Gillian Wearing at the International Center of Photography

Gillian Wearing’s now classic video of herself dancing uninhibitedly in a London shopping arcade in 1994 – causing discomfort with the idea of turning public into private space – is precedent setting in the International Center of Photography’s group show ‘Public, Private, Secret,’ which considers how identity is created both openly and in secret. (Through Jan 8, 2017).

Gillian Wearing, Dancing in Peckham, video, 25 min, 1994.
Gillian Wearing, Dancing in Peckham, video, 25 min, 1994.

Ydessa Hendeles in ‘The Keeper’ at the New Museum

Ydessa Hendeles’ ‘Partners (The Teddy Bear Project)’ is a standout in ‘The Keeper,’ the New Museum’s intriguing homage to obsessive collections of deeply meaningful, often personal, artifacts. The installation presents over three thousand photographs from diverse family albums of individuals with their teddy bears, taken since the stuffed animal came into existence thanks to Teddy Roosevelt’s hunting exploits. Here, teddies break through class barriers, age differences and cultural divides as the world embraces a mass-produced consumer good. (Through Sept 25th).

Ydessa Hendeles, installation view of ‘Partners (The Teddy Bear Project)’ at the New Museum, July 2016.
Ydessa Hendeles, installation view of ‘Partners (The Teddy Bear Project)’ at the New Museum, July 2016.

Martin Puryear’s Big Bling at Madison Square Park

Martin Puryear’s huge wooden structure, sheathed in chain-link fencing and capped with a gold-leafed shackle, towers over Madison Square Park’s main lawn like a seated animal. Its shape echoes the Phrygian cap, associated with French revolutionaries and freedom and explored recently by the artist, and is topped off with a gorgeously gleaming shackle – a gilded symbol of servitude. (At Madison Square Park through January 8th, 2017).

Martin Puryear, Big Bling, installation view in Madison Square Park, 2016.
Martin Puryear, Big Bling, installation view in Madison Square Park, 2016.

Mike Nelson in ‘Wanderlust’ on the High Line

Sleeping bags filled with rubble from nearby construction sites make for an eerie sculpture by British artist Mike Nelson. Placed in semi-hidden locations on the High Line, the bags contrast the luxurious living conditions being created in the neighborhood’s new buildings with solitary, make-do survival. (In ‘Wanderlust’ on the High Line through March 2017).

Mike Nelson, Untitled (public sculpture for a redundant space), sleeping bags, concrete, construction debris, dimensions variable, 2016.
Mike Nelson, Untitled (public sculpture for a redundant space), sleeping bags, concrete, construction debris, dimensions variable, 2016.

Nari Ward on the High Line

Smart cars snag great parking spaces in New York; this one, created by Harlem-based artist Nari Ward, enjoys a privileged place on the High Line where an admiring audience regularly surrounds it. Inspired by an abandoned car that hosted a lime tree in his father’s yard in Jamaica, Ward planted an apple tree in this car, lining the exterior with rubber tire treads and turning a symbol of nimble urban driving into a stationary support for nature. (On the High Line through March 2017).

Nari Ward, Smart Tree, Smart car, cinder blocks, tire treads, soil, apple tree, 106 x 61 x 120 inches, 2016.
Nari Ward, Smart Tree, Smart car, cinder blocks, tire treads, soil, apple tree, 106 x 61 x 120 inches, 2016.

Matt Johnson in ‘Wanderlust’ on the High Line

Matt Johnson’s ‘Untitled (Swan)’ marries industrial materials to the natural world by shaping a train track into the shape of an abstract swan set in the High Line’s lush gardens. Known for morphing everyday items – a crumpled Starbucks cup carved from wood and painted, a stack of plastic party cups actually rendered in painted bronze – into objects of wonder, this twisted rail pays homage to the former rail line on which it’s installed. (In ‘Wanderlust’ on the High Line through March 2017).

Matt Johnson, Untitled (Swan), bent train track, 120 x 138 x 34 ¾ inches, 2016.
Matt Johnson, Untitled (Swan), bent train track, 120 x 138 x 34 ¾ inches, 2016.

 

Tony Matelli in ‘Wanderlust’ on the High Line

Tony Matelli pioneered his hyper-realistic sculptures before the social media era, yet they seem made for photographing and sharing. This bronze sleepwalker is a major traffic-stopper on the High Line not just as an art object in its own right but as a catalyst for audience interaction. (In ‘Wanderlust’ on the High Line through March 2017).

Tony Matelli, Sleepwalker, bronze, acrylic, paint, 69 x 21 x 34 inches, 2014.  In ‘Wanderlust’ on the High Line through March 2017.
Tony Matelli, Sleepwalker, bronze, acrylic, paint, 69 x 21 x 34 inches, 2014. In ‘Wanderlust’ on the High Line through March 2017.

Ellen Altfest in ‘The Female Gaze’ at Cheim & Read Gallery

Known for hyper-detailed renderings of the male body (among other natural subjects), Ellen Altfest’s ‘Leg’ ponders the facts on a section of a man’s leg. Veins, hair, and tiny blemishes are the ostensible subjects of the painting, but the limb gives off a vital glow, contrasting its grey surroundings and suggesting that even a fractional view of her subject bears close scrutiny. (At Cheim & Read Gallery in ‘The Female Gaze, Part Two: Women Look at Men’ through Sept 2nd).

Ellen Altfest, Leg, oil on linen, 8 x 11 x 1 ½ inches, 2010.
Ellen Altfest, Leg, oil on linen, 8 x 11 x 1 ½ inches, 2010.

 

Alex Katz at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Alex Katz’s towering painting of his wife, Ada, in red coat, hat and lips dominates a selection of paintings by the artist at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. As bold as an advertisement but with no product to sell, this arresting painting celebrates Ada’s allure. (Through Nov 6th).

Alex Katz, Red Coat, oil on canvas, on loan from the American Contemporary Art Foundation, Inc. Leonard A. Lauder, President, 1982.
Alex Katz, Red Coat, oil on canvas, on loan from the American Contemporary Art Foundation, Inc. Leonard A. Lauder, President, 1982.

Laszlo Moholy-Nagy at the Guggenheim

Hungarian avant-garde artist Laszlo Moholy-Nagy used camera-less photography to create experimental pictures like this one, for which he put his own face and glasses against light-sensitive paper in the darkroom and made multiple exposures to create this ghostly image. (At the Guggenheim in ‘Moholy-Nagy: Future Present’ through Sept 7th).

Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Photogram (Moonface), (Self-Portrait in Profile), gelatin silver print (enlarged from a photogram), 1926, printed 1935.
Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Photogram (Moonface), (Self-Portrait in Profile), gelatin silver print (enlarged from a photogram), 1926, printed 1935.

Nathalia Edenmont at Nancy Hoffman Gallery

Sweden-based artist Nathalia Edenmont is both collector and artist – using rare butterfly wings she acquires at fairs in Singapore and Paris, she creates labor-intensive collages that uniquely comment on nature’s beauty. (At Chelsea’s Nancy Hoffman Gallery through Sept 1st.)

Nathalia Edenmont, Vortex, collage of butterfly wings, 14 ¼ x 13 inches, 2011.
Nathalia Edenmont, Vortex, collage of butterfly wings, 14 ¼ x 13 inches, 2011.

Hiroshi Watanabe at Benrubi Gallery

We are like characters in a disaster movie, writes photographer Hiroshi Watanabe – though terrible events loom, we carry on with life as usual. Here, snow-covered persimmons make for a beautiful image but one that warns of a fast-arriving, harsher season. (At Chelsea’s Benrubi Gallery through Aug 26th).

Hiroshi Watanabe, The Day the Dam Collapses 25 (Persimmons), archival pigment print, 9 x 9 inches, 2009.
Hiroshi Watanabe, The Day the Dam Collapses 25 (Persimmons), archival pigment print, 9 x 9 inches, 2009.

Roger Steffens & The Family Acid at Benrubi Gallery

Wild abandon meets danger in this 1974 photo by counterculture photographer Roger Steffens, though what appears to be a fatal leap is an illusion – the young woman landed safely on the ledge directly beneath her. Under the titled ‘The Family Acid,’ Steffens’ photos chronicle the lives of his friends and family as they embody the changing mores of an era. (At Benrubi Gallery in Chelsea through Aug 26th).

