Ranjani Shettar at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Southern Indian sculptor Ranjani Shettar’s concern for threatened rural Indian ecosystems informed her dramatic mezzanine installation at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, ‘Seven ponds and a few raindrops.’  Crafted from organic muslin and bound to a welded and molded steel base with tamarind paste, the piece’s floating organic shapes conjure 3-D scientific models, intricate plant life or alien life.  (On view on the Upper East Side through Sept 16th).

Ranjani Shettar, detail installation view of ‘Seven ponds and a few raindrops’ at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, July 2018.

‘African American: Photographs from the 1940s and 1950s at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

One hundred and fifty studio portraits of unidentified African Americans by unknown photographers now on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art offer a fascinating peek at self-representation in the mid-20th century.  By recently acquiring two major portrait groups represented in the show, the Met announces its intention to build its collection to include images of African Americans.  (On view on the Upper East Side through October 8th).

Installation view of ‘African American: Photographs from the 1940s and 1950s at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, July 2018.

Morteza Khakshoor at the International Print Center New York

Male behaviors and rituals occupy Ohio-based printmaker and current International Print Center New York resident artist Morteza Khakshoor’s colorful, dream-like prints.  This piece, ‘Men of High Culture’ is a standout in the IPCNY’s current juried exhibition of new prints.  Including a homogeneously dressed cast of male wall flowers and two figures grappling with eccentric creatures and separated by a vase of flowers, Khakshoor’s setup reinterprets the uber-male cockfight.  (On view through Sept 22nd).

Morteza Khakshoor, Men of High Culture, screenprint on paper mounted on panel, 29 ¼ x 42 ¾ inches, 2018.

Lisette Model at Bruce Silverstein Gallery

From the serene to the lively, Bruce Silverstein Gallery’s selection of portrait photos by Lisette Model (seen here), Diane Arbus and Rosalind Fox Solomon turn everyday folks into intriguing characters.  Model’s electric photo of a singer at Café Metropole contrasts a gloved man on the Promenade des Anglais, Nice and the momentary repose of a bather at Coney Island, but all suggest that moments of delicious eccentricity are just around the corner.  (On view in Chelsea through Sept 8th).

Installation view of ‘We Are the Subject’ at Bruce Silverstein Gallery featuring work by Lisette Model from the late ‘30s to the mid ‘40s.

Laurel Sparks at Cheim & Read Gallery

‘Geomantria,’ the title of Lauren Sparks’ show last spring Kate Werble Gallery succinctly introduces the concept of geometry as magic in the Brooklyn painter’s canvases.  In this grid of nine works – part of a three-person group exhibition of abstract painting at Chelsea’s Cheim & Read Gallery, curated by Jack Pierson – Sparks plots out six points with relationships that shift according to the ash, papier mache, glitter, yarn and other materials she applies to woven strips of canvas.  (On view through August 30th).

Laurel Sparks, paintings from ‘STANZA’ and ‘TERCET.’ Materials include: acrylic, poured gesso, paper mache, ash, cut holes, collage, glitter and yarn on woven canvas strips, each 24 x 24 inches, 2018.