Teresita Fernandez at Lehmann Maupin Gallery

A horizon line made of charcoal surrounds visitors to Teresita Fernandez’s haunting installation of burnt and burning landscape at Lehmann Maupin Gallery on the Lower East Side. Though Fernandez has explained that she wants to question the reality of the ‘virgin’ landscape described by early European settlers in North America by pointing to existing slash and burn farming methods, this handsome installation tantalizingly offers many interpretations. (On view through May 20th).

Teresita Fernandez, Charred Landscape (America), charcoal, dimensions variable, site specific installation for Lehmann Maupin, New York, 2017. Background: Fire (America) 5, glazed ceramic, 96 x 192 x 1.25 inches, 2017.

 

Cey Adams at Jane Lombard Gallery

Designer Cey Adams – former street artist and Founding Creative Director of Def Jam Recordings – memorializes victims of random gun violence in this site-specific mural at Chelsea’s Jane Lombard Gallery. (Through August 12th).

Cey Adams, Fallen Stars of Random Gun Violence in America, latex, spray paint, site-specific mural, 252 x 104 inches, 2016.
Cey Adams, Fallen Stars of Random Gun Violence in America, latex, spray paint, site-specific mural, 252 x 104 inches, 2016.

Teresita Fernandez, ‘Fata Morgana’ at Madison Square Park

Titled after mirages that form on the horizon line, Teresita Fernandez’ ‘Fata Morgana’ in Madison Square Park playfully imagines what it would be like to inhabit the mirage. Her sprawling, 500 foot long installation of golden, mirror-polished metal covers the park’s walkways, creating both a dappled pattern on the ground and a through-the-looking-glass effect in the reflective surface overhead. (Through winter ’15-‘16).

Teresita Fernandez, Fata Morgana, Madison Square Park, through winter 2015-16.

Ann Wilson at The Drawing Center

Inspired by the fact that the Drawing Center’s 1866 SoHo building originally housed a loom company, Chicago-based artist Anne Wilson’s installation is an artwork being gradually created by winding and crossing thread around the gallery’s columns. (Through December 14th).

Anne Wilson, To Cross (Walking New York), site-specific performance and sculpture, 2014.