The Family Acid, Roger Steffens, Big Sur Plunge (Clare’s Leap), March, 1974, edition of 8, archival pigment print, 24 x 20 inches.
The Family Acid, Roger Steffens, Big Sur Plunge (Clare’s Leap), March, 1974, edition of 8, archival pigment print, 24 x 20 inches.

Libby Rothfeld in ‘Daydream from 2013’ at Canada New York

Neatly tiled platforms suggest a clean and ordered place while glasses with red sticks hint at incense offerings in New York artist Libby Rothfeld’s evocative ‘Option #1,’ currently at Canada New York on the Lower East Side. The setup entices us to make up our own story – one in which a fragile crown sporting a fairy-like face might find its way to an Asian supermarket shopping basket filled with potatoes… (Through August 26th).

Libby Rothfeld, Option #1, tile, grout, cement, porcelain, potatoes, glassware, rock, 33 x 36 x 21 inches, 2016.
Libby Rothfeld, Option #1, tile, grout, cement, porcelain, potatoes, glassware, rock, 33 x 36 x 21 inches, 2016.

Duke Riley at the Queens Museum of Art

Located in the same room as the Queens Museum’s model of New York City’s water system, Duke Riley’s ‘That’s What She Said’ is a commissioned work warning against misuse of a precious natural resource. To the left, an Egyptian goddess creates the waters that flow down into a landscape destroyed by power plants and the indifference of its inhabitants. (Through Jan 1, 2017).

Duke Riley, installation view of ‘That’s What She Said,’ at the Queens Museum of Art, July 2016.
Duke Riley, installation view of ‘That’s What She Said,’ at the Queens Museum of Art, July 2016.

Sopheap Pich, Rang Phnom Flower No. 2 at Tyler Rollins

Sopheap Pich’s bamboo and rattan flower is made of natural materials but resembles computer-generated imagery. In fact, this flower – from the cannonball tree – has personal meaning to the artist. It represents the tree that sheltered Buddha during his birth and is found near Buddhist temples and Pich’s home. (At Tyler Rollins Fine Art in Chelsea through Aug 26th).

Sopheap Pich, Rang Phnom Flower No. 2, bamboo, rattan, metal wire, approx. 85 ½ x 43 ¼ x 20 inches.
Sopheap Pich, Rang Phnom Flower No. 2, bamboo, rattan, metal wire, approx. 85 ½ x 43 ¼ x 20 inches.

Paul Outerbridge at Bruce Silverstein Gallery

Influential for his photographs of consumer culture items isolated and made strange, as well as his laborious tri-color Carbo printing technique, Paul Outerbridge is currently celebrated at Bruce Silverstein with a retrospective including this intensely colored cinematic homage to spring. (At Bruce Silverstein Gallery in Chelsea through Sept 17th).

Paul Outerbridge, First Robin of Spring, Carbo print, 14 3/8 x 10 5/8 inches, 1938, printed c. 1938.
Paul Outerbridge, First Robin of Spring, Carbo print, 14 3/8 x 10 5/8 inches, 1938, printed c. 1938.

Rokni Haerizadeh at the Guggenheim Museum

Painting over You Tube video stills, Iranian artist Rokni Haerizadeh morphs familiar imagery into a setting for mythological creatures inspired by Persian tradition. Here, a building echoes the Guggenheim’s spiraling form but is surrounded by emergency vehicles, one of which has partially changed into a fish. (At the Guggenheim, in ‘A Storm is Blowing from Paradise: Contemporary Art of the Middle East and North Africa’ through Oct 5th).

Rokni Haerizadeh, one piece from the 24-part work ‘But a Storm is Blowing from Paradise,’ gesso, watercolor and ink on inkjet prints, 2014.
Rokni Haerizadeh, one piece from the 24-part work ‘But a Storm is Blowing from Paradise,’ gesso, watercolor and ink on inkjet prints, 2014.

RongRong and inri at Chambers Fine Art

To make work for the 2012 Echigo-Tsumari Art Triennial, photographers RongRong and inri packed up their family and moved from Beijing to rural Japan, creating timeless, ethereal black and white scenes shot in a 200-year-old house. (At Chambers Fine Art in Chelsea through Aug 20th).

RongRong and inri, Tsumari Story No 11-4, silver gelatin print, 46 ¾ x 58 ¼ inches, 2014.
RongRong and inri, Tsumari Story No 11-4, silver gelatin print, 46 ¾ x 58 ¼ inches, 2014.

Richard Woods at Friedman Benda Project Space

British artist/designer Richard Woods has applied mock Tudor façade to a shopping mall in Seoul, fake flagstones to a cottage in Finland, and now brings a collection of woodblock tabletops to Friedman Benda Project Space in Chelsea. Presented as both tables and wall-mounted works, the exhibition’s vibrant color and patterns celebrate the places where we eat, work and commune. (Through Aug 19th).

Richard Woods, installation view of ‘Work Tables’ at Friedman Benda Project Space, June 2016.
Richard Woods, installation view of ‘Work Tables’ at Friedman Benda Project Space, June 2016.

‘Blackness in Abstraction’ at Pace Gallery

From a 1962 painted black rectangle by Sol LeWitt to a series of canvases hung from the ceiling by Oscar Murillo, Pace Gallery’s ‘Blackness in Abstraction’ discusses varieties of blackness, touching on race, the life of the spirit and simplicity of form. (On 25th Street in Chelsea through Aug 19th).

Installation view of ‘Blackness in Abstraction’ at Pace Gallery, June, 2016.
Installation view of ‘Blackness in Abstraction’ at Pace Gallery, June, 2016.

Peter Pillar at Andrew Kreps Gallery

German artist Peter Pillar spotted this surprising image of a woman being silenced by a ghostly hand while driving as he himself was traveling on the highway. As part of a series for which he photographed ads on the back of trucks, then removed text and non-image related info, Pillar lays bare how the images send particular messages. It’s an enticing challenge to imagine what’s would be sold by the original ad. (At Andrew Kreps Gallery through Aug 19th).

Peter Pillar, Erscheinungen #4, inkjet print on Alu-dibond, 59 1/16  x 53 1/8 inches, 2016.
Peter Pillar, Erscheinungen #4, inkjet print on Alu-dibond, 59 1/16 x 53 1/8 inches, 2016.

Fred Wilson in ‘GLASS’ at Pace Gallery

Using found objects, Fred Wilson tells a story of a man – in the form of a classic Greek bust – who lies broken before a stoic young African woman in the artist’s 2005 ‘Love and Loss in the Milky Way.’ Surrounded by glowing white milk glass objects (plates and various vessels) with two motherly figures positioned behind them, their disastrous encounter becomes a racially charged rendition of Romeo and Juliet. (At Pace Gallery on 24th Street in Chelsea through Aug 19th).

Fred Wilson, Love and Loss in the Milky Way (seen in detail), 1 table with 47 milk glass elements, 1 plaster bust, 1 plaster head, 1 standing woman and a ceramic cookie far, 77 ¾ x 92 x 43 7/8 inches, 2005.
Fred Wilson, Love and Loss in the Milky Way (seen in detail), 1 table with 47 milk glass elements, 1 plaster bust, 1 plaster head, 1 standing woman and a ceramic cookie far, 77 ¾ x 92 x 43 7/8 inches, 2005.

Margot Bergman at Anton Kern Gallery

Chicago-based octogenarian Margot Bergman makes her New York solo debut with highly emotive, expressionist portraits created on canvases found in thrift stores and flea markets and reworked into double portraits. Here, a kindly, elderly face peers out from the forehead of a pouty-lipped blond, perhaps foretelling the younger woman’s future or portraying her internal voice. (At Chelsea’s Anton Kern Gallery through Aug 19th).

Margot Bergman, Wilma Rose, acrylic on found canvas, 30 x 24 inches, 2012.
Margot Bergman, Wilma Rose, acrylic on found canvas, 30 x 24 inches, 2012.

Nancy Shaver at Derek Eller Gallery

Nancy Shaver marshaled work by twenty-four artists to create ‘Quilt,’ a wall collage of Shaver’s own fabric panels and works in other media which spreads out over Derek Eller Gallery’s walls like a kudzu of patterns and pop culture references.   (On the Lower East Side through Aug 19th).

