Clive Smith at Marc Straus Gallery

Once so abundant in the U.S. that their flocks sounded like thunder as they darkened the sky, passenger pigeons were hunted to extinction by the early 20th century. The final survivor, Martha, died in the Cincinnati Zoo over one hundred years ago, but inspired New York-based British realist painter Clive Smith’s painting of a commemorative plate, now on view at Marc Straus Gallery on the Lower East Side. Titled ‘Beak, Claw, Hand, Brush,’ this and other works in Smith’s series equate the labor of beak and hand, soberly suggesting that our own future may go the way of the passenger pigeon. (On view through Feb 9th).

Clive Smith, Beak, Claw, Hand, Brush, (1.9.1914), oil on linen, 54 x 71 inches, 2017.

Katherine Bernhardt at Canada New York

There’s trouble in the tropics in Katherine Bernhardt’s latest solo show of pattern paintings at Canada New York. Watermelons appear alongside toilet paper, birds in flight next to cigarettes as nature contrasts man-made products in paintings with ominous titles like ‘Climate Change.’ Here, in ‘Dole + Darth Vader,’ the Sith lord is surrounded by Dole bananas, linking a fictional face of evil to a company criticized for damaging the environment and harming workers. (On view on the Lower East Side through Feb 11th).

Katherine Bernhardt, Dole + Darth Vader, acrylic and spray paint on canvas, 72 x 60 inches, 2017.

Leigh Ruple at Morgan Lehman Gallery

A chain link fence rises like steam before a fiery sunset in Leigh Ruple’s ‘Metropolitan Avenue,’ an otherwise nondescript industrial scene turned electric by intense light, bands of color and prowling cats. (On view at Morgan Lehman Gallery in Chelsea through Feb 10th).

Leigh Ruple, Metropolitan Avenue, oil on canvas, 66 h x 72 w inches, 2017.

William King at Derek Eller Gallery

With their squat bodies, long legs and tiny heads, William King’s sculpted caricatures of important men or at least self-important ones are a highlight of Derek Eller Gallery’s current group show. Arms akimbo, each seems to demand to know what’s going on, as if they don’t quite approve of the work of nearby paintings on clothing by Annabeth Marks, Annie Pearlman’s vivid abstractions and Rachel Eulena Williams’ stitched canvases. (On view on the Lower East Side through Feb 11th.)

William King, Red and Black, vinyl, aluminum, 73 x 37 x 17 inches, c. 1985.

Demetrius Oliver at Klaus von Nichtssagend Gallery

Like Rachel Whiteread’s resin water tower, installed on a New York rooftop in the late 90s, Demetrius Oliver’s cast resin turbines exalt the humble devices used to harness our most precious natural resources. In combination with other pieces in ‘Pneumato,’ his current solo show at Klaus von Nichtssagend Gallery, Oliver considers the natural world through everyday objects. (On view through Feb 11th).

Demetrius Oliver, Atmospheric I, II and II, cast resin, steel pedestal, 51 ½ x 15 x 15 inches, 2015.

Melvin Edwards in ‘Sidelined’ at Galerie Lelong

As a young man, Melvin Edwards chose a career in art over football, but explains that the physicality of the sport remained in his sculpture.  He explores a more critical consideration of the game in Goal Line Stance, a steel sculpture from 2017 that stands out in Galerie Lelong’s current show – an exhibition prompted by NFL players’ protests against social injustice (On view through Feb 17th in Chelsea).

Melvin Edwards, Goal Line Stance, 2017, welded steel, 15.25 x 11.5 x 14.5 inches, 2017.

Zach Bruder at Magenta Plains

Medieval-looking characters converse at table in Zach Bruder’s arrestingly anachronistic painting, which pictures the Middle Ages in an abstracted or folksy 20th century painting style. Substituting detail and realism for expressive forms, Bruder cloaks a familiar-seeming scene in an alien appearance. (On view at Magenta Plains on the Lower East Side through Feb 11th).

Zach Bruder, Slur A Confidence I, acrylic and flashe on canvas on panel, 14h x 11w inches, 2017.

Tom Wesselmann at Gagosian Gallery

Still life paintings by Tom Wesselmann at Gagosian Gallery are literally the biggest show of the moment in Chelsea. At over 27 feet long, this arrangement of sun glasses, lipstick and more from 1973 was meant to represent the objects a woman might leave by a bedside table. (On view through Feb 24th).

Tom Wesselmann, installation view of “Still Life #60, oil on canvas, six free-standing sections, 122 ¼ x 333 x 86 ½ inches, 1973

Kelley Johnson at Freight and Volume Gallery

Miami-based artist Kelley Johnson’s latest solo show opens with 2-D paintings and advances to artworks that literally fly off the wall thanks to PVC rods zinging outward. This piece, titled ‘Wall Kite,’ is grounded at the moment, but appears to be ready to launch upward. (On view at Freight and Volume Gallery on the Lower East Side through Feb 4th).

Kelley Johnson, Wall Kite, flash and acrylic on panel with PVC rods, 77h x 64w x 34d inches, 2017.

Addie Wagenknecht at Bitforms

Yves Klein’s use of nude female models – daubed in his signature blue paint – as live paintbrushes increases in political incorrectness as the years go by. Now, Addie Wagenknecht has joined the ranks of artists who’ve responded with their own takes on Klein’s iconic objectification. Engaging a Roomba to paint as it skirted her nude body, Wagenknecht creates expressionist canvases with an algorithm and robot. (On view at Bitforms on the Lower East Side through Feb 11th).

Addie Wagenknecht, self-portrait – snow on cedar (winter), IKB dry pigment and resin on canvas, 80 x 90 inches, 2017.

Cheryl Donegan in ‘Alan Shields Project’ at Van Doren Waxter

Late artist Alan Shields was no stranger to the sewing machine or to using canvas to construct colorful abstractions. In an homage exhibition that makes connections between Shields’ work and that of younger colleagues, Cheryl Donegan’s track suits manipulate clothing prints, which are then printed onto new garments, complicating the path from idea to product. (On view at Van Doren Waxter on the Lower East Side through Feb 24th).

Cheryl Donegan, Extra Layer Tracksuits (Peacock) and (Squares), Size S, nylon material with poly trim, made in cooperation with Print All Over Me, (order from paom.com), 2016/17.

Jeff Koons in ‘David Zwirner: 25 Years’

Featuring live flowering plants, Jeff Koons’ huge mirror-polished stainless steel bluebird not only represents nature but brings it into the gallery. It’s part of David Zwirner Gallery’s 25-year anniversary exhibition, which includes work by many of the world’s best-known western contemporary artists and makes clear the scale of the gallery’s art world involvement. (On view at 537 West 20th Street and all Zwirner locations in Chelsea through Feb 17th.)

