Next week Armory Arts Week 2015 will be celebrated around NYC, March 3rd-8th, with special shows, gallery exhibitions and installations around the city. The Armory Show will take place March 5th-8th, 2015 at Piers 92 and 94. The Volta Show will take place March 5th-8th at Pier 90. The Scope Show will take place March 6th-8th at 639 W. 46th St. The ADAA Art Show will be on exhibit at the Park Avenue Armory, March 4th-8th. Pulse New York will be held at the Metropolitan Pavilion, March 5th-8th. The Spring Break show will be at Moynihan Station, March 3rd-8th. The Independent Show will be at 548 W. 22nd St., March 5th-8th.
MISSION OF ARMORY ARTS WEEK
In its seventeen years, The Armory Show, America’s leading fine art fair devoted to the most important art of the 20th and 21st centuries, has become an international institution, bringing artists, galleries, collectors, critics and curators from all over the world to New York every March. Armory Arts Week strives to take advantage of this yearly convergence of the world’s top collectors and art enthusiasts by proudly consolidating and promoting a diverse selection of our city’s own cultural offerings.
In celebration of New York’s unparalleled artistic communities, Armory Arts Week works to highlight the distinct non-profit cultural organizations of our city’s multiple neighborhoods and boroughs. Throughout the week of The Armory Show, we promote a different neighborhood each day with cultural events for all levels of visitors.
This concept of a week of non-profit arts-related events was born out of the festivities and widely-felt excitement generated by The Armory Show, and was formalized with the support of the city in 2009. Since then, Armory Arts Week has continued to expand its reach throughout all five boroughs of New York. From elaborate benefit parties to interactive public programming, The Armory Show hopes that Armory Arts Week will continue to enrich the public through the promotion of New York’s exceptional arts-related events.
Arrange your private transportation during Armory Arts Week with our official partner, Ridecentric, and enjoy preferred rates. Book online at RideCentric.com.
TUESDAY MARCH 3RD
HEARTBEAT BY STEREOTANK
Times Square Arts
Duffy Square, Times Square, NYC
Visit Duffy Square to see HeartBeat, an installation by Brooklyn-based design studio Stereotank. Selected as the 2015 Times Square Valentine Heart, this engagement sculpture consists of a massive heart glowing to the rhythm of a strong, deep and low frequency heartbeat sound and visitors are encouraged to move around and engage with it by playing various percussion instruments. The audience is invited to come together and creatively play, listen, dance and feel the vibrations of the heart while enjoying the warm pulsating light.
For the first week of March, Stereotank transforms Heartbeat into innovative public seating complementing the infamous TKTS red steps.
This installation was created in partnership with The Architectural League of New York and the Times Square Alliance.
For the first week of March, Stereotank transforms Heartbeat into innovative public seating complementing the infamous TKTS red steps.
This installation was created in partnership with The Architectural League of New York and the Times Square Alliance.
Seating open for the first week of March only
SOL LEWITT: WALL DRAWING #370
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Metropolitan Museum of Art, Fifth Avenue at 82nd Street, New York
Sol LeWitt’s 1982 Wall Drawing #370: Ten Geometric Figures (including right triangle, cross, X, diamond) with three-inch parallel bands of lines in two directions will be installed at The Metropolitan Museum of Art this summer. Over a period of four weeks, five drafters will prepare the 10 geometric figures set within squares that comprise the work. The drawing will be on view in its complete state beginning June 30, 2014, and will remain on view through January 3, 2016, when it will be painted over.
June 30, 2014 - January 3, 2016
Sunday – Thursday, 10am – 5:30pm; Friday and Saturday, 10am – 9pm
CAPTAIN LINNAEUS TRIPE: PHOTOGRAPHER OF INDIA AND BURMA, 1852-1860
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Metropolitan Museum of Art, Fifth Avenue at 82nd Street, New York
Captain Linnaeus Tripe (1822–1902) occupies a special place in the history of 19th-century photography for the outstanding body of work he produced in India and Burma (now Myanmar) in the 1850s. Captain Linnaeus Tripe: Photographer of India and Burma, 1852–1860 is the first major traveling exhibition of his work and will be on view at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Tripe was a photographer with the eye of a surveyor and the sensibilities of an artist, a telling combination that sets him apart from others of the period.