Nancy Shaver, installation view of ‘Quilt’ in ‘Dress the Form’ at Derek Eller Gallery, June 2016.
Nancy Shaver, installation view of ‘Quilt’ in ‘Dress the Form’ at Derek Eller Gallery, June 2016.

Zachari Logan at Julie Saul Gallery

Young Saskatchewan-based artist Zachari Logan asserts a new place in the natural world for the male body in works like ‘Leshy,’ a human figure created from flora and fauna, beautifully rendered in pastels on black paper. (At Julie Saul Gallery in Chelsea through Aug 12th).

Zachari Logan, Leshy 3, pastel on black paper, 57 ½ x 37 ¾ inches, 2015.
Zachari Logan, Leshy 3, pastel on black paper, 57 ½ x 37 ¾ inches, 2015.

Don Nice at Driscoll Babcock Galleries

Realist painter Don Nice pairs soda pop and pop corn in a Warholian consideration of the allure of brightly packaged processed food. These two paintings hang side by side in Nice’s current show at Driscoll Babcock Galleries, as if arranged for our viewing and eating pleasure. (In Chelsea through Aug 12th).

Don Nice, Coke Can and Popcorn, both oil on canvas, 24 x 18 inches, 2015.
Don Nice, Coke Can and Popcorn, both oil on canvas, 24 x 18 inches, 2015.

Karen Lederer in ‘A Series of Moves’ at Driscoll Babcock Galleries

Karen Lederer’s ‘Hipster Wellness’ is a standout in Driscoll Babcock’s summer group show of painting by young artists who follow new approaches to traditional still life. Bright colors dominate, particularly a glowing bowl of Cheetos, which balances the orange color squares on an art book about Josef Albers. Painted as if seen in digital space, the picture includes Lederer’s own hand, not wielding a brush but as if poised to take a selfie. (In Chelsea through Aug 12th).

Karen Lederer, Hipster Wellness, oil and acrylic on panel, 30 x 40 inches, 2015.
Karen Lederer, Hipster Wellness, oil and acrylic on panel, 30 x 40 inches, 2015.

Scott King in ‘I Beam U Channel’ at Bortolami Gallery

The changing built environment is the subject of Bortolami Gallery’s summer group exhibition, which opens with Scott King’s hard-to-miss ‘Temporary Eyesore.’ The printed banner brings to mind ‘pardon our appearance’ signs on renovation sites, albeit at a gargantuan scale, while the text seems to promise that a space deemed unpleasing to the eye will soon be taken care of. (In Chelsea through Aug 12th)

Scott King, Temporary Eyesore, 71 x 216 inches, 2008-2016.
Scott King, Temporary Eyesore, 71 x 216 inches, 2008-2016.

Imi Knoebel in ‘Shapeshifters’ at Luhring Augustine Gallery

Imi Knoebel’s large potato paintings are a standout in Luhring Augustine’s impressive intergenerational summer painting exhibition. Organic and geometric shapes seem to vie for dominance while muted tones struggle with vibrant color. (At Luhring Augustine Gallery through August 12th).

Imi Knoebel, Kartoffelbild, acrylic on aluminum, 69 5/8 x 98 13/16 inches, 2015.
Imi Knoebel, Kartoffelbild, acrylic on aluminum, 69 5/8 x 98 13/16 inches, 2015.

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.

Alicia Gibson in ‘X’ at Lyles & King

Alicia Gibson’s charmingly messy abstraction revels in the possibilities of nail decoration and personal expression in ‘Nail Polishing Club remix.’ Gumdrops, hats and very celebratory tombstones come to mind in this riotous appreciation of a female art. (In ‘X’ at Lyles & King through Aug 12th).

Alicia Gibson, Nail Polishing Club remix, oil, ink, spray paint, and burlap on canvas, 60 x 48 inches, 2016.
Alicia Gibson, Nail Polishing Club remix, oil, ink, spray paint, and burlap on canvas, 60 x 48 inches, 2016.

Bas Jan Ader at Metro Pictures Gallery

At the start of Dutch artist Bas Jan Ader’s 19 second video, Fall 1, the artist perches on a chair on a roof. As we watch with increasing unease, he leans over until he causes himself to tumble to the ground below. Absurd yet emotionally jolting, Ader’s video portrays the artist as dare devil willing to take risks and foretells his eventual disappearance at sea during the creation of another event-as-artwork. (At Metro Pictures in Chelsea through Aug 5th).

Bas Jan Ader, Fall 1, Los Angeles, 16mm black and white film, 1970.
Bas Jan Ader, Fall 1, Los Angeles, 16mm black and white film, 1970.

Greg Drasler at Betty Cunningham Gallery

Cutaway cars seen on a trip to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios inspired Greg Drasler to paint views of vehicles from multiple perspectives at once. Here, a car sits sandwiched between a vast sky and a flat, patchwork patterned plain, reflected as if partially submerged under water. The effect is strangely cinematic and painterly all at once. (At Betty Cunningham Gallery through Aug 5th).

Greg Drasler, Eat and Sleep, oil and linen, 80 x 44 inches, 2014.
Greg Drasler, Eat and Sleep, oil and linen, 80 x 44 inches, 2014.

Beauford Delaney in ‘It’s Not Your Nature’ at Michael Rosenfeld Gallery

Trees appear to dance and sway at the center of Beauford Delaney’s gorgeously curvy nature scene from c. 1945. As Fauvist colors turn the park into a riot of color, specifics of place or season feel beside the point. (At Michael Rosenfeld Gallery through Aug 5th).

Beauford Delaney, Untitled (Trees), oil on canvas 29 1/8 x 23 1/8 inches, c. 1945.
Beauford Delaney, Untitled (Trees), oil on canvas 29 1/8 x 23 1/8 inches, c. 1945.

Matthew Ronay in ‘Empirical Intuitive Absorption’ at Andrea Rosen Gallery

Does abstract art tap into a subconscious human understanding of the order of the universe? Curator and artist, Matthew Ronay asks this question in Andrea Rosen Gallery’s summer group show. His own colorful wooden sculptures explore forms recalling (in his words) ‘alien deep sea creatures, glandular secretions, vibrating fields of energy, and tongues and protrusions on scales indeterminable.’ (In Chelsea through August 5th).

Matthew Ronay, The Kernel, basswood, dye, gouache, steel, 18 x 31 ½ x 11 ¼ inches, 2016.
Matthew Ronay, The Kernel, basswood, dye, gouache, steel, 18 x 31 ½ x 11 ¼ inches, 2016.

Deborah Brown at Mike Weiss Gallery

Brooklyn artist Deborah Brown reframes Picasso’s distorted, phallic-headed sculpture of Picasso’s lover Marie-Therese with wicked humor by imaging her in painted form, an innocent in traditional dress, frolicking in a garden. (At Mike Weiss Gallery in ‘School’s Out!’ through August 6th).

Deborah Brown, Bacchante, oil on canvas, 36 x 36 inches, 2016.
Deborah Brown, Bacchante, oil on canvas, 36 x 36 inches, 2016.

Simen Johan Sea Lions at Yossi Milo

Simen Johan’s stunning image of sea lions (seen here in detail) has the creatures rising to the right in a digitally manipulated crescendo of activity. The composition and atmospheric background recalls Gericault’s famously dramatic 19th century shipwreck scene, ‘The Raft of the Medusa,’ though it is animals that embody intense emotion. (At Yossi Milo Gallery in Chelsea through Aug 10th).

 

Simen Johan, Untitled #188, digital C-Print, 71 x 94 ¼, 2015.
Simen Johan, Untitled #188, digital C-Print, 71 x 94 ¼, 2015.

Anouk Kruithof at Bitforms

Dutch artist Anouk Kruithof’s vaguely anthropomorphized stand features a printed sheet of vinyl bearing a picture (a screenshot) of a deliberately blurred ID card posted by the TSA to its Instagram account alongside contraband found on the traveller.   It’s a strange and provocative rematerialization of web-disseminated images. (At Bitforms on the Lower East Side through July 31st).