Jeff Koons, Bluebird Planter, mirror-polished stainless steel with transparent color coating and live flowering plants, 82 ½ x 115 x 41 ½ inches, 2010-2016.

Judy Chicago at Salon94

An all-powerful, muscular man subjugates woman and destroys nature in a series of potent paintings by Judy Chicago from 1984, now on view at Salon94. His invincible nature comes into question, however, in this painting from a triptych titled ‘Rainbow Man,’ in which he strains to bend a rainbow that snaps out of his hands and boomerangs back into shape. More than thirty years after being painted, the artist’s warning has only become more relevant to contemporary attitudes to the earth and the environment. (On view on the Lower East Side through March 3rd).

Judy Chicago, (one panel of the triptych) Rainbow Man, sprayed acrylic and oil on Belgian linen, 108 x 252 inches, 1984.

Judith Henry, Casting Call at Bravin Lee

Titled ‘Casting Call,’ Judith Henry’s installation of 300 small abstract sculptures look like mini-cobbled together robots or tools. Featuring eyes or resembling cameras, some meet our gaze; others appear to be small totems, like the figure at front here, resembling Shiva surrounded by a ring of fire. (On view at Bravin Lee in Chelsea through Feb 17th).

Judith Henry, installation view at Bravin Lee Gallery, Chelsea, January, 2018.

Scott Alario at Kristen Lorello Gallery

Art can be playful but doesn’t often involve play; Scott Alario’s images of an alien invasion – enacted with his young son – result in photos like this arresting image of a Star Wars limited edition cereal box used as avatar and shield. (On view at Kristen Lorello Gallery on the Lower East Side through Jan 27th).

Scott Alario, The Sugar Awakens, dye sublimation print, 32 x 24 inches, 2007.

Victoria Gitman at Garth Greenan Gallery

Vintage fur handbags by Victoria Gitman amaze with their abundant color and detail at Garth Greenan Gallery in Chelsea. With the contours of the purses cropped, Gitman’s arrangements resemble color field painting or Peruvian feather work. (On view through Feb 17th).

Victoria Gitman, Untitled, oil on board, 6 ¼ x 8 inches, 2017.

Luca Campigotto at Laurence Miller Gallery

Italian photographer Luca Campigotto’s cityscapes are bold and bright, though they’re shot after dark. Humans don’t feature much in the images yet our presence is felt through ubiquitous lights left on for safety, decoration, advertising and nighttime living. Here, Hong Kong glows with the intensity of over seven million lives being led and lit below. (On view at Laurence Miller Gallery through Feb 24th).

Luca Campigotto, Hong Kong, 55 x 73 ¾ inches, pure pigment print, 2016.

Serge Alain Nitegeka at Marianne Boeksy Gallery

Obstacle courses constructed from lengths of black wood are a recurring part of Johannesburg-based artist Serge Alain Nitegeka’s practice, forcing gallery visitors to reconsider their environment while ducking and bending through the gallery. Having lived and moved often as a refugee during his childhood, Nitegeka connects his own political experience with the gallery visitor’s spatial experience. (On view at Marianne Boesky Gallery in Chelsea through Feb 24th).

Serge Alain Nitegeka, installation view at Marianne Boesky Gallery, January, 2018.

Wang Ningde at Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery

Wang Ningde’s ‘Form of Light’ images, currently on view at Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery in Chelsea, appear to be photos but fool the eye. From straight on, thin strips of photographic film disappear and visitors see only the projection of images underneath, arranged via projection software to synch with the gallery’s light sources. (On view through Feb 17th).

Wang Ningde, Thicket No. 4, transparency film, acrylic, honeycomb aluminum board, 78 x 54 ½ inches, 2017.

Stephen Shore at 303 Gallery

The Museum of Modern Art’s current retrospective of Stephen Shore’s photography lauds his ‘poetics of the ordinary.’ Shot in Montana, though not obviously linked to a particular location, this composition at 303 Gallery encourages viewers to find aesthetic interest in unexpected times and places. (On view in Chelsea through Feb 17th).

Stephen Shore, installation view of Three Forks, Montana, August 6, 2017, pigment print, 64 x 48 inches, printed 2017.

Gordon Parks at Jack Shainman Gallery

Granted access to Nation of Islam leadership and communities in 1963, Life photographer Gordon Parks shot remarkable images including this portrait of women’s leader Ethel Sharrieff. Now on view at Jack Shainman Gallery’s 24th Street location, the arresting show overviews selections from Parks’ lesser-known yet powerful series. (On view through Feb 10th).

Gordon Parks, Ethel Sharrieff, Chicago, Illinois, gelatin silver print, 20 x 16 inches, 1963.

Brian Tolle at C24 Gallery

Levittown – a post WWII house development of 17,500 homes on Long Island seen from an aerial view on the gallery wall – has become synonymous with the crushing conformity of the suburbs. Brian Tolle’s carefully researched replica of the Levittown Cape Cod style house is realized in platinum silicon rubber and rests on a beanbag, armchair, kids toys and other typical items from American homes. In the gallery, Tolle’s deflated forms suggesting the melting away of past attitudes and lifestyles. (On view at C24 Gallery in Chelsea through Feb 27th).

Brian Tolle, Go Ask Alice, found vinyl bean bag chair, platinum silicone rubber, 24 x 56 x 56 inches, 2009.

Byron Kim at James Cohan Gallery

The weeks turn to years in Byron Kim’s diaristic notes, jotted on his paintings of the sky on successive Sundays since 2001. The towers fall, Obama is elected president, Kim worries over his kids, ponders his work and enjoys an active social life – all set against the backdrop of shifting weather. (On view at James Cohan Gallery in Chelsea through Feb 17th).

Byron Kim, installation view of ‘Sunday Paintings, 1/7/01 to 2/11/18’ at James Cohan Gallery in Chelsea through Feb 17th.

Mark di Suvero, Eppur si Muove at Paula Cooper

“And yet it moves” is the translated titled of this new monumental steel sculpture by Mark di Suvero, referring to Galileo’s 17th century assertion (despite pressure from the Inquisition) that the earth is not stable. Likewise, this formidably weighty sculpture looks fixed but will rock on its axis if set in motion. (On view at Paula Cooper Gallery in Chelsea through Feb 3rd.)

Mark di Suvero, Eppur si Muove, stainless steel, 10.5 x 28 x 12 feet, 2017 – 2017.

 

 

Barry McGee at Cheim & Read

From papier-mâché to paintings on panel, Barry McGee’s exhibition of recent work at Cheim & Read is packed with a superabundance of objects bearing McGee’s signature patterns and logos. In the back, a stack of surfboards is typical of the show’s visual overload, speaking to McGee’s boundless creative impulse. (On view in Chelsea through Feb 17th.)

