Both Beatriz Milhazes at
James Cohan and Tomma Abts at
David Zwirner presented spare shows. Milhazes offered one large painting per wall; Abts, several small paintings per each very large wall. Size aside, they couldn’t have been more opposite.

Study in contrasts: Milhazes is hot and expansive; Abts is cold and tight

Milhazes kaleidoscopes the grid, geometry, Carnaval, textile design, folk art and botany into a throbbing samba of up-against-the-picture-plane abstraction. Her paintings are a non-pharmacological high. They’re big, joyous, warm, physically expressive, wilfully chromatic, unabashedly beautiful. The work is so richly detailed that every visual toke—er, detail—offers something big and fabulous; even her paintings have paintings!

Milhazes: Sinfonia Nordestina, 2008, acrylic on canvas, 96 7/8 x 144 7/8 inches
Detail below

Milhazes: Popeye, 2008 acrylic on canvas, 78 3/8 x 54 3/4 inches
Milhazes: Mulatinho, 2008, acrylic on canvas, 97 5/6 x 97 5/8
Two (very different) details below


Milhazes: Carambola, 2008, acrylic on canvas, 54 7/8 a 50 5/8
Detail below

.Against this extravagantly saturated tropicalismo it’s probably unfair to make comparisons, but I found Tomma Abts’s paintings stingy and tight, like the kid in school who encircles his paper with his left arm to make sure no one can catch a glimpse of what he’s writing. I liked her recent show at the
New Museum well enough, and I can appreciate the intellectual rigor of the work here, but in this show her coolness struck me as cold and, well,withholding. The tonal hues seemed too gray, the geometry too quirky, too labored. There are layers and layers of paintings under the surface—Abts’ process is to let the work grow intuitively from this mulch, so to speak—but I left feeling that while she might have planted plum tomatoes, she ended up with radishes.


Abts, clockwise from top left: Nesche, Bilte, Teite, Lurro; all 2008, oil and acrylic on canvas, 19 x 15 inches. All full-view images from the gallery website


Abts: Isko, 2008, oil and acrylic on canvas, 19 x 15 inches
Detail below, hinting at the layers of painting underneath the surface