Anouk Kruithof, Neutral (openhearted), graphite, printed vinyl, rubber band, 70.1 x 48.5 x 11.81 inches, 2015.
Anouk Kruithof, Neutral (openhearted), graphite, printed vinyl, rubber band, 70.1 x 48.5 x 11.81 inches, 2015.

Nora Schultz in ‘See sun, and think shadow’ at Barbara Gladstone Gallery

Inspired by a poem that describes a shaft of sunlight that, contrary to its nature, brings darkness to mind, Barbara Gladstone Gallery’s summer group exhibition includes Nora Schultz’s enormous, ungainly window blinds, which look as if they were crafted by a giant’s child. Installed in the room furthest from the sun, their functionality is denied, their obtusely large and rough construction emphasized. (In Chelsea through July 29th).

Nora Schultz, installation view of  two pieces titled ‘Window Blinds,’ aluminum, metal hooks, and nylon rope, 100 x 133 x 9 inches, and 90 x 109 x 9 ½ inches, 2015.
Nora Schultz, installation view of two pieces titled ‘Window Blinds,’ aluminum, metal hooks, and nylon rope, 100 x 133 x 9 inches, and 90 x 109 x 9 ½ inches, 2015.

Alan Wiener at 11R

Displayed under glass and supported by carefully crafted supports, Alan Wiener’s two bricks and a stone are everyday objects given the royal treatment but the mini-pedestals actually steal the show. Created from aquaresin in controlled pours, their shapes suggest candy, bones and ancient architectural embellishments. (At 11R through July 29th).

Installation view of Alan Wiener’s Untitled (8), Untitled (6) and Untitled (5) from 2014 and 2015 in aquaresin, brick and stone at 11R, June, 2016.
Installation view of Alan Wiener’s Untitled (8), Untitled (6) and Untitled (5) from 2014 and 2015 in aquaresin, brick and stone at 11R, June, 2016.

Eve Ackroyd in ‘On Painting’ at Kent Fine Art

Abstracted eyes float before a male and a female head like afterimages in strangely ethereal canvases by New York-based Brit Eve Ackroyd. Evocative of dream-states, Ackroyd’s paintings bring to mind simultaneous layers of experience, from the conscious to the unconscious, memory to the present moment. (In ‘On Painting’ at Kent Fine Art in Chelsea through July 29th).

Eve Ackroyd, Untitled (Face with Falling Eyes), 11 x 14 inches, acrylic on canvas, 2016 and (on the right) Untitled (Closed Eyes) acrylic on canvas, 9 x 12 inches.
Eve Ackroyd, Untitled (Face with Falling Eyes), 11 x 14 inches, acrylic on canvas, 2016 and (on the right) Untitled (Closed Eyes) acrylic on canvas, 9 x 12 inches.

Robert Raphael in ‘Ceramics’ at LMAK Gallery

Robert Raphael’s cool-colored constructions of ropes are actually created in ceramic, rendering a traditionally functional material functionless. (At LMAK Gallery through July 30th.)

Robert Raphael, Untitled (Rope Study), ceramic glaze, 20 x 16 x 14 inches, unique, 2015.
Robert Raphael, Untitled (Rope Study), ceramic glaze, 20 x 16 x 14 inches, unique, 2015.

Nicole Eisenman in ‘If Only Bella Abzug Were Here’ at Marc Straus Gallery

Masks populate the mask-like features of ‘Whatever Guy,’ a portrait by Nicole Eisenman of a zoned-out and alienated character. (At Marc Straus Gallery through July 29th).

Nicole Eisenman, Whatever Guy, oil on canvas, 2009, 82 x 65 inches, 2009.
Nicole Eisenman, Whatever Guy, oil on canvas, 2009, 82 x 65 inches, 2009.

John Kelsey in ‘Landscapes’ at Marlborough Gallery

A phenomenal landscape meets a monumental project to collect data at mind-boggling expense ($1b+) in John Kelsey’s pretty watercolor of an NSA Data Center in Williams, Utah. (At Marlborough Gallery through July 29th).

John Kelsey, NSA Data Center, Camp Williams, UT, watercolor, mounted on aluminum, 12 ¼ x 16 1/8 inches, 2013.
John Kelsey, NSA Data Center, Camp Williams, UT, watercolor, mounted on aluminum, 12 ¼ x 16 1/8 inches, 2013.

Zach Bruder in ‘Record Lines This Summer’ at Magenta Plains

‘Record Lines this Summer,’ a group show at Magenta Plains Gallery, takes its title from the delays expected at TSA airport checkpoints in July and August. In that context, Zach Bruder’s painting of Father Time holding a shoe up for contemplation takes on new meaning…is this shoe going to set off an alarm, or is he suggesting walking as a better mode of transport?

Zach Bruder, Monument Around, acrylic and flashe on linen, 52 x 58.5 inches, 2016.
Zach Bruder, Monument Around, acrylic and flashe on linen, 52 x 58.5 inches, 2016.

Sarah Bednarek and Leigh Ruple at Morgan Lehman Gallery

Cancer treatment in 2009 caused Sarah Bednarek to experience hallucinations of a geometric world; in her show at Morgan Lehman Gallery, she manifests these visions as sculptural forms that seem to simultaneously offer the mysteries of a red void and the domestic banality of veneered wood. Behind, Leigh Ruple’s vividly colored, lethargic character is barely contained by the canvas. (In Chelsea through July 29th).

Sarah Bednarek, Concave Sibling, MDF walnut, paint, 30 x 30 x 30 inches, 2016 (foreground.)  Leigh Ruple, Listless, Idle, oil on canvas, 60 x 66 inches, 2014.
Sarah Bednarek, Concave Sibling, MDF walnut, paint, 30 x 30 x 30 inches, 2016 (foreground.) Leigh Ruple, Listless, Idle, oil on canvas, 60 x 66 inches, 2014.

Sharon Madanes in ‘Me, My, Mine’ at DC Moore Gallery

Sharon Madanes merges her preoccupations with hand washing and chairs in this standout painting in DC Moore Gallery’s summer group exhibition. Wearing beads of water like jewelry, an unknown woman (in a cheongsam?) reaches into our space – the seats and table behind suggest we’re about to dine with this mysterious character. (In Chelsea through July 29th).

Sharon Madanes, On the Other Hand, oil, acrylic, and chair caning on canvas, 22 x 25 inches, 2016.
Sharon Madanes, On the Other Hand, oil, acrylic, and chair caning on canvas, 22 x 25 inches, 2016.

Gretta Johnson at Feuer/Mesler

Shaped artworks on paper by young Brooklyn artist Gretta Johnson are abstract but bring specific objects to mind, as the show’s title ‘Jackets/Machines/Hair,’ affirms. Here, what looks like a heraldic symbol featuring modified fly whisks and a door hinge invites speculation. (At Feuer/Mesler on the Lower East Side through July 29th).

Gretta Johnson, InVestement, wax, watercolor, and colored pencil on paper, 42 x 38 inches, 2016.
Gretta Johnson, InVestement, wax, watercolor, and colored pencil on paper, 42 x 38 inches, 2016.

Marti Cormand at Josee Bienvenu Gallery

This painting of a sculptural fragment by German modernist artist Emy Roeder, a man puzzling over an abstract sculpture, and a portrait head by German artist Edwin Sharff are all meticulously paintings by Marti Cormand of artworks labeled ‘degenerate’ by the Nazis during WWII. Displaying the images as a series of 5 x 7 inch ‘postcards’ downplays their radicality but emphasizes the fact that their aesthetic has been wholly assimilated into contemporary art. (At Josee Bienvenu Gallery through July 22nd).

Marti Cormand, installation view of ‘Postcards A – Z’ at Josee Bienvenu Gallery, through July 22nd.
Marti Cormand, installation view of ‘Postcards A – Z’ at Josee Bienvenu Gallery, through July 22nd.

Caroline Larsen at The Hole NYC

Caroline Larsen’s paintings are a deliberate tour-de-force of low-brow associations, resembling latch-hook or embroidery, created by squeezing oil paint through pastry bags and mounted on cheap wall coverings. Seemingly designed to test whether there’s any fertile ground left in the fine art vs kitsch debate, they deliberately elude the kind of transcendence that this majestic mountainscape might suggest. (At The Hole NYC through July 24th).