Barry McGee, Untitled, surfboards, dimensions variable, 2017.

Tomas Sanchez at Marlborough Contemporary

Nature is vast, mankind is tiny in Cuban painter Tomas Sanchez’s landscapes. Here, a solitary cloud patrols a wooded terrain conspicuously absent of humans. (On view at Marlborough Contemporary through Feb 10th).

Tomas Sanchez, Thought Cloud, acrylic on canvas, 78 x 98 inches, 2017.

Beatrice Caracciolo at Paula Cooper Gallery

Paris-based Italian artist Beatrice Caracciolo’s ‘Tramontana’ refers in its title to a cold north wind, which appears to cause a landscape to hunker down in this expressive ink on paper artwork. (On view at Paula Cooper Gallery in Chelsea through Feb 3rd).

Beatrice Caracciolo, Tramontana, water soluble ink on paper, 58 x 65 x 1 inches, 2017.

Michael Stamm at DC Moore Gallery

Though each painting in his first solo show at DC Moore Gallery is based on the torso of an eccentrically outfitted individual, Michael Stamm’s new paintings are remarkable diverse and inventive. Inspired by meetings with his therapist – with whom he avoided eye contact – Stamm’s headless characters offer enticing sartorial clues to identity. Here, the subject’s sweater contrasts a mountainous landscape above with licking flames below, connected by the French emblem translated, ‘it is established by God’s decree.’ (On view in Chelsea through Feb 3rd).

Michael Stamm, Saint Sweater, oil, acrylic and flashe on linen, 28 x 21 inches, 2017.

Kiyoshi Nakagami at Ameringer, McEnery, Yohe

Kiyoshi Nakagami’s otherworldly abstractions, dramatically contrasting light and dark and rendered in pigment and gold dust, suggest a moment of cosmic creation or the beginning of an alien encounter. Scale and subject matter are hard to discern but the impact of Nakagami’s meticulously laid gold lines is profound. (On view at Ameringer McEnery Yohe gallery in Chelsea at the gallery’s temporary location on 19th Street).

Kiyoshi Nakagami, detail of Untitled, pigment and gold dust on linen, 72 x 72 inches, 2016.

Carla Klein at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery

What can a painting do that a photograph can’t? Carla Klein’s latest paintings, created from photos taken on visits to European greenhouses, set themselves apart by making familiar spaces seem strange. Frames and panels in the background look excessive, as if new spaces were propagating along with the plants. (On view at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery through Feb 15th).

Carla Klein, Untitled, oil on canvas, 59 x 106 ¼ x 1 inches, oil on canvas, 2017.

Odili Donald Odita Paintings at Jack Shainman

Celebration is a synonym for freedom in Odili Donald Odita’s vibrant abstract paintings, canvases that act with joyous vitality against forces that would quiet and crush identity. (On view at Jack Shainman Gallery in Chelsea through Feb 10th).

Odili Donald Odita, Burning Sun, acrylic on canvas, 92 x 70 x 1 5/8 inches, 2017.

Hiroshi Senju at Sundaram Tagore Gallery

Sublime images of cliff faces by Japanese artist Hiroshi Senju (as seen here in detail) begin as mulberry washi paper, sourced from a specialist paper maker who can only make the paper in winter. After creating texture by hand-rumpling the large paper sheets, Senju uses handmade brushes and natural and synthetic pigments to render the natural world as apparition. (On view at Sundaram Tagore Gallery in Chelsea through Jan 13th).

Hiroshi Senju, detail of At World’s End #11, acrylic and natural pigments on Japanese mulberry paper mounted on board, 63.8 x 51.3 inches, 2017.

Robyn O’Neil at Susan Inglett Gallery

The visionary landscapes of Joseph Yoakum (1890-1972) and Robyn O’Neil (b. 1977) are Spartan and stylized, turning familiar natural forms of mountains, trees and more into apocalyptic omens. In this detail of a drawing by O’Neil, America’s national bird dominates a huddled crowd and an inhospitable landscape. (On view at Susan Inglett Gallery through Jan 27th).

Robyn O’Neil, detail of The Everywhere Citadel, graphite on paper, 38 ½ x 60 ¼ inches, 2016.

Arturo Herrera at Sikkema Jenkins & Co.

Large new paintings by Arturo Herrera suggest movement across the canvas, as if wind or gravity partnered with the Berlin-based painter to drag earthy, autumn tones over a now partially obscured pattern. Usually involving half-seen layers, Herrera’s works continue to obscure and reveal. (At Sikkema Jenkins & Co. through Jan 20th).

Arturo Herrera, Untitled, acrylic on canvas, 86.625 x 74.75 inches, acrylic on canvas, 2017.

Michael Eastman at Edwynn Houk Gallery

Known for photographing opulent buildings from Italy to Havana, Michael Eastman’s latest series focuses on century-old neoclassical interiors in Buenos Aires. This slightly less extravagant but no less gorgeous college stairwell is the picture of tranquility in cool, blue and green-toned tile. That it is without students suggests timing or an oblique reference to something more sinister in Argentina’s past. (On view at Edwynn Houk Gallery in midtown through Jan 20th).

Michael Eastman, Colegio Passage, Buenos Aires, chromogenic print, 48 x 60 inches, 2017.

Elizabeth Catlett at Burning in Water

In her late 80s, late American sculptor and printmaker Elizabeth Catlett created this arresting print, now a highlight of her mini-retrospective at Burning in Water gallery in Chelsea. Here, Catlett synthesizes influences from African art, European modernism and more in a portrait that feels both cutting edge and connected with early 20th century avant-garde art. (On view through Feb 3rd).

Elizabeth Catlett, Black Girl, Lithograph on paper, framed, 22 x 15 inches, 2004.

Cai Dongdong at Klein Sun Gallery

Known for making alterations to documentary photography in work that questions both history and how we consume photography, Cai Dongdong reframes a shot of guerrillas on Lake Honghu at Klein Sun Gallery. Armed fighters contrast the lake’s tranquil beauty in a spot that saw conflict during China’s civil war. (On view in Chelsea through Jan 6th).

Cai Dongdong, The Guerrilla on Honghu Lake, gelatin silver print, wood, 63 x 55 1/8 x 14 9/16 inches, 2017.

Sage Sohier at Foley Gallery

Photographer Sage Sohier looks ambushed by her former-model mother and her sister, who make Sohier up with gusto in this family portrait. Our sympathy is tempered by mom’s and sis’s smiles, but as Sohier stages beauty treatments and time at home in her mother’s company, viewers are prompted to consider the role of beauty and appearances in Sohier’s life and our own. (On view at Foley Gallery on the Lower East Side through Jan 7th).

