Omer Fast at James Cohan Gallery

August Sander’s iconic ‘People of the 20th Century,’ a photographic project documenting the German people in the early 20th century is the starting point for Omer Fast’s ‘August,’ a captivating video imagining Sander’s haunted later years. Here, Fast restages Sander’s oft-reproduced image of young farmers as an opportunity to consider the photographer’s stagecraft. (On view at James Cohan Gallery through Oct 29th).

Omer Fast, still from August, stereoscopic film in 3D, 5.1 surround sound, duration 15:30 minutes, 2016.

Terri Friedman in ‘A Line Can Go Anywhere’ at James Cohan Gallery

Terri Friedman’s multi-part fiber artworks have huge presence; bold colors – from lush green to fiery orange – suggest abstracted strata of the earth and the making process is never far from the surface of a viewer’s consciousness.   (On view at James Cohan Gallery in Chelsea through Oct 14th).

Terri Friedman, Never Odd or Even, wool, acrylic, cotton fibers, 167 x 86 inches, 2016.

Mernet Larsen in ‘Dream Machines’ at James Cohan Gallery

Part of ‘Dream Machines,’ an exhibition that ponders how in daily life, ‘the real and imaginary cease to be contradictory,’ Mernet Larsen’s surreal ‘Sunday Drive’ is both plausible and impossible at once. Her orange-toned factory fresh figures are perfect but creepy, giving viewers pause to reconsider the serendipity of an American tradition. (At James Cohan Gallery’s Chelsea location through July 28th).

Mernet Larsen, Sunday Drive, oil on canvas, 30 x 48 inches, 1986.

Nahum Tevet at James Cohan Gallery

Nahum Tevet’s wall mounted sculptures are small-scale but full of action, a workout for the eye. Frames, furniture and machines come to mind amid patterning that recalls mid-century abstraction, cut outs that recall typography, colors that shout and mirroring that makes every element repeat. (At James Cohan Gallery’s Lower East Side location through July 28th).

Nahum Tevet, Double Mirror (SLDB), acrylic and industrial painting on wood, veneer, metallic mirror, 19 5/8 x 16 ½ x 13 3/8 inches, 2015.

Elias Sime at James Cohan Gallery

A swirling, starry sky crafted from braided electrical wire hovers over a curving organic landscape made from keyboard keys in this detail from Ethiopian artist Elias Sime’s collaged wall panel at James Cohan Gallery. Abstract yet suggestive of a landscape, this piece is testament to the resourcefulness of turning manmade objects – discarded electronics – into objects recalling natural beauty. (On view at James Cohan Gallery’s Chelsea location through June 17th).

Elias Sime, (detail) Tightrope: Evolution 2, reclaimed electrical wires on panel, 91 x 94 inches, 2017.