Terry Winters at Matthew Marks Gallery

From plant life to outer space, New York painter Terry Winter derives his dynamic abstract paintings from patterns and forms in the natural world. Here, ‘Skin’ suggests both an exotic lizard species and an abstracted architecture. (At Matthew Marks Gallery in Chelsea through Dec 23rd).

Terry Winters, Skin, oil, wax and resin on linen, 60 x 45 inches, 2016.
Terry Winters, Skin, oil, wax and resin on linen, 60 x 45 inches, 2016.

 

Mike Kelly at Hauser & Wirth Gallery

Mike Kelly makes a tongue-in-cheek jab at determining value in art by bringing two forms into a kind of balance in this pairing at Hauser & Wirth’s Upper East Side space. Part of Kelly’s Memory Ware series, for which he replicated a popular folk art form by covering objects and flat surfaces with beads, shells and other small keepsake items, this sculpture suggests that the force of personality on the right balances the abundance of work on the left. (Through Dec 23rd).

Mike Kelly, Balanced by Mass and Personification, mixed media, 60 ½ x 25 x 15 inches, 2001.
Mike Kelly, Balanced by Mass and Personification, mixed media, 60 ½ x 25 x 15 inches, 2001.

Augustus Sherman at Steven Kasher Gallery

An Ellis Island clerk from 1892 to 1925, Augustus Sherman was uniquely positioned to document immigration in all its diversity. Among his photographic portraits of Scottish boys in kilts and Romanian shepherds, this shot of a Russian German family is a standout as each family member stoically waits first for the camera and later, for a new life in North Dakota. (At Steven Kasher Gallery in Chelsea through Dec 23rd).

Augustus Sherman, Jakob Mittelstadt and Family, Russian German, ex SS ‘Pretoria.’ Admitted to go to Kullen, ND, May 9, 1905, vintage gelatin silver print, printed ca. 1905, 4 ¾ x 6 ½ inches, typed inscription “German family.”
Augustus Sherman, Jakob Mittelstadt and Family, Russian German, ex SS ‘Pretoria.’ Admitted to go to Kullen, ND, May 9, 1905, vintage gelatin silver print, printed ca. 1905, 4 ¾ x 6 ½ inches, typed inscription “German family.”

Richard Hughes at Anton Kern Gallery

British artist Richard Hughes makes his own t-shirts…out of paper pulp in the case of this low-key garment. Deliberate misspellings on the shirts, and here, a disregard for even including a message, take a whatever attitude to a new level. (At Anton Kern Gallery in Chelsea through Dec 22nd).

Richard Hughes, Some Werds, paper pulp, 13 x 12 inches, 2016.
Richard Hughes, Some Werds, paper pulp, 13 x 12 inches, 2016.

Rob Pruitt at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise

Energized by the inauguration of President Obama in 2008, New York artist-provocateur Rob Pruitt started painting a picture of the president daily, sourcing his images from the news. All paintings completed up to the start of the show are included at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, where this unusual monument to the nation’s leader and to Pruitt’s endurance will be on view through the end of the week. (On the Lower East Side through Dec 18th).

Rob Pruitt, installation view of ‘The Obama Paintings,’ at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise on the Lower East Side, November 2016.
Rob Pruitt, installation view of ‘The Obama Paintings,’ at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise on the Lower East Side, November 2016.