Caroline Larsen, Diamond Back, oil on canvas over board, 37 x 47 inches, 2016.
Caroline Larsen, Diamond Back, oil on canvas over board, 37 x 47 inches, 2016.

‘Guilding the Lolly’ at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise

Brian Belott’s eclectic, messy collaged artwork pops up regularly in New York group shows; this month for Gavin Brown’s Lower East Side summer group show, Belott’s the organizer, having asked artist friends to contribute their own reinterpretations of iconic artwork. Among the standouts, Giva Beavers remakes Van Gogh’s Starry Night as if rendered in bacon and Melissa Brown brings Holbein’s Ambassadors up to date in paint and lottery scratch-off ink on aluminum. (Through July 30th).

Installation view of ‘Guilding the Lolly,’ curated by Brian Belott at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, through July 30th.
Installation view of ‘Guilding the Lolly,’ curated by Brian Belott at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, through July 30th.

Trevor Shimizu at 47 Canal

T Magazine described a sketchy painting of a happy pregnant woman by Trevor Shimizu as having ‘emotional depth’ that ‘transcends that of an emoji.’ Perhaps it’s because Shimizu doesn’t set the bar very high on his draftsmanship or finish that his paintings charm with their earnestness and humor. His latest show was inspired by parenthood, reflecting on sleep deprivation (front) and breastfeeding in public (rear). (At 47 Canal on the Lower East Side through July 30th).

Trevor Shimizu, Sleep Deprived 1, oil on canvas, 58 x 55 inches. In the background right: Breastfeeding in Public (1), oil on canvas, 72 x 66 inches.
Trevor Shimizu, Sleep Deprived 1, oil on canvas, 58 x 55 inches. In the background right: Breastfeeding in Public (1), oil on canvas, 72 x 66 inches.

Roxy Paine in ‘False Narratives’ at Pierogi

A generic meeting room, scaled down to doll-size and crafted in minute detail by Roxy Paine is the centerpiece of Pierogi’s summer group show ‘False Narratives.’ The absence of tables as protective barriers suggests that honesty and vulnerability will be part of whatever discussions take place here; a bulletin board on the wall offers topics of conversations that include ‘captives and fugitives’ and ‘chance and fate.’ (On the Lower East Side through July 31st).

Roxy Paine, Meeting, birch, maple, epoxy, apoxie, LED lights, acrylic light diffusers, enamel, lacquer, oil paint, damar varnish, paper, steel, aluminum, stainless steel, 130.25 x 97.5 x 58.5 inches, 2016.
Roxy Paine, Meeting, birch, maple, epoxy, apoxie, LED lights, acrylic light diffusers, enamel, lacquer, oil paint, damar varnish, paper, steel, aluminum, stainless steel, 130.25 x 97.5 x 58.5 inches, 2016.

Gerard Mullin at Kristen Lorello Gallery

Young Brooklyn-based, Irish artist Gerard Mullin merges paint and design in hand-carved abstract works that never seem to stop moving. (At Kristen Lorello Gallery on the Lower East Side through July 15th).

Gerard Mullin, Untitled, watercolor, wood dye and acrylic on plywood, 48 x 35 ¾ inches, 2013.
Gerard Mullin, Untitled, watercolor, wood dye and acrylic on plywood, 48 x 35 ¾ inches, 2013.

Jay Pluck in ‘People Who Work Here’ at David Zwirner Gallery

The folks behind-the-scenes have taken over the scene at David Zwirner Gallery’s 533 West 19th Street, location in Chelsea, where some forty artists who work at the gallery are showing their own work. Here, Jay Pluck’s hand painted wallpaper pattern is a welcome sliver of Matisse-like color and pattern installed unexpectedly between galleries. (Through Aug 5th).

Jay Pluck, Untitled, acrylic paint on paper and wheat paste, dimensions variable, as installed, 190 x 10 inches, 2016.
Jay Pluck, Untitled, acrylic paint on paper and wheat paste, dimensions variable, as installed, 190 x 10 inches, 2016.

Katherine Bernhardt in ‘Make Painting Great Again’ at Canada New York

At eight feet high, Katherine Bernhardt’s vibrant, textile-like painting overwhelms with powerful graphics while her subject matter – plantains, cigarettes, basketball and Lisa Simpson – samples pop culture and everyday objects with strong associations. (At Canada New York through July 15th).

Katherine Bernhardt, Two Simpsons, Plantains, Basketballs, Cigarettes, acrylic and spray paint on canvas, 96 x 120 inches, 2016.
Katherine Bernhardt, Two Simpsons, Plantains, Basketballs, Cigarettes, acrylic and spray paint on canvas, 96 x 120 inches, 2016.

Adam Parker Smith at The Hole NYC

At first glance, Adam Parker Smith’s shiny mylar balloon sculptures don’t look long for this world; inside of each, however, are resin & fiberglass interiors and metal armatures that give the sculptures heft. Arranged around a faux rock garden, the balloons resemble classic Greek sculptures reinterpreted with humor – Venus stands in the foreground with a champagne bottle body barely covered by a flying scarf while Augustus towers to the rear of the gallery. (At The Hole on the Lower East Side through July 24th).

Adam Parker Smith, installation view of ‘Oblivious the Greek,’ at The Hole NYC, June 2016.
Adam Parker Smith, installation view of ‘Oblivious the Greek,’ at The Hole NYC, June 2016.

Nicole Wermers at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery

These assisted readymade sculptures by Nicole Wermers were inspired by awnings but have been fitted with custom textiles and turned to the side to create vertical columns. Their patterns recall post-war minimal painting a la Daniel Buren, but rolled up, their potential is hidden. (At Chelsea’s Tanya Bonakdar Gallery through July 29th).

Nicole Wermers, installation view of ‘Vertical Awnings’ at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, June 2016.
Nicole Wermers, installation view of ‘Vertical Awnings’ at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, June 2016.

Meraud Guinness Guevara in ‘In Good Company’ at Lori Bookstein Fine Art

Though she was allied with the pre-war Parisian avant-garde, Meraud Guinness Guevara favored realism. This 1938 still life foregrounds an intimate arrangement of curving kitchen objects while a more austere selection of white forms stands behind at attention. (In ‘In Good Company’ at Lori Bookstein Fine Art through July 29th).

Meraud Guinness Guevara, Still Life with Kitchen Objects, oil on canvas, 23 ¼ x 28 ¾ inches, 1938.
Meraud Guinness Guevara, Still Life with Kitchen Objects, oil on canvas, 23 ¼ x 28 ¾ inches, 1938.

Anna Sew Hoy at Koenig and Clinton

“Bodies merge with stuff,” explains LA sculptor Anna Sew Hoy of her recent sculptures, succinctly introducing her intention to build bodies that allow reshaped thinking. Installed at Koenig and Clinton Gallery in Chelsea, denim ‘worms’ and arms lifted to create an oval shape bespeak fluidity and openness. (Through July 29th).

Anna Sew Hoy, Woven Void, glazed stoneware, denim, cinder blocks, 44 x 23 x 5 inches, 2016 in front of Denim Worm, jeans, cotton t-shirts, thread, 1,260 inches (continuous loop), 2016.
Anna Sew Hoy, Woven Void, glazed stoneware, denim, cinder blocks, 44 x 23 x 5 inches, 2016 in front of Denim Worm, jeans, cotton t-shirts, thread, 1,260 inches (continuous loop), 2016.

Aliza Nisenbaum in ‘Intimisms’ at James Cohan Gallery

Mexican-born, New York-based assistant art professor Aliza Nisenbaum’s focus on U.S. immigrants inspired James Cohan Gallery’s excellent summer group show ‘Intimisms,’ which features close portraits of artists’ friends and family. Here, her painting of the Women’s Cabinet of the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs is more public yet portrays the individuality of each community leader. (In Chelsea through July 29th).

Aliza Nisenbaum, MOIA’s NYC Womens Cabinet, oil on linen, 68 x 85 inches, 2016.
Aliza Nisenbaum, MOIA’s NYC Womens Cabinet, oil on linen, 68 x 85 inches, 2016.

Sadie Benning Airplane Painting at Callicoon

Global art commerce comes to mind in Sadie Benning’s painting of abstracted airplanes bearing mini-paintings on their wings. The planes disappear right off the panel in an apparently never-ending cycle of supply and demand. (At Callicoon Fine Arts on the Lower East Side through July 29th).

