Neil Goodman's show at Perimeter also shows new growth and a seasoned artist gaining confidence and fully hitting his stride with bold, seductive, considered sculptures and innovative advancements in the medium of bronze. Too often our society makes a priority of the young and the new, yet here are powerful examples of mid-career artists making some of the best work around.
Across the way at Albano, Margaret Wharton's new wall pieces reveal her ever-expanding and evolving imagination and inspired use of common materials like clothes pins, nuts and bolts, tennis rackets and chairs. When working with found objects (a notion we'll expand on in a moment), art must transcend its materials, as is exemplified here.
Perhaps that notion is true too at Tony Wight, where Matthew Metzger's beautiful paintings are probably not inspired by 19th Century, trompe l'oiel master John Peto, as Metzger recreates and renders the most beautiful truck mud flaps I've ever seen. Sure, there's a bunch of theory behind this work, which is art historical, relevant and fascinating, yet the paintings as objects themselves are seductive and captivating. Metzger's work is paired with the photographs of Sreshta Rit Premnath whose reworked photographs are inspired by M.S. Ramaiah who believed that if he ever stopped building he would die. A bust of the builder has been photographed and manipulated in a poetic response.
It was good to get back to the Ukrainian Institute Museum of Art where 3 Chicago artists and friends (Michiko Itatani, Claire Wolf Krantz and Susan Sensemann) participate in Mutuality, an uplifting presentation of mutual respect and synergistic art, that highlights the artists divergent experiences, source material, individual integrity and cooperative energy.
In the already-opened category, Rashid Johnson's significant, large-scale paintings at Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art are both beautiful and meaningful. As an artist I've previously been hard on for being too casual, I'm comfortable acknowledging that he has now found a powerful stride and ability to communicate a fresh and poignant look at his own history. From that base he draws in tangential and substantive content, and reveals himself as a force that is to be contended with and watched for years to come.


I enjoy seeing what architects draw when they don't have to. Is it nature? Is it abstract? Is it an extension of their work or is it counterbalancing? For Stephen Wierzbowski, whose drawings are on view at Framing Mode & Gallery, it's beautiful and historical, predominantly European buildings in a variety of settings. Like sculptors, many architects draw well, and like sculptors those drawings often don't get seen much.
Paul Klein


I love it that you preview the shows for us! Thanks for all you do
I do have a question for you, what do you do with artwork that you get tired of? It is hard to sell and also I feel bad getting rid of a piece. What do you do with art that has lost its lustre?
Love the Richard Hull work.
Itatani's piece is striking. I look forward to seeing the original.
Thanks for the preview.