Luiz Zerbini at Sikkema Jenkins & Co

‘Perhappiness,’ a one word poem by Brazilian poet Paulo Leminsky, borrowed as the title of painter/musician Luiz Zerbini’s first solo show in New York, perfectly embodies the artist’s upbeat experimentation. Here, rocks that look like abstract paintings, pools of water crafted from lines of color and nests that resemble creative architecture are an homage to the inspiration of nature. (At Sikkema Jenkins & Co in Chelsea through June 4th.)

Luiz Zerbini, Distraidos venceremos (Distracted Win), acrylic on canvas, 102.375 x 157.5 inches, 2015.
Luiz Zerbini, Distraidos venceremos (Distracted Win), acrylic on canvas, 102.375 x 157.5 inches, 2015.

Amy Cutler at Leslie Tonkonow Artwork and Projects

If everyone could see inside your head right now, what thoughts would be laid bare? Amy Culter’s incredible cross section shows one woman’s mental map as a series of bizarre dreams, from a scary, hostage-holding snowman to the hilarious notion that our teeth are just the caps worn by a team of ladies nestled shoulder to shoulder in our jaws. (At Leslie Tonkonow Artworks and Projects in Chelsea through June 30th).

Amy Cutler, Molar Migration (detail), gouache on paper, 22 3/8 x 22 7/8 inches, 2012.
Amy Cutler, Molar Migration (detail), gouache on paper, 22 3/8 x 22 7/8 inches, 2012.

Richard Serra at Gagosian Gallery

The biggest show in town – literally – starts with a fifty-foot long walk between two thirteen foot high steel plates. Then it’s into a slightly disorienting and unexpected labyrinth of open and constricted spaces that challenge viewers to take the measure of Richard Serra’s NJ-1 with our own bodies. (At Gagosian Gallery’s 522 West 21st Street location through July 29th).

Richard Serra, NJ-1, weatherproof steel, six plates, overall 13’ 9” x 51’ 6” x 24’ 6”, 2015.
Richard Serra, NJ-1, weatherproof steel, six plates, overall 13’ 9” x 51’ 6” x 24’ 6”, 2015.

Martin Klimas at Foley Gallery

Known for photographing freeze dried flowers as he explodes them and liquid pigment as it is blasted by sound from a speaker, German artist Martin Klimas has come up with another way to make merge sound and art in a new body of work at Foley Gallery. The ‘Pure Tones’ series involves a frequency generator and still water, which is disturbed in surprisingly beautiful patterns, as evidenced by this grid of surfaces. (On the Lower East Side through May 22nd).

Martin Klimas, untitled inkjet and lenticular prints, 12 x 12 inches, 2014.
Martin Klimas, untitled inkjet and lenticular prints, 12 x 12 inches, 2014.

Aaron Siskind in ‘Songs and the Sky’ at Bruce Silverstein Gallery

Aaron Siskind’s 1954 photographs of high divers leaping into Lake Michigan are included in Bruce Silverstein Gallery’s engaging group show ‘Songs and the Sky’ as an example of the artists’ desire to align his images with music, ‘…in terms of rhythm and repetitions that can be expressed visually.” The gallery takes the connection a step further by actually pairing the photos with sound; in Siskind’s case with a selection by John Cage: 44 Harmonies from Apartment House – 1776 and Cheap Imitation. (In Chelsea through June 18th).

Aaron Siskind, Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation #477 (left) and #474 (right), 1954.
Aaron Siskind, Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation #477 (left) and #474 (right), 1954.