Sage Sohier, Mum and Laine making me up, Washington D.C., archival pigment print, 28h x 33.75w, 2004.

Brent Wadden Abstractions at Mitchell-Innes and Nash

Working without training on a handloom, Brent Wadden crafts wonky abstractions in pleasingly complementary colors and dizzying black and white lines. (On view at Mitchell-Innes and Nash’s Madison Ave location through Jan 5th).

Brent Wadden, Untitled, hand woven fibers, wool, cotton, and acrylic on canvas, 71 7/8 x 70 7/8 inches, 2017.

Billy Copley at Edward Thorp Gallery

If a hard-edged abstract painting liberated itself from the stretcher and tottered off, it might look something like Billy Copley’s acrylic on paper sculpture, which appears to be blowing streamers for the new year. (On view at Edward Thorp Gallery in Chelsea through Jan 27th).

Billy Copley, The Rosewater Dish, acrylic and prepared paper on formed paper, 30 ½h x 36w x 23d inches, 2017.

Andrea Grutzner at Julie Saul Gallery

Andrea Grutzner turns framed excerpts from the built environment into surprising and colorful abstractions; here, in six images from her Tanztee series, amid wildly patterned clothes, Grutzner builds a structure from the arms and hands of dancers at a tea dance in rural Germany. (On view at Julie Saul Gallery through Feb 3rd).

Andrea Grutzner, Tanztee #3, 6, 15, 4, 8, and 1, chromogenic print, 17 ½ x 23 ½ inches, 2012-15.

Richard Avedon at Pace Gallery

Commissioned by Harper’s Bazaar in 1961, Richard Avedon photographed over thirty weddings at New York City’s Town Hall, recording hopeful beginnings. These images became the opening photos in his 1964 collaboration with James Baldwin, ‘Nothing Personal,’ a photographic portrait of the USA in which joy gives way to darker social realities. Now on view at Pace Gallery, the series is stunningly relevant to contemporary life. (On view at Pace Gallery’s 24th Street location through Jan 13th).

Richard Avedon, Wedding of Mr and Mrs Joseph Sacca, City Hall, New York City, May 6, 1961, vintage gelatin silver print, image: 16 x 15 ¾ inches.

Cleverson Oliveira at Miyako Yoshinaga

Rainy days aren’t what they seem in Brazilian artist Cleverson Oliveira’s world. Look closely at this detail of a vine-filled, wetland landscape and the raindrops on the surface of the image transform into black and white oblong shapes resembling tiny heads with towering hairdos. (On view at Miyako Yoshinaga in Chelsea through Jan 6th).

Cleverson Oliveira, (detail of) Untitled 201, 36 x 55 inches, graphite and permanent marker on canvas, 2017.

Bosco Sodi at Paul Kasmin Gallery

Bosco Sodi’s hand-formed ceramic cubes at Paul Kasmin Gallery are new but appear weathered, evoking mankind’s ancient and ongoing relationship with clay. Behind, a mixed media painting continues Sodi’s signature practice of mixing pigment, sawdust, glue and other materials into an explosive, vividly colored abstraction. (On view at Paul Kasmin Gallery through Jan 6th).

Bosco Sodi, Untitled, clay, 31 ½ x 31 ½ x 31 ½ inches, 2017 (foreground) and Untitled, mixed media over linen, 78 ¾ x 110 ¼ inches, 2017 (background).

John Mason at Albertz Benda

Like models strutting down a catwalk, a row of abstracted ceramic figures by nonagenarian LA artist John Mason exude confidence and style. Recalling Duchamp’s Nude Descending a Staircase, Brancusi’s sculpture and Lygia Clark’s bichos they combine Cubist form, Futurist dynamism with a suggestion of moveability often alien to ceramics. (On view at Albertz Benda Gallery in Chelsea through Jan 13th).

John Mason, Figure, Spring Green, ceramic, 63 x 24 x 21 inches, 2014.

Elizabeth Murray at Pace Gallery

This 1989-90 pair of shoes by Elizabeth Murray features chimney-like shapes and keyholes, bringing to mind two houses (representing a couple?) bound by a tangled set of orange laces.  On loan from MoMA, ‘Dis Pair’ is a highlight of Pace Gallery’s exhibition of Murray’s raucous, street-inspired painting from the 80s. (On view in Chelsea through Jan 13th).

Elizabeth Murray, Dis Pair, oil and plastic cap on canvas (two parts), 10’ 2 ½ inches x 10’ 9 ¼ inches, 1989-90. Installation at Pace Gallery, Nov – Dec 2017.

Derrick Adams at Tilton Gallery

Tiny roads bisect the anonymous subject of Derrick Adams painted collage, suggesting that this character is on an unswerving journey. Plaid fabric maps a city grid and African textiles nod to the heritage of the woman in this vibrant portrait of an individual in the driver’s seat of her own life. (On view at Tilton Gallery on the Upper East Side through Jan 6th).

Derrick Adams, Figure in the Urban Landscape 3, acrylic, graphite, ink, fabric on paper collage, grip tape and model cars on wood panel, 48 ½ x 48 ½ x 2 1/8 inches, 2017.

Ruby Rumie at Nohra Haime Gallery

When Columbian artist Ruby Rumie chanced to meet Cartagena street vendor Dominga Torres Tehran, she commenced a series of strikingly beautiful portraits now on view at Nohra Haime Gallery in Chelsea. Titled ‘Weaving Streets,’ the show celebrates the communities of women who sell fish, fruit and other foods on the streets. Wearing understated white dresses, the women’s unique identities and natural beauty are the focus of this remarkable body of work. (On view in Chelsea through Jan 6th).

Ruby Rumie, installation view of ‘Weaving Streets’ at Nohra Haime Gallery, Dec 2017.

Adam McEwen at Gagosian Gallery

Adam McEwen’s escalator stairs, disassembled and scattered on Gagosian Gallery’s floor are readymades related to movement, though unlike Duchamp’s spinnable bike wheel mounted on a stool, they’re solidly in place. Dedicated to mass transit, their egalitarian nature contrasts an upside down image of a stretch limo, printed on cellulose sponge and hung on the wall behind. (On view at Gagosian Gallery’s 980 Madison Ave 5th floor gallery).

Adam McEwen, Assembly, escalator steps, variable dimensions, 2014.

Giuseppe Penone at Marian Goodman Gallery

Giuseppe Penone’s 1985 branch, carved from the block of fir wood to which it still belongs, posits artist as creator and forces a comparison between human effort and natural growth. (At Marian Goodman Gallery on 57th Street through Dec 22nd).

Giuseppe Penone, Albero di 3,50 metri, fir wood, 140 1/8 x 11 1/8 x 6 ¼ inches, 1985.

