, Marc Ganzglass, Rosy Keyser, Erin Shirreff and Nick van Woert–gives each of them their own room in Hauser & Wirth’s Upper East Side location. As Mr. Jackson states in the press release: “I am not a curator. I merely selected the five artists for this exhibition and left to them the decision of which artworks to present. These artists inspire me.” –Michael H. Miller
    Hauser & Wirth, 32 East 69th Street, New York, 6-8 p.m.

    Opening: “Lucian Freud Drawings,” at Acquavella
    On May 1, Acquavella Galleries will present “Lucian Freud Drawings,” the most comprehensive exhibition of the late artist’s drawings ever to be shown in the U.S., including intimate portraits of family and friends as well as landscapes, many of which were selected from Freud’s sketchbooks and have never before been seen. —Rozalia Jovanovic
    Aquavella, 18 East 79th Street, New York, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

    WEDNESDAY, MAY 2

    Opening: Noam Rappaport at James Fuentes
    Mr. Rappaport makes relentless invention look easy. He makes each his (usually) spare paintings—hardly an adequate term here—with just a few components: perhaps a slab of wood, an unusually shaped swath of canvas, some touches of paint. Those elements become bewilderingly complete and handsome works that stretch strangely across walls or jut out magically into space. Fans of no-more-than-necessary artists, from Blinky Palermo to B. Wurtz, will swoon. —Andrew Russeth
    James Fuentes, 55 Delancey Street, New York, 6–8 p.m.

    Opening: Dana Schutz, “Piano in the Rain,” at Petzel
    For her first outing at Petzel, Ms. Schutz makes her characters “build a boat while sailing it, ignite themselves, pass on a contagious yawn, flash the audience with various craft-making tools and play a concerto in the rain,” according to the gallery’s (frankly tantalizing) news release. No doubt more of her inimitable pleasures await. Schutz fans can visit the Metropolitan Opera’s Arnold & Marie Schwartz Gallery through May 12 to catch her “Götterdämmerung” show of watercolor monoprints informed by Wagner’s opera of the same name. —A.R.
    Friedrich Petzel Gallery, 537 West 22nd Street, New York, 6–8 p.m.

    Opening: Ryan McGinley, “Animals” and “Grids,” at Team Gallery
    Ryan McGinley has two new shows opening simultaneously at Team Gallery, “Animals” and “Grids.”  For “Animals,” Mr. McGinley took studio portraits of marmosets and parakeets. But as these are Ryan McGinley photos, the animals are posed with nude models. This coincides with “Grids,” another opening of Mr. McGinley’s work at Team Gallery’s Wooster Street space, featuring three large grids composed of portraits of fans taken at concerts.—R.J.
    83 Grand Street, and 47 Wooster Street, New York, 6 p.m.

    Party: MoMA PS1 Opens Frieze
    The party will include “a full concert by Martha Wainwright, including renditions as Edith Piaf, original songs, and a climactic tribute to Kraftwerk.” Given how climactic those performances at the museum already were, this should, in so many words, be a good party. — Dan Duray.
    22-25 Jackson Avenue, Long Island City

    THURSDAY MAY 3

    Opening: Courtney Love, “And She’s Not Even Pretty,” at Fred Torres Collaborations
    You know Courtney Love as a musician, actress and wife of Kurt Cobain. You may not know the Hole front-woman studied fine art at the San Francisco Art Institute in the 1980’s. Apart from practicing celebrity as an art from, she’s also been drawing throughout her life and will be presenting her work for the first time. Whether or not David LaChapelle and Julian Schnabel are her mentors, which they are, Ms. Love’s foray into visual art is going to be a celebrity shit show. —R.J.
    Fred Torres Collaborations, 527 West 29th Street, New York, 6-8 p.m.


    SATURDAY MAY 5

    Opening: Tauba Auerbach, “Float,” at Paula Cooper Gallery
    Tauba Auerbach’s much-anticipated first solo show at Paula Cooper Gallery will include words from the artist’s “Weave” and “Fold” series, as well as new photographs and sculptural objects. –M.H.M.
    Paula Cooper Gallery, 521 West 21st Street, New York, 6–8 p.m.

    Opening: Kehinde Wiley “An Economy of Grace” at Sean Kelly Gallery
    Painter Kehinde Wiley branches out with his first ever portraits of women. For the clothes, he’s collaborated with Riccardo Tisci, Creative Director of Givenchy, and of “Watch the Throne” cover fame. — D.D.
    Sean Kelly Gallery, 528 West 29 Street, New York, 6-8 p.m.

  • Back Forward TUESDAY | Opening: "Science on the Back End" at Hauser & Wirth

    TUESDAY | Opening: "Science on the Back End" at Hauser & Wirth

    The artist Matthew Day Jackson selects five artists--Larry Bamburg, Marc Ganzglass, Rosy Keyser, Erin Shirreff and Nick van Woert--gives each of them their own room in Hauser & Wirth's Upper East Side location. As Mr. Jackson states in the press release: "I am not a curator. I merely selected the five artists for this exhibition and left to them the decision of which artworks to present. These artists inspire me." --Michael H. Miller

    Hauser & Wirth, 32 East 69th Street, New York, 6-8 p.m.

  • Back Forward TUESDAY | Opening: "Lucian Freud Drawings," at Acquavella

    TUESDAY | Opening: "Lucian Freud Drawings," at Acquavella

    On May 1, Acquavella Galleries will present “Lucian Freud Drawings,” the most comprehensive exhibition of the late artist’s drawings ever to be shown in the U.S., including intimate portraits of family and friends as well as landscapes, many of which were selected from Freud’s sketchbooks and have never before been seen.
    —Rozalia Jovanovic
Aquavella, 18 East 79th Street, New York, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.