Sadie Benning, Airplane Painting, acrylic gouache, casine and wood, 37 ¾ x 97 ¼ inches, 2015.
Sadie Benning, Airplane Painting, acrylic gouache, casine and wood, 37 ¾ x 97 ¼ inches, 2015.

Caroline Wells Chandler in ‘Common Threads’ at Danese Corey

Caroline Wells Chandler’s crocheted smiley creatures run and jump along the gallery wall in Danese Corey Gallery’s textile-related summer group show, ‘Common Threads.’ Goofily happy, they are pure fun. (In Chelsea through July 29th).

Caroline Wells Chandler, installation view in ‘Common Threads’ at Danese Corey Gallery, June 2016.
Caroline Wells Chandler, installation view in ‘Common Threads’ at Danese Corey Gallery, June 2016.

Cey Adams at Jane Lombard Gallery

Designer Cey Adams – former street artist and Founding Creative Director of Def Jam Recordings – memorializes victims of random gun violence in this site-specific mural at Chelsea’s Jane Lombard Gallery. (Through August 12th).

Cey Adams, Fallen Stars of Random Gun Violence in America, latex, spray paint, site-specific mural, 252 x 104 inches, 2016.
Cey Adams, Fallen Stars of Random Gun Violence in America, latex, spray paint, site-specific mural, 252 x 104 inches, 2016.

‘Shrines to Speed’ at Leila Heller Gallery

As summer travel season rolls around, ‘Shrines to Speed’ at Chelsea’s Leila Heller Gallery acts as something of a cautionary tale. Sylvie Fleury’s smashed and sliced car – covered in nail polish – rests near an ominous pair of van doors by Richard Prince and a crushed Fiat 500 by Ron Arad. All are enticing objects but each undermines the glamor of car culture. (In Chelsea through July 9th).

Sylvie Fleury, Skin Crime 6, crashed car, enamel, 31 x 29 x 141 inches, 1997 in foreground of installation view of ‘Shrines to Speed’ at Leila Heller Gallery, June 2016.
Sylvie Fleury, Skin Crime 6, crashed car, enamel, 31 x 29 x 141 inches, 1997 in foreground of installation view of ‘Shrines to Speed’ at Leila Heller Gallery, June 2016.

Cristina de Miguel at Freight & Volume

Spanish artist Cristina de Miguel offers an update on Picasso’s 1905-6 Boy Leading a Horse with a version that crops the boy (as if shot on film) and adds expressionist patches of color reminiscent of the post-war CoBrA group. The horse’s expression – he’s in on the joke? – adds humor. (At Freight and Volume on the Lower East Side through July 10th).

Cristina de Miguel, Boy Leading a Horse, mixed media, 74 x 60 inches.
Cristina de Miguel, Boy Leading a Horse, mixed media, 74 x 60 inches.

Terence Koh at Andrew Edlin Gallery

At the top of a stepped pile of dirt, a domed chamber houses bees (contained in the top of the structure by a screen) and offers visitors a place to sit for quiet contemplation. Artist Terence Koh explains that the ‘bee chapel’ came to him in a dream as a way of offering sanctuary to the beleaguered insects. (At Andrew Edlin Gallery on the Lower East Side through July 1st.)

Terence Kohn, installation view of bee chapel, beeswax, earth, wood, stone, bees, 2016.
Terence Kohn, installation view of bee chapel, beeswax, earth, wood, stone, bees, 2016.

Sandro Miller at Yancey Richardson Gallery

Under the direction of photographer Sandro Miller, actor John Malkovich plays a series of unexpected roles in a recent body of work at Chelsea’s Yancey Richardson Gallery. As Warhol’s Marilyn, Arthur Sasse’s Albert Einstein and here, Dorothea Lange’s Migrant Mother, Malkovich’s face makes some of art history’s most iconic images eerily unfamiliar. (Through July 8th).

Sandro Miller, Dorothea Lange/Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California (1936), archival pigment print, 12 x 9 inches, 2014.
Sandro Miller, Dorothea Lange/Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California (1936), archival pigment print, 12 x 9 inches, 2014.

Lordan Bunch at Foley Gallery

Self-taught super realist painter Lordan Bunch paints children from class photos and photo-booth shots, pulling their identities from oblivion to act as memento mori. (At Foley Gallery on the Lower East Side through June 30th).

Lordan Bunch, Amiable no 9, oil on panel, 17.5 x 11.5 inches, 2012.
Lordan Bunch, Amiable no 9, oil on panel, 17.5 x 11.5 inches, 2012.

Asya Reznikov at Nancy Hoffman Gallery

Russian-American artist Asya Reznikov takes on the role of Manet’s bar maid at the Folies-Bergere, only she serves the demands of just one client and from her own body. Transplanted from the public realm into the domestic sphere, Reznikov’s character still manages a tight ship but with little apparent enjoyment. (At Nancy Hoffman Gallery in Chelsea through July 1st).

Asya Reznikov, Wet Bar, archival pigment print, 38 x 51 inches, 2016.
Asya Reznikov, Wet Bar, archival pigment print, 38 x 51 inches, 2016.

Joanne Greenbaum Ceramics at Rachel Uffner Gallery

New York painter Joanne Greenbaum takes mark making into three dimensions with ceramics that evoke natural forms and architecture in vibrant color at Rachel Uffner Gallery on the Lower East Side. (Through July 1st).

Joanne Greenbaum, Untitled, archival marker on porcelain, 14 x 12 x 11 inches, 2016.
Joanne Greenbaum, Untitled, archival marker on porcelain, 14 x 12 x 11 inches, 2016.

Tiny: Streetwise Revisited at Aperture Foundation

Aperture’s exhibition ‘Tiny: Streetwise Revisited’ is a fascinating glimpse into the life of Tiny, the petite Seattle teen memorably photographed in 1983 by Mary Ellen Mark for Life magazine and filmed by her filmmaker husband Martin Bell for his 1984 documentary Streetwise. As a young woman in this photo, she dreams of having riches and a family of 10 kids. In the exhibition, Mark follows Tiny as she fulfills her second wish as poverty and addiction define her life. (In Chelsea through June 30th).

Installation view of ‘Tiny:  Streetwise Revisited’ at Aperture Foundation, June 2016.
Installation view of ‘Tiny: Streetwise Revisited’ at Aperture Foundation, June 2016.

Karin Laval at Benrubi Gallery

Glass, mirrors and distorted perspectives turn nature into a candy-colored wonderland in new photos by Paris-born, NY photographer Karin Laval. This hyped-up version of nature literally moves into the gallery space as Laval presents an image on the wall and as sculpture. (At Chelsea’s Benrubi Gallery through July 1st.)

Karine Laval, Untitled Sculpture, direct ink on plexi, two way mirror, maple frame, 74 x 50 inches in front of Untitled #46 from the ‘Heterotopia’ Series, chromogenic print (three panels), 2014.
Karine Laval, Untitled Sculpture, direct ink on plexi, two way mirror, maple frame, 74 x 50 inches in front of Untitled #46 from the ‘Heterotopia’ Series, chromogenic print (three panels), 2014.

Goshka Macuga at the New Museum

Miroslav Tichy surreptitiously photographed unsuspecting women in the Czech Republic for decades; the resulting images are often celebrated in New York galleries and museums. For her solo show at the New Museum, Polish-born artist Goshka Macuga created this tapestry, featuring women from Tichy’s photos (and other sources) along with two women who wear body suits based on Tichy’s drawings.  The women in the tapestry clean Karl Marx’s tombstone, summoning not workers but women to unite. (At the New Museum through June 26th).

Goshka Macuga, Death of Marxism, Women of All Lands Unite, wool tapestry, collection of the Broad Art Foundation, 2013.
Goshka Macuga, Death of Marxism, Women of All Lands Unite, wool tapestry, collection of the Broad Art Foundation, 2013.

Nicole Eisenman at Anton Kern Gallery

The woman at the center of Nicole Eisenman’s portraits ‘Weeks on the Train,’ (the writer Laurie Weeks) is casually posed, but commands an unusually large amount of room. The space creates an aura around her and gives her a sense of approachability that eludes the two oddballs seated in front of her. (At Anton Kern Gallery in Chelsea through June 25th).

