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This Artist Sees Right Through Your Relationship Shams

<i>Death and the Maiden</i> by Nicole Eisenman.
Death and the Maiden by Nicole Eisenman. Photo: Nicole Eisenman

A topless woman dining with the Grim Reaper, a town square full of mummies — no subject is too sensational for artist Nicole Eisenman’s provocative paintings. The French artist, known for complex narrative scenes and symbolic portraits, shakes up traditional ideas about relationships through wordplay, absurdity, and intimacy.

“I was painting against my education — against a man-made art world, the one I had learned about with all its masters,” Eisenman said of her work in the literary component of the exhibit. “I wanted to turn it upside-down. I was becoming aware that there was no space for me. I understood it instinctually, in a kind of proto-feminist way. I was just pissed off because I didn’t see a place for myself in the world.”

Her first New York museum survey exhibition, “Nicole Eisenman: Al-ugh-ories,” opened this month and runs through June 26 at the New Museum. Click ahead to see the middle-aged lovers, re-imagined Hamlets with bangs, and too-close-for-comfort selfies.

Photo: Nicole Eisenman

Beasley Street.

Photo: Nicole Eisenman

Coping.

Photo: Nicole Eisenman

The Fag End II.

Photo: Nicole Eisenman

Big Green Head.

Photo: Nicole Eisenman

Hamlet.

Photo: Nicole Eisenman

Deep Sea Diver.

Photo: Nicole Eisenman

Death and Maiden.

Photo: Nicole Eisenman

Selfie.

Photo: Nicole Eisenman

The Triumph of Poverty.

Photo: Nicole Eisenman

Tea Party.

This Artist Sees Through Your Relationship Shams