Elmgreen and Dragset at Flag Art Foundation

Created in mirror-polished stainless steel, this sculpture of a lifeguard by Scandinavian art duo Elmgreen and Dragset shimmers like an apparition on the Flag Art Foundation’s 9th floor terrace. Peering intently toward the Hudson River (or the buildings on the block in between), the guard is perpetually alert to a situation we can’t see. (In Chelsea through Dec 17th).

Elmgreen and Dragset, Watching, mirror-polished stainless steel, 118 x 31 ½ x 37 2/5 inches, 2016.
Elmgreen and Dragset, Watching, mirror-polished stainless steel, 118 x 31 ½ x 37 2/5 inches, 2016.

Jennifer Dalton in ‘Summer School’ at FLAG Art Foundation

Jennifer Dalton’s contribution to FLAG Foundation’s summer group show stays with visitors in a unique way. Custom-printed gum balls invite chewing, once you’ve decided between, ‘Tell Me Everything’ or ‘Don’t Tell Me Anything.’  The balls act as mini-personality test – are you prepared for a long story, or would you rather not know? (At FLAG Art Foundation through August 12th).

Jennifer Dalton, Decision Analysis, doubled gum ball machine, custom printed, 42 ½ x 17 x 7 ½ inches, 2014.

Jeff Koons at Flag Art Foundation

At over ten feet tall, this polyethylene sculpture by Jeff Koons magnifies kitsch to its limits. Whether it’s a contemporary crucifixion, as Koons has said, a phallic symbol, as others have pointed out, or something else entirely, there’s more than meets the eye. (At Chelsea’s Flag Foundation through May 14th).

Jeff Koons, Cat on a Clothesline (Red), polyethylene, 123 x 110 x 50 inches, 1994-2001.
Jeff Koons, Cat on a Clothesline (Red), polyethylene, 123 x 110 x 50 inches, 1994-2001.

Roni Horn in ‘Space Between’ at FLAG Art Foundation

Ellsworth Kelly’s sleek forms – sometimes abstracted from nature – inspired FLAG Art Foundation’s summer group show and are seen in the background here. But Roni Horn’s ‘Pink Around (B),’ in the foreground is perfectly positioned to beautifully interact with nature, reflecting the sky and recording the changing light during the course of the day. (In Chelsea through August 14th).

Roni Horn, Pink Around (B), solid cast pink glass, 40 x 14 1/2 inches, 2008.

‘A Secret Affair’ at FLAG Art Foundation

The FLAG Foundation’s ‘A Secret Affair’ is one of the best shows of the moment in Chelsea, and one of the most appropriately titled, given that it’s tucked away high on the 9th and 10th floors of the foundation’s 545 West 25th Street exhibition space. Curated by Louis Grachos from Glenn and Amanda Fuhrman’s collection, rooms like this one show off the quality of the collection as well as the Fuhrmans’ penchant for sculptures of couples. (Through May 16th).

Installation view of ‘A Secret Affair: Selections from the Fuhrman Family Collection,’ at the FLAG Art Foundation, including work by Louise Bourgeois (foreground), Yinka Shonibare (left), Juan Munoz (middle), Maurizio Cattelan (back), March 2015.