Nicole Eisenmann, Weeks on the Train, oil on canvas, 82 x 65 inches, 2015.
Nicole Eisenman, Weeks on the Train, oil on canvas, 82 x 65 inches, 2015.

Ben Sanders in ‘Elysian Redux’ at Asya Geisberg Gallery

Taking an 80s aesthetic as inspiration, Ben Sander’s steel vase is a surprisingly sturdy support for an abstract design of floating shapes and heavily textured lines of lavender paint. Sander’s accompanying 2-D work behind likewise balances the substantial – thick marks resembling giant paint strokes – with unanchored shapes including ping pong and Wiffle balls to offer an amusing musing on taste. (At Chelsea’s Asya Geisberg Gallery through June 25th).

Ben Sanders, Blue Tube Dude, enamel and oil on steel, 16 x 6 inches, 2016 in front of ‘Untitled,’ acrylic on magnet-inlaid MDF, rubber, ping pong balls, Wiffle ball on enameled steel, 28 x 34.5 inches.
Ben Sanders, Blue Tube Dude, enamel and oil on steel, 16 x 6 inches, 2016 in front of ‘Untitled,’ acrylic on magnet-inlaid MDF, rubber, ping pong balls, Wiffle ball on enameled steel, 28 x 34.5 inches.

Alicja Kwade at 303 Gallery

Large mirrors intersect with clear glass frames in Berlin-based Polish artist Alicja Kwade’s first solo show at 303 Gallery, confusing the sightlines and adding intrigue to the gallery’s stunning new space on 21st Street. In the foreground, Kwade offers a beautiful brass sculpture that suggests the trajectory of a slowing spinning and falling hoop, arresting a sequence of events as a sculpture. (In Chelsea through June 30th).

Alicja Kwade, installation view of ‘Alicja Kwade,’ at 303 Gallery, May 2016.
Alicja Kwade, installation view of ‘Alicja Kwade,’ at 303 Gallery, May 2016.

Kirk Magnus at James Cohan Gallery

East Asian tradition meets folk tale characters in the late Kirk Magnus’s ceramic demon, now part of the artist’s mini-30 year retrospective at James Cohan Gallery. Magnus’ deep knowledge of the world’s ceramic arts and his sense of humor are evident in a variety of vessels crafted with different techniques and featuring an assortment of oddball characters. (On the Lower East Side through June 26th).

Kirk Magnus, Green Guardian, earthenware and colored slips and glazes, 16 ½ x 13 x 13 ½ inches, 2008.
Kirk Magnus, Green Guardian, earthenware and colored slips and glazes, 16 ½ x 13 x 13 ½ inches, 2008.

James Turrell, Juke Green at Pace Gallery

From this single-projection light work from 1968 now on view at Pace Gallery to his stunning transformation of the Guggenheim Rotunda into a light installation in 2013 James Turrell suggest that light can manifest in physical form. Juke Green – glowing an emerald green that suffuses the room with color – conjures a giant gem or a portal into another world. (At Pace Gallery’s 534 West 25th Street location.)

James Turrell, Juke Green, Corner Light Projection, 1968.
James Turrell, Juke Green, Corner Light Projection, 1968.

Peter Linde Busk at Derek Eller Gallery

Whether she is Venus, Sister Ray (a Velvet Underground character), or Penthesilea, the Amazonian Queen, Danish artist Peter Linde Busk’s recurring female character has a jittery, incomplete quality owing to her construction from cast-off and fragmentary materials. Here, Smalti, natural stones, ceramics and more compose a faceless, imperfect creature. (At Derek Eller Gallery on the Lower East Side through June 19th).

Peter Linde Busk, Sister Ray, Smalti, natural stones, fired and glazed ceramics, lithographic stones, glass, plaster, grout, artist oak frame, 94.5 x 59 x 2.75 inches, 2016.
Peter Linde Busk, Sister Ray, Smalti, natural stones, fired and glazed ceramics, lithographic stones, glass, plaster, grout, artist oak frame, 94.5 x 59 x 2.75 inches, 2016.

Rachel Harrison at Greene Naftali Gallery

Last November, a former guard at the Wexner Center for the Arts in Ohio entered the Center shortly after it opened, shooting and spray painting artworks before killing himself. Rachel Harrison’s sculpture ‘Valid Like Salad,’ which features a portrait of Al Pacino in Scarface and indirectly questions who we validate as heroes, was one of the targeted artworks. Now on display at Greene Naftali Gallery, it is a chilling witness to our current epidemic of gun violence. (In Chelsea through June 18th).

Rachel Harrison, detail of ‘Valid Like Salad,’ at Greene Naftali Gallery, May 2016.
Rachel Harrison, detail of ‘Valid Like Salad,’ at Greene Naftali Gallery, May 2016.

Mario Merz, Tavola a Spirale at Sperone Westwater Gallery

Iconic Italian Arte Povera artist Mario Merz demonstrated his ongoing interest in the Fibonacci sequence this spiral table from 1982, now on view at Sperone Westwater Gallery. Merz translates the Fibonacci numbers – in which each number is the sum of the previous two – into a symbolic display of nature’s beautiful bounty. (On the Lower East Side through June 25th).

Mario Merz, Tavola a spirale (Spiral Table), aluminum, glass, fruit, vegetables, laurel branches, tar paper and beeswax, 216 inches diameter, 1982.
Mario Merz, Tavola a spirale (Spiral Table), aluminum, glass, fruit, vegetables, laurel branches, tar paper and beeswax, 216 inches diameter, 1982.

Nyoman Masriadi at Paul Kasmin Gallery

Known for painting muscled men who radiate strength, Indonesian artist Nyoman Masriadi creates a painting seething with tension as two guards interrogate a party-goer who claims to be ‘on the list.’ Each towering painting in the show (this one is over six feet tall) seethes with drama as it pokes fun at various powerful men. (At Paul Kasmin Gallery’s 293 Tenth Ave location through June 18th).

Nyoman Masriadi, Serta Merta, acrylic on canvas, 79 x 118 ½ inches, 2013.
Nyoman Masriadi, Serta Merta, acrylic on canvas, 79 x 118 ½ inches, 2013.

Amanda Nedham in ‘Frida Smoked’ at Invisible Exports

An ostrich, Asiatic black bear and other animals look to be constructed of cigarettes but have actually been crafted from Sculpey and acrylic by Amanda Nedham. A standout in Invisible Export’s group exhibition on the current cultural status of smoking, Nedham equates animals threatened by habitat loss with another endangered species – the smoker. (At Invisible Exports on the Lower East Side through June 19th).

Amanda Nedham, installation view in ‘Frida Smoked,’ sculptures in Sculpey and acrylic, 2016.
Amanda Nedham, installation view in ‘Frida Smoked,’ sculptures in Sculpey and acrylic, 2016.

Lee Mullican at James Cohan Gallery

‘We were dealing with art as a way of mediation,’ explained late West Coast painter Lee Mullican of his pattern-driven, energetic work inspired by Native American art and design. (Seen here in detail.) (At James Cohan Gallery’s Chelsea location through June 18th).

Lee Mullican, (detail) Meditations on a Jazz Passage, oil on canvas, 75 x 75 inches, 1964.
Lee Mullican, (detail) Meditations on a Jazz Passage, oil on canvas, 75 x 75 inches, 1964.

Thornton Dial at Marianne Boesky Gallery

A ghostly face and a walking figure arise out of a tangle of clothing in Thornton Dial’s energetic 2007 work ‘Winter Jackets.’ The late self-taught artist returns to political themes in this show – the first since his passing in January. Here, we ponder the movement of a solitary (uniformed?) individual who strides forward with purpose. (At Marianne Boesky Gallery in Chelsea through June 18th).

Thornton Dial, Winter Jackets, clothing, enamel and spray paint on canvas on wood, 80 x 66 x 2 inches, 2007.
Thornton Dial, Winter Jackets, clothing, enamel and spray paint on canvas on wood, 80 x 66 x 2 inches, 2007.