Anna Conway at Fergus McCaffrey

In the corner of a cavernous space that opens to the outdoors, a man rests in his immaculate office next to a retaining wall holding back hundreds of dark cows with yellow tags in their ears. Such surreal juxtapositions are rife in Anna Conway’s meticulous imagined painted scenarios, prompting consideration of how space effects the psyche. (On view at Fergus McCaffrey through Dec 23rd).

Anna Conway, detail of Devotion, oil on canvas, 44 x 72 inches, 2015.

Katharina Fritsch at Matthew Marks Gallery

Katharina Fritsch’s latest large-scale sculptures of familiar objects blown up to huge proportions and presented in strikingly vibrant colors are as enigmatic and enticing as ever at Matthew Marks Gallery. We immediately confront our mortality in the first gallery, with a skull and egg acting as a reminder of death and a symbol of life about to start. (On view through Dec 22nd).

Katharina Fritsch, installation view of ‘Katharina Fritsch’ at Matthew Marks Gallery, Nov 2017. Schadel/Skull, polyester, paint, 2017 in the background and Ei/Egg, plastic, paint, 2017 in the foreground.

Gary Hume, Three Leaves at Matthew Marks

Three leaves drift down towards the earth in glossy, saturated tones that evoke candy more than autumn colors. Part of an exhibition that considers Gary Hume’s aging mother’s fading memory, the artist’s signature fields of saturated color here suggest absence but not darkness. (At Matthew Marks Gallery in Chelsea through Dec 22nd).

Gary Hume, Three Leaves, enamel paint on paper mounted in artist’s frame, 75 x 55 ¾ inches, 2016 – 17.

Brian Rochefort at Van Doren Waxter

Young LA-based sculptor Brian Rochefort takes inspiration from nature, modeling his ceramic vessels after a giant underwater sinkhole off the coast of Belize and a series of water-flooded caves in tropical climes among other natural wonders. Building up organic shapes from mud and clay, Rochefort covers their surfaces with ceramic, glass and glaze to create a wonder-inspiring experience of his own. (On view at Van Doren Waxter on the Lower East Side through Dec 22nd).

Brian Rochefort, SETI, stoneware, earthenware, glaze, glass, 17 x 14 x 13 inches, 2017.

Thomas Struth at Marian Goodman Gallery

Astronauts simulate working in the weightlessness of space in Houston’s Johnson Space Center, where they perform tasks on models in a giant pool; captured by German photographer Thomas Struth, the lab appears to be suspended in space and time, submerged as if in jelly or under glass. (At Marian Goodman Gallery on 57th Street through Dec 22nd).

Thomas Struth, Full-scale Mock-up 1, JSC, Houston, inkjet print, image: 60 7/8 x 110 ¼ inches, 2017.

Susan Wides at Kim Foster Gallery

Susan Wides’ innovative use of a tilt shift lens allows her to choose which plane in a landscape she’ll bring into sharp focus and what she’ll allow to blur. The resulting compositions are a charming reintroduction to the natural world, appearing abstract until our eyes can pick out the details, here, of flowers in the foreground and falling water beyond. (On view in Chelsea at Kim Foster Gallery through Dec 22nd).

Susan Wides, September 3, 2016_12:49:45, dye sublimation on aluminum, 60 x 40 inches.

Debi Cornwall at Steven Kasher Gallery

Photographer Debi Cornwall’s goal in visiting the U.S. naval station at Guantanamo Bay three times in ’14-’15 was to draw the public into looking at the camp again. Ironically, in some of the most effecting photos in her resulting series, her subjects look away. Men who were detained for years, in many cases with out ever having charges filed, refuse another interrogation – this time by viewers. (At Chelsea’s Steven Kasher Gallery through Dec 23rd. )

Debi Cornwall, Mourad, French Algerian, Lyon, France, 26 x 30 inches, archival pigment print, printed 2017.

Lara Schnitger, Too Nice Too Long at Anton Kern

Described by Anton Kern Gallery as a ‘traveling hybrid procession-protest piece,’ LA artist Lara Schnitger’s installation at Kern’s 55th Street address features inspirational banners and a huge, mysterious ‘Venus of Fernando’ on a palanquin. Schnitger calls the installation ‘Suffragette City,’ a place in which female power is explored in radically idiosyncratic ways. (On view in mid-town through Dec 23rd).

Lara Schnitger, installation view of ‘Too Nice Too Long’ at Anton Kern Gallery, Dec 2017.

Ursula Morley Price at McKenzie Fine Art

From her home in a small French town, British octogenarian artist Ursula Morley Price continues to invent unique ceramic forms that evoke the beauty and order of the natural world. This white twist form, on view at McKenzie Fine Art on the Lower East Side, suggests delicate petals, a flexible spinal column, coral, machinery and more. (On view through Dec 22nd).

Ursula Morley Price, White Twist Form, stoneware, 7 ¼ inches high, 9 inches diameter, 2017. Photograph courtesy of McKenzie Fine Art, Inc.

Jim Krantz at Danziger Gallery

Who says a photograph has to lie flat against the wall? Commercial photographer Jim Krantz – famed for his photos of the American west, particularly of cowboys for a Marlboro ad campaign – has collaborated with Modernica on a series of fiberglass chairs featuring wrangling and riding. If you can’t sit on a horse, this must be the next best thing. (On view at Danziger Gallery on the Lower East Side through Dec 22nd).

Jim Krantz, Modernica x Jim Krantz Collaboration, Fiberglass Shell Chair (1 of 5), 32.5 x 18.5 inches, 2017.

Nina Chanel Abney at Jack Shainman Gallery & Mary Boone Gallery

Nina Chanel Abney’s electrifying new paintings take gun violence, racial conflict, and protests turned violent as subject matter. Their dynamic jumble of forms echoes the constant stream of alarming news supplied 24/7 by the media. (Nina Chanel Abney is showing new work at Jack Shainman Gallery’s 20th Street location through Dec 20th and Mary Boone Gallery’s 24th Street location through Dec 22nd).

Nina Chanel Abney, detail of Untitled, acrylic and spray paint on canvas, 5 panels, 96 1/8 x 60 15/16 x 1 15/16, 2017.

Tunji Adeniyi-Jones at Nicelle Beauchene Gallery

Young Brooklyn-based British painter Tunji Adeniyi-Jones brings Yoruba deities, Matisse’s dancers and Chris Ofili’s Trinidadian characters to mind in bold, rhythmic paintings at Nicelle Beauchene Gallery on the Lower East Side. (On view through Dec 23rd).

Tunji Adeniyi-Jones, Red Twins, oil on canvas, 60 x 56 inches, 2016.

