David Hammons in Subliminal Horizons at Alexander Gray Associates

David Hammons’ untitled bottles from the mid-80s are a standout in Alexander Gray Associates’ summer group show, which features artists of color who have a relationship to the Hudson River Valley.  Evoking messages cast adrift in bottles or carefully constructed ships in bottles, each curious form invites and eludes easy interpretation.  A white lightning bolt suggests magically captured electricity, a fish somehow survives in a glass enclosure and the zippers from the flies of pants become living insects, a series of transformations that invite wonder.  (On view through Aug 14th).

David Hammons, installation view of untitled bottles from 1985, Alexander Gray Associates.

Josh Kline at 47 Canal

Josh Kline’s stunning new show at Lower East Side gallery 47 Canal imagines a world in which technological advances have created mass unemployment. Carts with bottles and cans rendered in flesh tones suggest a sinister equivalence between recyclables and bodies that have been rendered redundant by ‘progress.’ (Through June 12th).

Josh Kline, The Sound of Severance, cast sculptures in silicone, granny cart, polyethylene bags, plastic zip tie, rubber, plexiglas, LEDs, and power source, 40.5 x 24 x 23 inches, 2016.
Josh Kline, The Sound of Severance, cast sculptures in silicone, granny cart, polyethylene bags, plastic zip tie, rubber, plexiglas, LEDs, and power source, 40.5 x 24 x 23 inches, 2016.