February 24, 2015 - May 25, 2015
Sunday – Thursday, 10am – 5:30pm; Friday and Saturday, 10am – 9pm
THOMAS HART BENTON'S AMERICA TODAY MURAL REDISCOVERED
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Metropolitan Museum of Art, Fifth Avenue at 82nd Street, New York
This exhibition celebrates the gift of Thomas Hart Benton's epic mural America Today from AXA Equitable Life Insurance Company to The Metropolitan Museum of Art in December 2012. Benton (1889–1975) painted this mural for New York's New School for Social Research to adorn the school's boardroom in its International Style modernist building on West 12th Street. Showing a sweeping panorama of American life throughout the 1920s, America Today ranks among Benton's most renowned works and is one of the most remarkable accomplishments in American art of the period.
September 30, 2014 - April 19, 2015
Sunday – Thursday, 10am – 5:30pm; Friday and Saturday, 10am – 9pm
MADAME CÉZANNE
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Metropolitan Museum of Art, Fifth Avenue at 82nd Street, New York
Madame Cézanne, the first exhibition of paintings, drawings, and watercolors by Paul Cézanne (1839–1906) of his most painted model, Hortense Fiquet (1850–1922), will open at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on November 19. The exhibition will trace Cézanne’s lifelong attachment to the woman who was his model, his wife, and the mother of his son, Paul. She profoundly influenced his portrait practice for more than two decades and yet she was not well received—by either his family or his friends.
November 19, 2014 - March 15, 2015
Sunday – Thursday, 10am – 5:30pm; Friday and Saturday, 10am – 9pm
JIM DINE: TOOLS
Senior & Shopmaker Gallery
210 Eleventh Avenue, NYC
Senior & Shopmaker is pleased to announce an exhibition of early prints and drawings by Jim Dine, an artist whose singular achievement in graphic media has earned him a distinguished place in American art history of the post-war era.
February 6, 2015 - March 28, 2015
Tuesday - Friday 10am-6pm; Saturday 11am-6pm
ANTONI TÀPIES, PRINTS
Pace Prints
32 East 57th Street, 3rd Floor, NYC
Pace Prints is pleased to present Antoni Tàpies, Prints, on view at its 32 E. 57th Street gallery, from February 19—March 21, 2015. The exhibition will run concurrently with Antoni Tàpies: 1923-2013 at Pace Gallery, 32 East 57th Street, the artist’s first exhibition in New York since his death in 2012. Printmaking had a profound affect on the work of Tàpies, and informed much of his work in other media. In these prints, like in his paintings, themes of flatness, language, national identity, death and the human body are explored with both reverence and innovative spirit.
March 21, 2015 - February 19, 2015
Tuesday - Friday, 9:30 - 5:30; Saturday, 10am -5pm
MARTIN MULL: ENDGAME
Hirschl & Adler Modern
730 Fifth Avenue, 4th Floor, NYC
Martin Mull’s recent figurative paintings disrupt historically disparate sectors of American life, creating images that inform and question our contemporary society.
February 26, 2015 - April 4, 2015
Tuesday - Friday, 9:30am - 5:15pm; Saturday, 9:30am - 4:45pm
MAD. SQ. ART 2015 | PAULA HAYES: GAZING GLOBES
Madison Square Park Conservancy
Madison Square Park, 23rd Street and Fifth Avenue, NYC
Gazing Globes, artist and designer Paula Hayes’s (American, b. 1958) first outdoor sculpture exhibition in New York City, is currently on view in Madison Square Park. The exhibition features eighteen transparent polycarbonate spheres that hold the remnants of contemporary culture, including up-cycled radio parts, industrial materials, acrylic wands, and other pieces of vintage technology sprinkled with fairy dust made of pulverized CDs. Formed into beauteous illuminated objects, Hayes’s crystal balls summon the present and predict the future. Gazing Globes is presented by Mad. Sq. Art, Madison Square Park Conservancy’s free contemporary art program.
February 19, 2015 - April 19, 2015
Daily, 7am - 12am
This outdoor exhibition is free and open to the public during Park open hours.