Valeska Soares at Alexander Gray Associates

Five mirror-topped antique wooden tables support a host of antique glassware, installed by Valeska Soares at Alexander Gray Associates in Chelsea. Filled with spirits, and looking like the tidily assembled remnants of an epic celebration, the piece emanates a sickly smell that strongly suggests the party is over. (On view through Dec 16th).

Valeska Soares, Epilogue, mixed media, 47h x 459w x 47.75d inches, 2017.

Alex Katz at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise

In 1959, iconic representational painter Alex Katz made a somewhat drastic decision to cut away the background of a painting that wasn’t working and mount it on plywood. The result was the first of his cutouts, a wall-mounted or freestanding group of sculptures that Katz has created for decades. Now on view at Gavin Brown’s Grand Street location, cutouts include this diminutive cluster of friends. (On view on the Lower East Side through Dec 22nd).

Alex Katz, JJ, Clarice, and Joe, oil on aluminum, 59 x 29 inches, 1965.

Sylvie Fleury at Salon94 Bowery

“Unfettered, confident, individual…” – these adjectives don’t describe art or an artist, they’re part of Dior’s marketing for its ‘Precious Rocks’ eye shadow compact, remade into a series of large-sized acrylic paintings by Swiss artist Sylvie Fleury. Long a provocateur who questions fashion, consumption and ‘high’ art, Fleury’s latest series may be modeled on makeup, but it makes an unmissable nod to mid-20th century hard-edge abstraction. (On view on the Lower East Side at Salon94 Bowery through Dec 22nd).

Sylvie Fleury, Precious Rocks, acrylic on canvas on wood, 45.625 x 54.75 x 3 inches, 2017.

Alison Elizabeth Taylor, Sam’s Town at James Cohan

A tiny, sideways glance from a woman playing the slots in Vegas red flags an internal conflict in Alison Elizabeth Taylor’s absorbing mixed media image at James Cohan Gallery. Constructed using marquetry and collaged photos, the materials themselves speak to a nature/culture divide made more acute by the way the outside world is visible through the casino walls and the subject wears animal patterned (and likely synthetic) clothes. (At James Cohan Gallery’s Lower East Side space through Dec 22nd).

Alison Elizabeth Taylor, detail of Sam’s Town, marquetry hybrid, 47 x 59 inches, 2016.

Yayoi Kusama, Festival of Life at David Zwirner Gallery

As lines to visit Yayoi Kusama’s infinity rooms at David Zwirner Gallery stretch around the block, the octogenarian art star’s paintings and flower sculptures are ready to wow the eye without the wait. Both engulf the senses with exuberantly patterned, wildly colorful design. (On view through Dec 16th at David Zwirner Gallery’s 533 West 19th Street location.)

Yayoi Kusama, Installation view of ‘Festival of Life,’ David Zwirner Gallery, 533 West 19th Street, November 2017.

Ellen Harvey at Danese Corey

Did you capture the perfect eclipse picture as the moon passed in front of the sun in parts of the U.S. last August? For the many whose cameras let them down, Ellen Harvey’s sculpture – a hand-engraved on rear-lit Plexiglas mirror rendition of an iPhone – not only yields a picture of the pivotal moment but also recalls the frustrated efforts of unprepared cell phone photographers last summer. (On view at Danese Corey Gallery in Chelsea through Dec 23rd).

Ellen Harvey, iPhone Eclipse, laser and hand-engraved rear-lit Plexiglas mirror, 6.125 x 3 x .625 inches, 2017.

Shirazeh Houshiary at Lisson Gallery

Clouds of pigment abut clusters of hooked forms – the meeting point of lines which cover each canvas like a net – in Shirazeh Houshiary’s elegant new paintings at Lisson Gallery, suggesting areas of active organization amid nebulous clouds. (On view at Lisson Gallery’s 24th Street space through Dec 22nd).

Shirazeh Houshiary, detail of Rift, pigment and pencil on white Aquacryl on canvas and aluminum.

Jessica Jackson Hutchins, Cushion at Marianne Boesky

Jessica Jackson Hutchins’ work elicits appreciation of the uncharming extraordinary in life. ‘Cushion,’ from the artist’s latest solo show at Marianne Boesky Gallery, is no exception. Two misshapen figures intertwine on a couch cushion, enjoying a moment of tenderness and connection. (On view in Chelsea through Dec 22nd).

Jessica Jackson Hutchins, Cushion, ceramic, cushion, 26 ½ x 32 x 32 inches, 2017.

Jim Shaw at Metro Pictures

The perfectly coiffed blond hair of the model in this surreal painting by Jim Shaw is not only coming from her head but powering her whole being as she emerges from a mass of curls like a genie materializes from smoke. Now on view at Chelsea’s Metro Pictures Gallery, the painting is part of Shaw’s bizarre but powerfully intriguing merger of advertising imagery and storytelling. (On view through Dec 22nd).

Jim Shaw, The Ties that Bind, acrylic on muslin, 56 x 48 inches, 2017.

Zanele Muholi at Yancey Richardson Gallery

Zanele Muholi’s towering self-portrait dramatically dominates her ‘Hail, the Dark Lioness’ photo series at Yancey Richardson Gallery, challenging viewers to reconcile the South African artist-activist’s ‘exotic’ characters with political realities in Africa and the US. (On view in Chelsea through Dec 9th).

Zanele Muholi, Ntozabantu VI, Parktown, site-specific photographic mural, 2016.

Jacqueline Humphreys at Greene Naftali Gallery

The screen and the stretcher come crashing together in Jacqueline Humphrey’s new oil paintings featuring characters and numbers. Applied through laser-cut stencils, the thickly textured symbols spread across the canvas like a dense fog, at times arranged to resemble brush strokes. (On view at Greene Naftali Gallery through Dec 16th).

Jacqueline Humphreys, (#J>>), oil on linen, 100 x 111 inches, 2017.

Jeanne Silverthorne at Marc Straus Gallery

If you climb up to the fourth floor of Marc Straus Gallery expecting to find strange things in the attic spaces, Jeanne Silverthorne’s sculptural rendition of scored poppy plants dripping latex won’t disappoint.   Surrounded by rubber sculptures of packing crates, perhaps hiding even stranger cargo, the piece comes as an otherworldly surprise. (On the Lower East Side through Dec 10th).

Jeanne Silverthorne, Poppy Juice, platinum silicone rubber, phosphorescent pigment, 25 x 38 x 19 inches, 2017.

Florian Maier-Aichen at 303 Gallery

For years, Florian Maier-Aichen stayed dedicated to analogue approaches to photography; his latest digital images – created with Photoshop’s Lasso tool – have the joyful energy of a new convert. (On view at 303 Gallery in Chelsea through Dec 22nd).

