Chiharu Shiota at Templon Gallery

The huge line to enter Chiharu Shiota’s exhibition at Chelsea’s Templon Gallery last weekend speaks to the capacity of the Berlin-based Japanese artist to mesmerize audiences with the scale and intense labor of installations that elaborate on her ongoing theme of human connectivity.  A temporary installation fills the gallery’s front room, acting as portal to the rest of the exhibition and a place to marvel at the seemingly simultaneously chaotic and orderly network the artist created by suspending book pages in a web of thick white thread stapled to walls and floor.  Titled ‘Human Rhizome,’ the piece references an underground network of roots; in Shiota’s interpretation, the written word acts as an unseen communication network. (On view through March 9th).

Chiharu Shiota, Human Rhizome, thread and book pages, installation, ‘23

Ivan Navarro at Templon Gallery

It’s easy to name a few stars, at least of the human variety.  But start thinking beyond our solar system and it gets tougher to come up with household names for more distant celestial bodies.  The stars – Almaz, Menkalinen, Hoedus I and others noted on this lightbox by Ivan Navarro at Templon Gallery’s recently opened New York space – are officially named by a working group of the International Astronomical Union in Paris.  Navarro, known for neon sculptures that comment on political power and social issues questions who has the right to mark territory with names or by other means.  Swirls of painted color evoke distant nebula along with the stars, emphasizing the unknown nature of distant phenomenon.  (On view in Chelsea through Dec 23rd).

Ivan Navarro, Nebula X (Auriga), LED, aluminum, wooden box, paint, regular mirror, one way mirror, and electric energy, 2022.