Paula Scher at Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery

Paula Scher, principle at renowned design firm Pentagram, invites us to understand the country through its airline routes, geography, climate and here, its weather. Her painted maps of the USA emphasize how we see places through frameworks of information. (At Chelsea’s Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery through March 26th).

Paula Scher, U.S.A. Extreme Weather, acrylic on hand-pulled silkscreen, 36 ¾ x 54 1/8 inches, 2015.
Paula Scher, U.S.A. Extreme Weather, acrylic on hand-pulled silkscreen, 36 ¾ x 54 1/8 inches, 2015.

Airan Kang at Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery

Some books electrify the reader, some illuminate our understanding; few do so as literally as in South Korean artist Airan Kang’s glowing volumes now on show at Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery in Chelsea. (Through June 13th).

Airan Kang, installation view of ‘The Luminous Poem,’ May 2015.

Anita Molinero in ‘Derive(s)’ at Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery

French artist Anita Molinero is known for destroying vibrantly colored, plastic consumer goods by melting them. Here, pale green Styrofoam trays remain intact but pierced, supported by cradling metal arms and a backed by a chunk of concrete. (At Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery through Feb 14th).

Anita Molinero, Untitled, 16 ½ x 12 ½ x 15 inches, 2014.

Shea Hembrey at Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery

Does it matter if artists make their own work or act as managers in a studio? Arkansas-based artist Shea Hembrey not only makes a point of hand-making his own work, he’s invented five fictional artist/makers for a solo show at Chelsea’s Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery. Here, ‘Pawnee Calhoun’ explores physics with a ‘super collider anomaly’ made from altered hornets nests. (Through Dec 13th).

Pawnee Calhoun, untitled (supercollider anomaly), altered hornet nests, 28 x 35 x 21 inches, 2014.

Robert Currie at Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery

Elaborate patterns made from stretched monofilament are the highlight of British artist Robert Currie’s New York solo debut at Chelsea’s Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery. Seeming to shift as visitors move, they embody an unexpected dynamism and astound at their intricate construction. (Through June 14th.)

Robert Currie, (detail view of) 40, 031 inches of black, red and yellow nylon monofilament, nylon monofilament, 27 1/8 x 51 ¼ x 11 inches, 2014.