JOHN ZURIER: WEST OF THE FUTURE
Peter Blum Gallery
20 West 57th Street, NYC
Peter Blum is pleased to announce an exhibition of paintings by John Zurier entitled West of the Future at 20 West 57th Street, New York. There will be an opening reception on Friday February 13, from 6 to 8 p.m. The exhibition runs through April 4. John Zurier’s new works, created in 2014 and 2015, are heavily influenced and inspired by his recent travels in Iceland. His abstract paintings evoke the natural light, sky, fog and ice of the ethereal terrain. The exhibition’s title, West of the Future, is a direction that is difficult to grasp because it exists outside of time and yet, is something that can be imagined or felt. This same kind of ambiguity is what the artist strives for in his paintings. For Zurier, West of the Future implies a luminous immeasurable distance.
February 13, 2015 - April 4, 2015
Tuesday - Friday, 10am - 6pm; Saturday, 11am - 6pm
MICHAEL EASTMAN: STRUCTURE AND COLOR
Edwynn Houk Gallery
745 5th Avenue, #407, NYC
February 19, 2015 - April 4, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 11am - 6pm
LOOKING AT DRAWINGS
Moeller Fine Art New York
35 East 64th Street, NYC
Moeller Fine Art is pleased to announce “Looking at Drawings," on view January 19 – March 14, featuring nineteenth and twentieth century works on paper from private collections, many on the market for the first time. Highlights include a suite of caricatures by French court painter Jean-Baptiste Isabey from the distinguished collection of the Marquis Philippe de Chennevières, early charcoal nudes by Otto Dix, and important watercolors from Erich Heckel to Paul Klee and from Mark Tobey to Yayoi Kusama.
January 19, 2015 - March 21, 2015
Monday – Friday 10am – 6pm; Saturday 11am – 5pm.
PAULA CROWN: THE SUBLIME AND THE CENTER: DIMENSIONS OF LANDSCAPE
Marlborough Gallery
40 West 57th Street, NYC
THE SUBLIME AND THE CENTER: DIMENSIONS OF LANDSCAPE features new paintings and sculptural work from Crown’s PERforations and Fractals, which are part of her ‘Africa Series.’ The show also includes new works entitled ALPHABR AVO, BEARINGS DOWN and DISoriental. Combining a painterly and geometric intuition, the artist materially and dimensionally explores real and virtual space.
February 5, 2015 - March 7, 2015
Monday - Saturday, 10am - 5:30pm
DISCOVERING JAPANESE ART AMERICAN COLLECTORS AND THE MET
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Metropolitan Museum of Art, Fifth Avenue at 82nd Street, New York
The 2015 centennial of the Department of Asian Art offers an ideal opportunity to explore the history of the Museum's collection of Japanese art. Showcasing more than two hundred masterworks of every medium, this exhibition will tell the story of how the Museum built its comprehensive collection of Japanese art beginning in the early 1880s, when it owned just a small, eclectic array of Japanese decorative arts.
February 14, 2015 - September 27, 2015
Sunday – Thursday: 10:00am – 5:30pm; Friday and Saturday: 10:00am – 9:00pm
ON THE EDGE OF FUSION
West Harlem Art Fund
Mist Harlem, 46 West 116th Street between Lenox and 5th Avenue, NYC
The West Harlem Art Fund and Friends are presenting “On the Edge of Fusion" for Armory Arts Week again. From March 2nd, a digital salon with installations will take place in Harlem at MIST located at 46 West Street, New York, N.Y. Curator-driven, this digital platform will allow participants to enjoy watching digital art and digitally-based films online from the comfort of their homes or live at MIST where participants can talk and share their opinions with others.
March 2, 2015 - March 6, 2015
6pm - 8pm
SIMONE LEIGH: MOULTING
Tilton Gallery
8 East 76th Street, NYC
Opening Reception: Monday, March 02, 6pm - 8pm.
March 03, 2015 - April 18, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am - 6pm
LITTLE NEMO: DREAM ANOTHER DREAM
Society of Illustrators
128 East 63rd Street, NYC
Winsor McCay was perhaps the greatest cartoonist of all time and the Sunday newspaper strip Little Nemo in Slumberland is his most enduring creation. Detailing the adventures of its titular character in The Land of Wonderful Dreams, the early twentieth century opus is one of the most inventive and visually stunning works of American art. A century later, the comic medium is still racing to keep up with the richness, draftsmanship, imagination, and wonder of McCay’s fantastic storytelling and wild Slumberland universe.