Florian Maier-Aichen, Untitled (Lasso Painting #3), inkjet print, 90 ½ x 68 1/8 inches, 2016.

Antoine Catala at 47 Canal

Antoine Catala’s charmingly strange solo show at 47 Canal remakes emojis as extra-terrestrial faces adorning ‘breathing’ socks and shopping bags. Commenting on what he sees as emojis’ sudden ubiquitous and alien presence in our lives, Catala asks what damage is occurring (band-aids are a theme) and how much ‘cute’ we’re willing to consume at what cost. (On view on the Lower East Side through Dec 17th).

Antoine Catala, installation view of ‘Everything is OK,’ at 47 Canal, Nov 2017.

Matt Bollinger at Zurcher Gallery

A heavy, fascinating stillness pervades Matt Bollinger’s paintings and animation at Zurcher Gallery on the Lower East Side, extending even to this sculpture of a hand ashing a cigarette. The hand (crafted in resin and foam with painted highlights) looks like it’s been extracted from a painting, miraculously appearing in 3-D form before us. (On view through Dec 21st).

Matt Bollinger, Ash, resin, foam, wood and acrylic, 11 x 12 x 12 inches, 2017.

Becky Kolsrud at JTT Gallery

Young LA artist Becky Kolsrud has fun with the old assertion that women are ‘closer to nature’ by literally cloaking her female figures – giantesses who dominate the landscape – with bodies of water that act like robes or shields. (At JTT Gallery on the Lower East Side through Dec 17th).

Becky Kolsrud, Three Women, oil on canvas, 76 x 90 inches, 2017.

Jonathan Monaghan Animation at Bitforms

In Jonathan Monaghan’s latest fantastical animation, Disco Beast, a unicorn is captured and drained of energy by a predatory cell phone charging station only to be reborn in a luxury building’s hidden disco. Here, the unicorn is penned in by a ring of TSA scanners, an allusion to the Renaissance Unicorn Tapestries (which act as metaphor for marriage, among other things) and an update on the experience of being ‘captured.’ (On view at Bitforms on the Lower East Side through Dec 10th).

Jonathan Monaghan, The Unicorn in Captivity, 3D printed 18K gold plated brass, 3D printed porcelain, acrylic, 15 x 23 x 8 inches, 2017.

Hayv Kahraman, Woven Painting at Jack Shainman

When Hayv Kahraman fled Baghdad during the first Gulf War, one of the few non-essential items her family took was a mahaffa, a traditional fan woven from palm tree fronds. In recent works at Jack Shainman Gallery, the artist has woven her paintings together in strips that recall the fan, artfully combining different realities. (On view in Chelsea on 24th Street through Dec 20th).

Hayv Kahraman, Mnemonic Artifact, oil on linen, 60 x 90 inches, 2017.

Cecily Brown at Paula Cooper Gallery

Inspired by shipwrecks in iconic 19th century paintings by Gericault and Delacroix, Cecily Brown’s latest oil paintings allow strange, fraught characters to emerge from the depths. In this detail from ‘Sirens and Shipwrecks and Bathers and the Band,’ a figure appears from swirling blue depths like a figurehead on a ship, a seemingly stray blue line forming a knowing smile. (At Paula Cooper Gallery in Chelsea through Dec 2nd).

Cecily Brown, detail from Sirens and Shipwrecks and Bathers and the Band, oil on linen, 97 x 151 x 1.5 inches, 2016.

Ashley Lyon at Jane Lombard Gallery

A crumpled red duvet at the entrance to Jane Lombard Gallery is at once cozy and alien – a symbol of the comforts of home, but a symbol that belongs to someone else. Constructed in fired clay by Ashley Lyon, sculptures including the bed covering, a piece of memory foam, pillows and this quilt offer a conceptual appreciation of the soft furnishings that make a house a home. (On view in Chelsea through Dec 21st).

Ashley Lyon, Wellspring, fired clay with mixed media surfacing, 7 x 8 x 19 inches, 2017.

Matt Connors at Canada NY

Taking the history of painting, particularly 20th century modernism as one major influence, painter Matt Connors shapes color and form into optical experience in new paintings at Canada NY on the Lower East Side. (On view through Dec 10th).

Matt Connors, Yet to be titled, oil, acrylic and colored pencil on canvas, 35 ¼ x 31 ¼ inches, 2017.

Jorge Pardo Self Portraits at Petzel Gallery

Known for combining art, architecture and design, Jorge Pardo takes a turn towards two-dimensional work at Petzel Gallery with laser cut light boxes bearing his self-portraits. This surprising turn away from 3-D objects and spaces, along with Pardo’s recent self-portraits crafted on furniture, begs the question of whether all of the artist’s design isn’t a form of portraiture. (On view at Petzel Gallery through Jan 13th).

Jorge Pardo, Untitled, MDF-Acrylic Paint-Caoba-LED Fixtures, 63 x 47 inches, 2017.

Tanya Marcuse at Julie Saul Gallery

Over a period of weeks or months, photographer Tanya Marcuse builds up sections of earth with transplanted mushrooms, berries, and various plants, adding in preserved animals (who have died elsewhere) along with fresh materials. The result is a tour de force of nature, which she likens to the roiling bodies of Jan van Eyck’s Last Judgment or a Jackson Pollock dense, all-over composition. (At Julie Saul Gallery through Nov 25th).

Tanya Marcuse, detail of ‘Woven No. 9,’ pigment print, 62 x 124,” 2015.

William Villalongo, Solo Show at Susan Inglett Gallery

In his latest solo show at Susan Inglett Galley, William Villalongo’s characters are an amorphous mass of organic material rather than distinct identities. Here, Villalongo alludes to Henry Brown’s escape from slavery in a box mailed from Virginia to Philadelphia, begging the question of how historical distance can allow identities to shift. (On view through Dec 9th).

William Villalongo, 25 Hour Cargo Piece, acrylic, paper collage and velvet flocking on wood panel, 46 x 60 x 1 ½ inches, 2017.

Gilbert & George at Lehmann Maupin Gallery

With staffs and beards of snakes, Gilbert and George merge the roles of Moses, Medusa and themselves as performance artists who make art with their bodies. In their latest two-gallery show, the duo don an array of stylized beards that reference Santa, religious observance and hipsters in their East London neighborhood. (At Lehmann Maupin Gallery on 22nd Street in Chelsea and on Chrystie Street on the Lower East Side).

Gilbert and George, Beardery, mixed media, 149.61 x 237.01 inches, 2016.

Thomas Bangsted at Marc Straus Gallery

Danish photographer Thomas Bangsted’s WWII scenes at first read as strangely hi-res documentary images until revealed as masterpieces of reconstruction. Photographing objects and vehicles from war museums and collectors, building his own props (like the life raft in the foreground) and tracking down remaining ships, Bangsted pictures the maneuvers that won the war, including this episode in the Allied effort to sink one of the largest warships ever made. (On view at Marc Straus Gallery on the Lower East Side through Dec 10th).

