Sean Dack: ECHO/REPEAT at Fredric Snitzer Gallery

In addition to his acclaimed Futuresongs project from last Summer, Dack's latest show features a new series of images the artist has created through "a sheries of conversions from digital to analog.. exposing flaws within the technologically advanced medium, and appreciateing the beauty that lies in chance." Dack is also showing a short film he made called One Seven Nine Two Seven (2006) at the Miami Standard Hotel on Sunday evening at sundown prior to Werner Herzog's Lessons of Darkness.
Alex Dodge: Intelligent Design at Klaus Von Nichtssagend Gallery

For his second solo show at this small Williamsburg gallery, Dodge has created several paintings, works on paper and a sculptural installation. The sculpture, Study for Intelligent Design, features cast silicone body parts, "discarded android appendages, including a face, hands and ear, that incorporate synthetic colorless hair and technological fragments for sub-dermal viscera. The innards revealed by the torn away silicone flesh are comprised of a range of mechanical and electronic parts that span technologies of the past 50 years including typewriter parts, both old and current computer components, wires and fiber optic filament." Two of the paintings are based on the Playstation game Katamari Damacy. Dodge often explores the space between humanity and technology, a tension evident in his methodology, which combines traditional mediums and techniques with "computer-aided drafting and materials whose origins range from obsolete technologies to the most current.
Posted by James Friedman