Artist Mark Dean Veca opened his new solo exhibit Made For You and Me at Cristin Tierney January 31st and is on view through March 9th. The title of the exhibit is a lyric from the Woodie Guthrie song This Land is Your Land. The song, originally expressing an anti-capitalist sensibility, has since often been appropriated to convey capitalist sentiments such as growth through consumption. Interestingly, Veca’s work often reverses this same process. He re-appropriates corporate images to comment on corruption, consumption, and a generally waning culture. Appropriately the gallery statement calls his work a kind of “Sinister Pop”. This is particularly evident in his piece titled Tailspin. The piece depicts the Exxon-Mobil Pegasus pointing down, blue on one side, red on the other, and spinning. Tailspin subtly references a society’s consumption dependent on energy resources that are exceedingly spinning out of control.
Tag Archives: pop
Trey Speegle at Benrimon Contemporary


Trey Speegle just opened Good Luck With That, a solo show at Benrimon Contemporary in Manhattan. Speegle plays with familiar paint-by-number formulas in semi-abstract works full of color and personal significance. A few works in the show feature silhouetted horses among other elements that exist within a recognizable context, but the real star here is the artist’s subdued, flat application of color. The show will be up until October 20th, so if you’re out here, be sure to roll through.
Mauro Corda

Mauro Corda is an artist who deals with the figure in space and with objects. They transpose ideas of necessity and will, with objects that contain and hold. The announcement of each piece comes in the waiting for release. Each moment holds and tackles, as we wait for them to fall and touch the ground.




