I caught the last days of some good painting exhibitions in Chelsea. Particularly interesting for me was to see three different generation women painters showing at the same time in Chelsea: Alice Neel, Nicole Eisenman & Dana Schutz. The focus of Eisenman’s show at Leo Koenig is her etchings, lithographs and woodcuts. The varied technics of printmaking and resulting varied surface created a nice counterbalance to her paintings. Schutz abandons some of the more gimmicky ideas (black holes on canvas) and focuses on the expressionism of the paint itself in her new show at Friedrich Petzel Gallery. At Zwirner, Neels shows portraits and still lifes made between 1964 and 1983, relatively late works.
I found some commonalities among these three painters: focus on figures, expressionistic painting styles and bright color palettes. Yet it was interesting to see the generational differences as well. Neel’s naturalistic and emphatic expressionism contrasts with self-conscious artificiality and irony of younger painters (particularly Schutz). It is, of course, not entirely possible to have such a forthright painting practice as Neel at this day and age. We cannot abandon all the understanding and critical view gained during last couple of decades about our art history, cultural subtexts and power structures. At the same time I couldn’t help myself to feel some wistful nostalgia for Neel’s directness.
PHOTOS First row: Nicole Eisenman @Leo Koenig, Dana Schutz @Petzel, Allison Miller in Stone Gravy @Ameringer McEnery YoheSecond row: Thomas Demand @Mathew Marks, Brice Marden @Mathew Marks, Brice Marden @Mathew Marks
Third row: Chiharu Shiota @Haunch of Venison, Marlène Mocquet @Haunch of Venison, Julianne Swartz @Josée Bienvenue
Fourth row: Sven Lukin @Gary Snyder, Sven Lukin @Gary Snyder, Alice Neel @ Zwirner












I am a Korean-American painter living in New York city. I started this blog as a food blog, intending to share recipes (often requested by friends, as I am known to be a pretty good cook among my friends) and occasional restaurant reviews. As many of my Korean friends point out, all Koreans are obsessed about food (including me). I love shopping, making, looking at and reading about food, too. Food is my porn. Even my art is about food. Over the years, however, the blog evolved into sharing more of the things that interest me at the moment; classical music (especially opera), theater, books, French language, political and cultural ideas, and of course, food. I am also writing about the exhibitions that I am involved in as well as other exhibition reviews. In the end, I hope that I am showing my engagement as an artist with the society and the culture in general. Hopefully, some of it interests you, too.