Anne Samat at Marc Straus Gallery

Malaysian artist Anne Samat’s monumental family portrait at Marc Straus Gallery is a memorial to her late mother, brother and sister.  At center, an abstracted figure bearing a ‘no smoking’ sign alludes to Samat’s brother’s fatal illness, yet his form towers protectively over a small standing figure before a small pond.  Constructed in everyday materials ranging from rakes to plastic swords and woven with a mix of yarn and rattan sticks, Samat updates Malaysian and SE Asian artistic practices in a powerful installation acknowledging the importance of family and, as the title ‘Never Walk in Anyone’s Shadow’ suggests, self-reliance. (On view in Tribeca through Dec 21st).

Anne Samat, Never Walk in Anyone’s Shadow 2, rattan sticks, kitchen and garden utensils, beads, ceramic, metal and plastic ornaments, handwoven tapestry, 151 ½ x 285 x 77 inches, 2024.
Anne Samat, (detail) Never Walk in Anyone’s Shadow 2, rattan sticks, kitchen and garden utensils, beads, ceramic, metal and plastic ornaments, handwoven tapestry, 151 ½ x 285 x 77 inches, 2024.

Irving Penn, ‘Kinship’ at Pace Gallery

Pace Gallery’s current exhibition of Irving Penn’s photographs from the ‘40s to 2000, curated by supremely image-savvy artist Hank Willis Thomas, is compact but impactful, featuring juxtapositions of photos with often radically different subject matter that nevertheless have some affinity. A 1947 studio portrait of New Yorker cartoonists poised on a scaffold hangs near a photo of a careful arrangement of blocks, immediately conveying careful arrangement and balance rather than humor or play.  Around the corner, two models in Issey Miyake echo the form of a neighboring image of two weathered cigarette butts, a parallel that crashes together the fashionable and the discarded.  Hung on gallery walls constructed to recall the temporary structures Penn used as sets, photos are positioned near each other but on different walls, similar yet different.  Here, tangled members of a wrestling family appear opposite an arrangement of seafood, both shot in 1948, demonstrating the ‘visual muscle memory’ that Willis Thomas argues ties together Penn’s 70-year career.  (On view in Chelsea through Dec 21st).

(left) Irving Penn, Dusek Brothers (1 of 3), vintage gelatin silver print, 7 11/16 x 9 5/8, image, ed of 41, New York, 1948. (right) Irving Penn, Bouillabaisse, chromogenic print, 24 x 20 inches, images, ed of 7, Barcelona, 1948.
Installation view. Irving Penn, ‘Kinship’ at Pace Gallery, Dec ’24.

Jiha Moon at Derek Eller Gallery

Complex and colorful, Jiha Moon’s ceramic vessels at Derek Eller Gallery entice with their cheeky updates to historic forms and their contemporary subject matter.  Dumplings and succulent fruits allude to pleasure while forming the two eyes on this pot dominated by a fake grin.  Moon explains that this work is autobiographical, the dark clouds representing the impact on her life of the weather (specifically hurricanes) in Tallahassee, where she lives. The pagoda, boat and two birds refer to Blue Willow Pattern, an English take on blue and white Chinese porcelain with an accompanying love story that alternates between tragedy and happy ending.  (On view in Tribeca through Dec 21st).

Jiha Moon, Banana Thunderhead, porcelain, underglaze, glaze, 16.5 x 11 x 9 inches, 2024.

Pierre Huyghe in ‘Your Patience is Appreciated’ at Marian Goodman Gallery

There’s less than a week left to see Marian Goodman Gallery’s huge group exhibition in its new Tribeca location, a beautifully renovated 35,000 square foot industrial building from 1875.  Just inside the first room, an iteration of Pierre Huyghe’s ongoing ‘Timekeeper Drill Core’ series involved removing a circular portion of the gallery wall from the old 57th Street location and sanding down a circle at center to reveal the many times the space had been painted in its over forty years uptown.  Smartly installed, the show encourages conversations among circular forms in its initial room – Gabriel Orozco’s bike-wheel sculpture and Nairy Baghramian’s cylindrical abstraction are placed near Huyghe’s piece – suggesting that the gallery’s current manifestation is the beginning of a new cycle.  (On view through Dec 14th).

Pierre Huyghe, Timekeeper Drill Core (MGG 57th St), paint, plasterboard, 2 ½ x 23 3/8 inches, 2024.
Pierre Huyghe, Timekeeper Drill Core (MGG 57th St), paint, plasterboard, 2 ½ x 23 3/8 inches, 2024.

Jessie Henson at Broadway Gallery

Jessie Henson’s sewn works at Tribeca’s Broadway Gallery resemble elements of the natural world – water, wind smoke, arial overviews of landscape, or segments of the atmosphere – yet remain fully and enticingly abstract. The suggestion of movement created by curving masses of stitches is made complicated by rips in the paper support, torn in the process of repeated handling on Henson’s industrial sewing machine.  Further evidence of the process of making appears in holes pierced by a needle but not filled with thread, a device which adds shadow and patterning.  Contingent yet complex, Henson’s compositions arrest the eye with their dynamism.  (On view through Dec 14th).

Jessie Henson, Where are you now?, polyester and rayon thread on paper, 82 x 54 x 2.75 inches, 2024.
Jessie Henson, Where are you now? (detail), polyester and rayon thread on paper, 82 x 54 x 2.75 inches, 2024.