Thomas Bangsted, Port of Embarkation (Lady Liberty SS Margaret Knight), pigment print, 85 x 115.8, 2012 – 2017.

Adam Parker Smith at The Hole NY

Inspired by Homer’s The Iliad, Adam Parker Smith brings the ancient epic up to date by rendering key characters in Mylar balloons, which he casts in resin, then lines with fiberglass. This serious kitty – decked out as Hercules wearing a lion skin – is the centerpiece of one of New York’s most fun gallery exhibitions. (On view on the Lower East Side at The Hole NY through Nov 19th).

Installation view of Adam Parker Smith’s ‘Kidnapping Incites Years of Murderous Doom’ at The Hole, NY, Nov 2017.

LA Invitational at Gagosian Gallery

Against Alex Israel’s huge painting of a sky lit by a gorgeous sunset, Chris Burden’s three ‘ghost ships’ dominate Gagosian Gallery’s showcase of work by its LA artists. Equipped with solar panels and GPS, the boats were designed in 1991 to sail alone from Charleston to Plymouth, England. (On view through Dec 16th).

Installation view of LA Invitational at Gagosian Gallery, West 24th Street, Nov 2017. Includes work by Alex Israel, Chris Burden and Jeff Wall.

Paolo Ventura at Edwynn Houk Gallery

Three isolated bathers search for shells in a nature scene that melds sky and water, melancholy and peace by Paolo Ventura at Edwynn Houk Gallery. Ventura’s new hand painted, collaged photos evoke stage sets that question time and place. (On view in the 57th Street area through Nov 11th).

Paolo Ventura, La Cercatrice di Conchiglie, hand-painted photographs with collage, 30 panels, 8 x 11 1/8 inches each, 2017.

Alice Aycock at Marlborough Gallery

Even the base of Alice Aycock’s dynamic aluminum sculpture appears to lift off the ground in the artist’s dramatic debut at Marlborough Gallery which now represents the artist. The sculpture alludes to the forces of nature, fairground rides and more in works that combine chaotic and ordered forms in one eye-popping piece. (On view on 57th Street through Nov 18th).

Alice Aycock, Untitled Cyclone, aluminum, ed. 1/3 + 1AP, 100 x 165 x 112 inches, 2017.

Josephine Halvorson, Jagged at Sikkema Jenkins

The title of Josephine Halvorson’s exhibition of new painting, ‘As I Went Walking,’ refers to a verse in Woody Guthrie’s ‘This Land is Your Land’ about trespassing; Halvorson’s weathered signs and tattered boundary markers suggest that ownership of the land is not so easily claimed. (At Sikkema Jenkins & Co in Chelsea through Nov 22nd).

Josephine Halvorson, Jagged, oil on linen, 23 x 20 inches, 2017.

 

Sarah Bereza in ‘Sitting Still’ at Bravin Lee Programs

Sarah Bereza’s paintings question what a frame is and what it should hold. Alive with natural forms, the borders of her images are sculpture holding melting forms or, like here, conventional images that surprisingly appear to resist completion, morphing before our eyes. (On view at Bravin Lee Programs in Chelsea through Nov 29th).

Sarah Bereza, Growth Piece, oil on linen, cast resin, 23 x 18 x 3 inches, 2017.

Douglas Huebler at Paula Cooper Gallery

Before documentation and text became Conceptual Art founder Douglas Huebler’s primary media, his formica sculptures considered how place was experienced as art. Here, the yellow-hued interior of an S shaped sculpture glows mysteriously as it evokes superpower, the alphabet and Truro, MA the place for which it was named. (At Paula Cooper Gallery in Chelsea through Nov 18th).

Douglas Huebler, Truro Series #1, formica on plywood, 35 x 54 x 21 inches, 1966.

Paul Bulteel at Anastasia Photo

Belgian photographer Paul Bulteel spent a career focusing on energy and sustainable practice; lately, he’s expanded on his professional experience with ‘Waste Not,’ a photo series shot at European waste recycling facilities. Bulteel’s eye for color and composition make materials intriguingly strange (this pile of mixed metals suggests hair) while demonstrating what efforts go on to recycle and reuse. (At Anastasia Photo on the Lower East Side through Nov 22nd).

Paul Bulteel, “Tinned copper wire, typically used in electrical motors. The different metals (copper, nickel, lead, and tin) are separated in a pyro-metallurgical process. Lead and tin are further separated using vacuum technology.”

Matthew Pillsbury at Benrubi Gallery

Using his signature long exposure technique, Matthew Pillsbury turns his lens for his latest show, ‘Sanctuary’ at Benrubi Gallery, on basic rights – assembly and expression – that are often taken for granted. Here, a participant pauses in front of Matthew Chavez’s ‘Subway Therapy’ project, which provided pens and post-its for New Yorkers to express their thoughts after the 2016 presidential election. (On view in Chelsea through Nov 22nd).

Matthew Pillsbury, Subway Therapy 2, Union Square, New York City, Dec 3, 2016, 50 x 60 inches, 2016.

Kathleen Ryan at Arsenal Contemporary

Kathleen Ryan creates colossal pearls from bowling balls in her New York solo debut at Arsenal Contemporary on the Lower East Side. This piece and others shift our expectations of scale and turn quotidian balls into oversized, luxury jewelry. (On view through Nov 5th).

Kathleen Ryan, Barbed Wire, bowling balls, brass, dimensions variable, 2017.

Claes Oldenburg at Pace Gallery

Claes Oldenburg’s new sculptures remix objects familiar from his and parter Coosje van Bruggen’s career (a pencil once proposed as a New York monument, a banana skin flapping in the wind, yellow and brown potato chips). Collectively titled ‘Shelf Life,’ Oldenberg’s relatively small-scale assemblages beg the question of an idea’s staying power and continued relevance. (At Pace Gallery’s 24th Street location through Nov 11th).

Claes Oldenburg, Shelf Life Number 2, mixed media, 19 15/16 x 28 ¾ x 12 3/16 inches, 2016-17.

Keith Mayerson at Marlborough Contemporary

From Graceland to the former steel town of Bethlehem, PA, an assortment of iconic ‘American’ locations inspired Keith Mayerson’s ambiguous portrait of the country at Marlborough Contemporary. Here, Three Mile Island represents conversations around the definition of ‘clean’ power as the famed sight of a 1979 accident has been slated to close in 2019. (On view in Chelsea through Nov 11th).

Keith Mayerson, Three Mile Island, oil on linen, 32 x 48 inches, 2017.