Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

On View: “The Lost Mitten Society” and Saner at Jonathan LeVine Gallery

Currently on view at Jonathan LeVine Gallery in New York, "The Lost Mitten Society" is a salon-style group show filled with work from emerging and well-known artists working across various disciplines. The exhibition opened on January 10 and includes a diverse sampling of work from artists we have featured in print over the years as well as ones we recently introduced on our blog.


Martin Wittfooth

Currently on view at Jonathan LeVine Gallery in New York, “The Lost Mitten Society” is a salon-style group show filled with work from emerging and well-known artists working across various disciplines. The exhibition opened on January 10 and includes a diverse sampling of work from artists we have featured in print over the years as well as ones we recently introduced on our blog.

Finok, an artist credited with spearheading Brazil’s graffiti movement, contributed brightly-colored paintings filled with quirky characters and textile-inspired pattern work. An emotive, realist portrait by Kris Lewis (whose work was featured in print in HF Vol. 20), Martin Wittfooth’s (HF Vol. 19) painting of mystical fauna, and Amandine Urruty’s surreal, pastiche-like graphite drawings are all a part of the show’s varied offerings. Christian Rex van Minnen’s grotesque, Renaissance-inspired portraits, Doubleparlour’s eerie sculptures of childlike characters, and Mike Giant’s bold, flash tattoo-style ink drawings are not to be missed, as well.

Saner’s solo show “Primitivo” opened on the same evening. The Mexican artist looked to the folk art of his native country to create paintings that take to task the artificial dichotomy between “primitive” and “civilized.” Saner questions why there is so much chaos in contemporary society despite our technological progress and seeks the answers in pre-Colombian Mexican traditions. “We talk about primitive man as this tough guy, living in an elementary way only focused on basic needs,” writes Saner in his show statement. “Modern man no longer has to hunt or provide in such a rudimentary way and yet more than ever we are faced with poverty and war. So are we really living in such a highly developed world?” Saner has been gaining traction in the contemporary art world recently with his murals and his successful year culminates with “Primitivo,” his first solo show at Jonathan LeVine Gallery.


Finok

Doubleparlor

Kris Lewis

Sam Wolfe Connelly

Mike Giant


Amandine Urruty


Christian Rex van Minnen


Faith47


Saner


Saner


Saner

Meta
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
Known for his design-oriented paintings of voluptuous bird women, Amsterdam-based artist Parra will present a new series of work for his January 8 solo show at Jonathan LeVine Gallery in New York, "Yer So Bad." Named after a Tom Petty song about a femme fatale who can't seem to settle down, the exhibition features new Pop Art-inspired paintings filled with sex and intrigue. We first featured Parra in Hi-Fructose Vol. 25. Check out a preview of "Yer So Bad" below to see what he has been up to.
Ever the astute aesthete, Esao Andrews (previously covered in HF Vol. 8 and online) brings a renewed sense of clarity and purpose to his latest body of work. His new paintings will be featured at NYC's Jonathan LeVine Gallery from October 11 through November 8 for Andrews's upcoming solo show, "Epilogues." For this series, the artist embraced some of his signature motifs, bringing them back into the studio and furthering their growth. The ongoing narrative in his work, as Andrews tells us, needed a conclusion, a way to say farewell and move forward with his pursuits. This exhibition of painting provides him with just that: closure. In "Epilogues," we are treated to a visual feast of some of Andrews’s most well-known images as they would appear as aged, matured and weathered in his trademark tonality, creating transcendent moments of haunted familiarity.
Jonathan LeVine Gallery recently brought Olek, DalEast, Dan Witz, Saner, Nychos and Jeff Soto to Berlin for their takeover of Project M, Urban Nation's ever-evolving outdoor art gallery. In addition to murals and public installations by the above-mentioned artists, LeVine curated a pop-up exhibition titled "Greetings from New York City" with works by Kevin Cyr, Tara McPherson, Gary Baseman, Faile and Evol as well as studio works from the artists who did the street art portion of the show. Photographer Henrik Haven captured the artists in action as they left their mark on Berlin's cityscape.
While women artists have been involved in making art throughout history, their work has been dismissed or not as often acknowledged in comparison to men. Today, women do have important roles in society as writers, painters, sculptors, dancers, business leaders, among others, but they are still statistically under-represented by art institutions. "Trifecta", which opens this Friday at Jonathan Levine Gallery, will shed a light on three prominent women in Contemporary art - Handiedan, Mimi Scholz, and Sandra Chevrier. Curator Yasha Young shares, “This exhibition addresses the fact that art created by women has been historically dismissed as craft as opposed to fine art, affecting the development of women in art throughout history. I would like to open doors for women artists and encourage them to step out and up."

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List