Ursula Morley Price at McKenzie Fine Art

From her home in a small French town, British octogenarian artist Ursula Morley Price continues to invent unique ceramic forms that evoke the beauty and order of the natural world. This white twist form, on view at McKenzie Fine Art on the Lower East Side, suggests delicate petals, a flexible spinal column, coral, machinery and more. (On view through Dec 22nd).

Ursula Morley Price, White Twist Form, stoneware, 7 ¼ inches high, 9 inches diameter, 2017. Photograph courtesy of McKenzie Fine Art, Inc.

Jessica Jackson Hutchins at Marianne Boesky Gallery

Jessica Jackson Hutchins’ work elicits appreciation of the uncharming extraordinary in life. ‘Cushion,’ from the artist’s latest solo show at Marianne Boesky Gallery, is no exception. Two misshapen figures intertwine on a couch cushion, enjoying a moment of tenderness and connection. (On view in Chelsea through Dec 22nd).

Jessica Jackson Hutchins, Cushion, ceramic, cushion, 26 ½ x 32 x 32 inches, 2017.

Ashley Lyon at Jane Lombard Gallery

A crumpled red duvet at the entrance to Jane Lombard Gallery is at once cozy and alien – a symbol of the comforts of home, but a symbol that belongs to someone else. Constructed in fired clay by Ashley Lyon, sculptures including the bed covering, a piece of memory foam, pillows and this quilt offer a conceptual appreciation of the soft furnishings that make a house a home. (On view in Chelsea through Dec 21st).

Ashley Lyon, Wellspring, fired clay with mixed media surfacing, 7 x 8 x 19 inches, 2017.

Magdalena Suarez Frimkess at Kaufmann Repetto

Popeye, Chinese landscape painting and pre-Columbian art are among the many influences on Magdalena Suarez Frimkess’s small-scale but boldly conceived ceramics. Vessels like this untitled head reimagine use-value while introducing enticingly idiosyncratic characters. (On view at Kaufman Repetto in Chelsea through Oct 21st).

Magdalena Suarez Frimkess, Untitled, ceramic, glaze, 3.5 x 3 inches, 2004.

Sally Saul at Rachel Uffner Gallery

These shoes may not be the most ambition artworks in Sally Saul’s debut show at Rachel Uffner Gallery, but their unassuming quality – a quotidian appreciation for the quiet pleasures in life, such as the perfect shoes for the occasion – is the perfect introduction to a show of what critic John Yau calls ‘funny, sweet and tender’ artworks. (On view on the Lower East Side through Oct 29th).

Sally Saul, Untitled, clay and glaze, 5 pairs, dimensions variable, 2017.