Richard Tuttle, Titel 3 at Pace Gallery

Richard Tuttle celebrates fifty years of art making with a show of work from his last 26 New York solo shows. ‘Titel 3’ from 1978 typifies Tuttle’s sometimes ephemeral arrangements; a washy drip of brown watercolor on the wall interacts with a crisp, green arch of paper, creating a succinct contrast between chance and deliberate gestures. (At Pace Gallery’s 25th Street location through June 11th)

Richard Tuttle, Titel 3, watercolor and paper, 7 11/16 x 9 7/8 inches, 1978.
Richard Tuttle, Titel 3, watercolor and paper, 7 11/16 x 9 7/8 inches, 1978.

Nadia Haji Omar at Kristen Lorello Gallery

Brooklyn-based, Sri-Lanka raised artist Nadia Haji Omar has found inspiration for her abstract forms in Tamil, Sinhala, Arabic and French letter forms. This untitled dye and acrylic canvas nods to language as much as to natural forms found in the water or under a microscope. (At Kristen Lorello Gallery on the Lower East Side through June 12th).

Nadia Haji Omar, Untitled, acrylic and dye on canvas, 24 x 18 inches, 2016.
Nadia Haji Omar, Untitled, acrylic and dye on canvas, 24 x 18 inches, 2016.

Anton van Dalen at Sargent’s Daughters

Sargent’s Daughters’ homage to Dutch New Yorker Anton van Dalen includes this painting from 1986 featuring behavior psychologist B.F. Skinner, whose pigeon experiments included a plan to train the birds to guide missiles in WWII. Himself a pigeon fancier, van Dalen reimagines the pigeon’s world to fascinating effect. (On the Lower East Side through June 12th).

Anton van Dalen, B.F. Skinner with Project Pigeon, oil on canvas, 48 x 64 inches, 1986.
Anton van Dalen, B.F. Skinner with Project Pigeon, oil on canvas, 48 x 64 inches, 1986.

Sigmar Polke at David Zwirner Gallery

Iconic German artist Sigmar Polke created this painting the year after a trip that took him around Asia, from Papua New Guinea to Thailand and beyond. Painted on checked fabric, Polke’s hovering, calligraphic mountains compete with a rectangular pattern of curving black splashes, creating an almost mythical realm at center. (At David Zwirner Gallery’s 20th Street location through June 25th).

Sigmar Polke, Magnetische Landschaft (Magnetic Landscape), acrylic and iron mica on fabric, 116 5/8  x114 ½ inches, 1982.
Sigmar Polke, Magnetische Landschaft (Magnetic Landscape), acrylic and iron mica on fabric, 116 5/8 x114 ½ inches, 1982.

Meg Webster, Solar Grow Room at Paula Cooper

Meg Webster’s environmentally friendly project at Paula Cooper Gallery uses a solar-powered electrical system to power grow lights that maintain planters full of herbs, lettuce, flowers and more. Mylar-covered walls reflect light and emphasize how unnatural Webster’s carefully maintained, secluded slice of nature is. (In Chelsea through June 24th).

Meg Webster, Solar Grow Room, 4 raised wooden planters with moss, grass, flowers and other vegetation, off-grid solar powered electrical system, grow lights, mylar covered walls, each planter 42 x 50 x 50 inches, 2016.
Meg Webster, Solar Grow Room, 4 raised wooden planters with moss, grass, flowers and other vegetation, off-grid solar powered electrical system, grow lights, mylar covered walls, each planter 42 x 50 x 50 inches, 2016.

Naotaka Hiro at Brennan and Griffin

LA artist Naotaka Hiro’s fragmentary, cast self-portraits question what we do and don’t see from the exterior. ‘Big Question’ also appeals our sense of hearing as the artist demonstratively takes hold of his ear. (At Brennan & Griffin on the Lower East Side through June 5th).

Naotaka Hiro, Big Question, bronze, steel stand, 40 x 24 x 12 inches, unique, 2016.
Naotaka Hiro, Big Question, bronze, steel stand, 40 x 24 x 12 inches, unique, 2016.

Anish Kapoor, She Wolf at Barbara Gladstone Gallery

Anish Kapoor’s monumental sculpture ‘She Wolf’ appears to be tipping over under its own weight, or deliberately leaning to the gallery floor from its marble pedestal. Given the title, giant quasi-oval shapes suggest teats, though a covering of soil over the structure’s rocky forms ties it to the earth, creating a kind of living geology. (At Barbara Gladstone Gallery’s 21st Street location through June 11th).

Anish Kapoor, She Wolf, resin, earth and marble, 107 x 355 x 209 inches, 2016.
Anish Kapoor, She Wolf, resin, earth and marble, 107 x 355 x 209 inches, 2016.

Josh Blackwell at 11R

New York artist Josh Blackwell morphs a plastic carrier bag into a wonder of colorful stitching in a free-standing sculpture that’s a poster child for reuse and recycling. (At 11R on the Lower East Side through June 5th).

Josh Blackwell, Neveruses (Unprincipled), plastic, wool, silk, paper, wire, foam, 15.5 x 15 x 4 inches, 2016.
Josh Blackwell, Neveruses (Unprincipled), plastic, wool, silk, paper, wire, foam, 15.5 x 15 x 4 inches, 2016.

Dora Budor at Ramiken Crucible

Inspired by a sculpture in a David Cronenberg sci-fi horror film, Dora Budor’s enormous head houses a seating area – a lounge for contemplating the life of the mind and how it can be controlled. (At Ramiken Crucible through June 5th).

Dora Budor, installation view of ‘Ephemerol’ at Ramiken Crucible, through June 5th.
Dora Budor, installation view of ‘Ephemerol’ at Ramiken Crucible, through June 5th.

Willy Le Maitre at Canada NYC

How do you make a 2-D image that is also a time-based artwork? Willy Le Maitre’s answer is to include multiple images in a lenticular print, so that, for example, a children’s play area runs together with icy branches and a glowing screen. Le Maitre explains that as viewers move back and forth before a piece, they use their eyes and their memory of what they’ve just seen to complete the picture. (At Canada NYC on the Lower East Side through June 5th).

Willy Le Maitre, particulated playground, 3D lenticular print, 48 x 36 inches, 2016.
Willy Le Maitre, particulated playground, 3D lenticular print, 48 x 36 inches, 2016.

Radcliffe Bailey, Before Cisero at Jack Shainman

Crushed green glass spills from a crate like a magical substance while the color echoes in the painted palms behind a confident young man wielding a pool cue in this sculptural installation by Atlanta artist Radcliffe Bailey. Is there an alchemy in the game of pool for this player? (At Jack Shainman Gallery in Chelsea through June 11th.)

Radcliffe Bailey, Before Cisero, mixed media installation including a framed photograph printed on aluminum, a pool stick, a crate and crushed green glass, 91 ½ x 64 x 47 inches, 2016.
Radcliffe Bailey, Before Cisero, mixed media installation including a framed photograph printed on aluminum, a pool stick, a crate and crushed green glass, 91 ½ x 64 x 47 inches, 2016.

Josh Kline, Cast Sculptures at 47 Canal

Josh Kline’s stunning new show at Lower East Side gallery 47 Canal imagines a world in which technological advances have created mass unemployment. Carts with bottles and cans rendered in flesh tones suggest a sinister equivalence between recyclables and bodies that have been rendered redundant by ‘progress.’ (Through June 12th).

Josh Kline, The Sound of Severance, cast sculptures in silicone, granny cart, polyethylene bags, plastic zip tie, rubber, plexiglas, LEDs, and power source, 40.5 x 24 x 23 inches, 2016.
Josh Kline, The Sound of Severance, cast sculptures in silicone, granny cart, polyethylene bags, plastic zip tie, rubber, plexiglas, LEDs, and power source, 40.5 x 24 x 23 inches, 2016.

Brian Tolle at CRG Gallery

Abraham Lincoln’s vision for the U.S. literally explodes from his eyes in Brian Tolle’s sculpture of Lincoln with the text from his inaugural addresses bursting in red, white and blue from his eyes. The sculpture is part of a show featuring U.S. presidents from Washington to Obama with attributes that relate to their roles in the country’s history. (At CRG Gallery on the Lower East Side through June 12th).

Brian Tolle, No. 16, mixed media, 71 x 45 x 60 inches, mixed media, 2012-16.
Brian Tolle, No. 16, mixed media, 71 x 45 x 60 inches, mixed media, 2012-16.