I don’t have much to say about any of it but will put up pictures here. Mostly the work we saw in Chelsea was pleasant but I don’t think we had any “Eureka — this is the promised land!” moments. It was status quo but you can’t have epiphanies every time. God doesn’t come down from the mountain but occasionally.
Lari Pitman‘s works at Gladstone are a surprise. Pitman, whose paintings we’ve seen in Philadelphia in the great “Secret Victorians” show at the Fabric Workshop, is producing some very different work these days. Gone is Pitman’s flat world with its 2-D design class affect. Here, in works with somber palette Pitman is softer, less didactic and more homey. These works have a domestic element to them (lamps, tables, interiors are depicted). What I remember of the flat world work is that it had political commentary in mind. I didn’t see that here although we didn’t linger and perhaps a closer reading would have uncovered one.