Dorothy Grebenak at Allan Stone Projects

This hooked rug manhole cover by the late Dorothy Grebenak is a handmade homage to a ubiquitous sight on New York City streets. Completely at odds with its cold, hard real-world counterpart, this textile manhole cover takes Pop art in a homey direction. (At Allan Stone Projects in Chelsea through April 22nd.)

Dorothy Grebenak, Con Edison Co, 31 ½ x 31 ½ inches, wool, c 1964.

Turiya Magadlela at Jack Shainman Gallery

A colorful bloom of pantyhose creates South African artist Turiya Magadlela’s palette in this 2-D piece that brings to mind modernist grid systems and consciousness of the female body. (At Chelsea’s Jack Shainman Gallery through April 22nd).

Turiya Magadlela, iMaid Ka Lova ne Maid ye Nja! (Lova’s maid meets the Dog’s maid), nylon and cotton pantyhose and sealant on canvas, 59 1/16 x 59 1/16 inches, 2016.

Karin Sander in ‘Serialities’ at Hauser & Wirth Gallery

Karin Sander, early adopter of 3D printing, still manages to make her mini-portraits look futuristic, as in this sculpture that makes her look as if she’s shimmering like a mirage or a hologram. (At Hauser & Wirth Gallery in Chelsea through April 8th).

Karin Sander, Karin Sander 1:5, 3D color scan of the actual person polychrome 3D printing, black and white, plaster material, 33 cm/13 inches, 2015.

Kristina Lee at Thierry Goldberg Gallery

Faces from the past materialize on young New York artist Kristina Lee’s canvas, evoking different character types from an elongated Emily Dickinson-like woman at the rear to the thoughtful girl sleuth in front of her. Other individuals provoke contemplation with their more ambiguous natures and odd features. (At Thierry Goldberg Gallery on the Lower East Side through April 2nd).

Kristina Lee, Spectators, oil on canvas, 36 x 26 inches, 2016.

Yoonmi Nam in ‘New Prints’ at the International Print Center New York

It’ll be no problem to ‘Please recycle this bag,’ in this case, as artwork. Yoonmi Nam’s plastic carrier bags are in fact lithographs on gampi paper containing not plastic food containers but glazed slipcast porcelain. They subvert the notion of disposability powerfully. (At the International Print Center’s ‘New Prints 2017/Winter’ exhibition through April 1st).

Yoonmi Nam, Take Out (Thank You for Your Patronage), lithograph on gampi paper and glazed slipcast porcelain. Edition: unique, 2016. And Take Out (Thank You Gracias), 2015.