Booth Gallery

Gallery: 'Not All Doors Are the Same'

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Though the Surrealist movement is over a hundred years old, the aesthetics and ideas that so invigorated its creators remain strikingly relevant to contemporary artists. Eleven such artists - working in the media of painting, sculpture, and installation - gather for Booth Gallery's new exhibition Not All Doors Are the Same, and though not all eleven self-identify as Surrealist, each uses some variation on the primary themes of Surrealism, and traffic in the same kind of disturbing imagery and haunted beauty.

We've selected a few highlights from the show; Not All Doors Are The Same is on view through December 7th at Booth Gallery in New York City.

Booth Gallery

Ronit Baranga

My Artemis (On the Wall), 2019

Clay, Acrylic Paint

Booth Gallery

Miles Johnston

Wounded, 2019

Graphite on Natural Stonehenge Paper

Booth Gallery

Dasha Shishkin

Excitement, Trout, in The Public Trousers, 2018

Charcoal, acrylic on myla

Booth Gallery

Adam Miller

The Fall Of Troy, 2019

Oil on Linen

Booth Gallery

Rob Zeller

The Courtship, 2019

Oil on Linen

Booth Gallery

Inka Essenhigh

Power Plant, 2016

Enamel on Panel

Booth Gallery

Jamie Adams

Blondie Bubba and His Rainbow World, 2018

Oil on Linen

Booth Gallery

Martin Wittfooth

The Moon, 2019

Oil on Canvas

Not All Doors Are The Same is on view through December 7th at Booth Gallery, located at 325 W 38th St #1 in New York City.