
The show at Werner featured two huge inarticulate canvases of a skinny apparition dressed as a bat, plus several small landscapes, which transpose Doig’s iconic canoe from northern Ontario to equatorial climes. One of the landscapes appeared to have a small seagull (or perhaps Icarus) floating in the sky.
But the show at Gavin Brown’s was a real stunner. The painting Music of the Future (2002-7) could be called a Caribbean Sunday in the Park with George – all blue-green algae, tiny figures, and anecdotal painterly incident. Maracas (2002-8) turns three stacked loudspeakers into objects of abstract mystery. A Ping-Pong painting sets a lone player with a red paddle against a checkered black and blue wall, the table’s side pressing against the picture plane, and Moruga (2002-8) insinuates mystifying pageantry into a lakeside scene. Painted from film stills and photographs in a process akin to a DJ’s sampling, Doig’s trancelike images – perceptually mysterious as well as perpetually puzzling – function as half-forgotten memories from our overloaded image banks.

Peter Doig, "Moruga", 2002-08, oil on canvas, 118 x 78 3/4 inches