  • Back Forward WEDNESDAY | Opening: Noam Rappaport at James Fuentes

    WEDNESDAY | Opening: Noam Rappaport at James Fuentes

    Mr. Rappaport makes relentless invention look easy. He makes each his (usually) spare paintings—hardly an adequate term here—with just a few components: perhaps a slab of wood, an unusually shaped swath of canvas, some touches of paint. Those elements become bewilderingly complete and handsome works that stretch strangely across walls or jut out magically into space. Fans of no-more-than-necessary artists, from Blinky Palermo to B. Wurtz, will swoon. (Untitled (Blue and Brown), 2012, is pictured.) —A.R.

    James Fuentes, 55 Delancey Street, New York, 6–8 p.m.

  • Back Forward WEDNESDAY | Opening: Dana Schutz, "Piano in the Rain," at Petzel

    WEDNESDAY | Opening: Dana Schutz, "Piano in the Rain," at Petzel

    For her first outing at Petzel, Ms. Schutz makes her characters "build a boat while sailing it, ignite themselves, pass on a contagious yawn, flash the audience with various craft-making tools and play a concerto in the rain," according to the gallery's (frankly tantalizing) news release. No doubt more of her inimitable pleasures await. Schutz fans can visit the Metropolitan Opera's Arnold & Marie Schwartz Gallery through May 12 to catch her "Götterdämmerung" show of watercolor monoprints informed by Wagner's opera of the same name.
 (Talk Talk, 2010, is pictured.) —A.R.
    Friedrich Petzel Gallery, 537 West 22nd Street, New York, 6–8 p.m.

  • Back Forward WEDNESDAY | Opening: Ryan McGinley, "Animals" and "Grids," at Team Gallery

    WEDNESDAY | Opening: Ryan McGinley, "Animals" and "Grids," at Team Gallery

    Ryan McGinley has two new shows opening simultaneously at Team Gallery, "Animals" and "Grids."  For "Animals," Mr. McGinley took studio portraits of marmosets and parakeets. But as these are Ryan McGinley photos, the animals are posed with nude models. This coincides with "Grids," another opening of Mr. McGinley’s work at Team Gallery’s Wooster Street space, featuring three large grids composed of portraits of fans taken at concerts.—R.J.

    83 Grand Street, and 47 Wooster Street, New York, 6 p.m.

  • Back Forward WEDNESDAY | Party: MoMA PS1 Opens Frieze

    WEDNESDAY | Party: MoMA PS1 Opens Frieze

    The party will include "a full concert by Martha Wainwright, including renditions as Edith Piaf, original songs, and a climactic tribute to Kraftwerk." Given how climactic those performances at the museum already were, this should, in so many words, be a good party. —Dan Duray.
    22-25 Jackson Avenue, Long Island City

  • Back Forward THURSDAY | Opening: Courtney Love, "And She's Not Even Pretty," at Fred Torres Collaborations

    THURSDAY | Opening: Courtney Love, "And She's Not Even Pretty," at Fred Torres Collaborations

    You know Courtney Love as a musician, actress and wife of Kurt Cobain. You may not know the Hole front-woman studied fine art at the San Francisco Art Institute in the 1980’s. Apart from practicing celebrity as an art from, she’s also been drawing throughout her life and will be presenting her work for the first time. Whether or not David LaChapelle and Julian Schnabel are her mentors, which they are, Ms. Love’s foray into visual art is going to be a celebrity shit show. —R.J.

    Fred Torres Collaborations, 527 West 29th Street, New York, 6-8 p.m.

  • Back Forward One of Tauba Auerbach's woven canvases, "Corner IV" (Courtesy Taubaauerbach.com)

    SATURDAY | Tauba Auerbach, "Float," at Paula Cooper Gallery

    Tauba Auerbach's much-anticipated first solo show at Paula Cooper Gallery will include words from the artist's "Weave" and "Fold" series, as well as new photographs and sculptural objects. --M.H.M.

    Paula Cooper Gallery, 521 West 21st Street, New York, 6–8 p.m.

  • Back SATURDAY | Opening: Kehinde Wiley "An Economy of Grace" at Sean Kelly Gallery

    SATURDAY | Opening: Kehinde Wiley "An Economy of Grace" at Sean Kelly Gallery

    Painter Kehinde Wiley branches out with his first ever portraits of women. For the clothes, he's collaborated with Riccardo Tisci, Creative Director of Givenchy, and of "Watch the Throne" cover fame. — D.D. (Photo courtesy WSJ)
    29 street: 528 W 29 street, 6-8pm, comment

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Google +1
  • Email
  • Print
Next in Gallerist

Connect With Us

Send

If you'd like us to follow up in regard to this tip, please remember to leave some form of contact information.

Send

Most Popular

Across the Wire

  • sad

    Michael Hastings Dies In Car Accident

  • Housing for All

    Alms for the Upper Middle Class: Subsidized Apartments Aim at $200K Earners

  • Up & Down the Street

    The Return of Wall Street’s Cassandra: In Armani and Pearls, Meredith Whitney Smacks Back

  • theater

    To Error Is Human: The Slapstick Shakespeare in the Park Is Irresistible

  • Race to Gracie Mansion 2013

    55% of New Yorkers Can't Name a Single Mayoral Candidate

    • About
    • Terms of Service
    • Privacy Policy
    • Masthead
    • Advertise With Us
Powered by WordPress.com VIP
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.