February 10, 2015 - March 28, 2015
Tuesday, 10am – 8pm; Wednesday - Friday, 10am – 5pm; Saturday, 12pm – 4pm
ALTERNATIVE WEEKLY COMICS: THE EXHIBIT
Society of Illustrators
128 East 63rd Street, NYC
The alt-weekly world traces its roots back to such newspapers as The Village Voice, which began its weekly schedule in 1955. The 1960s gave rise to a number of weekly newspapers, characterized as 'underground' newspapers such as New York's East Village Other and Washington, D.C.'s Quicksilver Times. These underground papers were driven mainly by the politics of the 1960s and as those issues receded, the underground press began a rapid decline through the 1970s.
March 04, 2015 - May 02, 2014
Tuesday, 10am – 8pm; Wednesday - Friday, 10am – 5pm; Saturday, 12pm – 4pm
HELENA RUBINSTEIN: BEAUTY IS POWER
The Jewish Museum
The Jewish Museum, 1109 Fifth Avenue at 92nd Street, NYC
Helena Rubinstein: Beauty Is Power is the first museum exhibition to explore the ideas, innovations, and influence of the legendary cosmetics entrepreneur and art collector Helena Rubinstein (1872-1965). She was not only an early patron of European and Latin American modern art, but also one of the earliest leading collectors of African and Oceanic sculpture. Through 200 objects – works of art by Picasso, Nadelman, Kahlo, Matisse, and others, African and Oceanic art, photographs, jewelry, and designer clothing – the exhibition reveals how Rubinstein’s unique style and pioneering approach to collecting challenged conservative taste and heralded a modern notion of beauty.
October 31, 2014 - March 22, 2015
Saturday to Tuesday, 11am - 5:45pm; Friday, 11am - 4pm
EFA OPEN HOUSE: OPEN STUDIOS, EXHIBITIONS, PRINTMAKING WORKSHOP
The Elizabeth Foundation for Arts
323 West 39th Street, New York (between 8th and 9th ave)
The Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts invites guests to our Open House to view over 60 artist studios, the EFA Project Space and EFA’s Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop. EFA Studios Member Artists work in a wide range of media and artistic sensibilities, creating a vibrant and diverse community. RBPMW will be open for tours from 5pm to 9pm; “This Color is you" curated by Bill Carroll will be on view in Blackburn 20|20, 5th floor, from 6pm to 9pm; "Double Visions" will be on view in Project Space, 2nd floor, from 5pm to 9pm.
Wednesdays — Saturdays, 12pm - 6pm
WEDNESDAY MARCH 4TH
THE ARMORY PARTY 2015
MoMA
11 West 53 Street, NYC
Preview starts at noon
Show: Piers 92 and 94 on the Hudson River
Twelfth Avenue at 55 Street, New York
Party (8:00–9:00 p.m. VIP)
(9:00 p.m.–12:30 a.m. General Admission)
Live Performance by:
Kelela
DJ Set by:
Alexis Taylor (Hot Chip)
with special guest DJs
Business Class (Lawrence Abu Hamdan)
E*vax (Ratatat)
Ezra Koenig (Vampire Weekend)
Preview and party to benefit The Museum of Modern Art.
The Armory Show is New York’s foremost fair devoted to the most important art of the 20th and 21st centuries. In 2015, the fair will again feature The Armory Show – Modern, a section specializing in modern and secondary market material on Pier 92, while Pier 94 will continue to be a venue to premiere new works by living artists. The opening preview and party for The Armory Show 2015 helps sustain the world-renowned exhibition programming of The Museum of Modern Art.
The Armory Show is pleased to announce that Lawrence Abu Hamdan, based between Beirut and London, is the Commissioned Artist for the 2015 fair. In this capacity, Abu Hamdan will help create the visual identity of the upcoming edition and undertake a unique on-site project at the fair. He will also produce a limited-edition artwork with proceeds benefitting The Museum of Modern Art.
The fair introduced its annual commission in 2002, and four years later began publishing an annual series of editions by its commissioned artists to benefit The Museum of Modern Art.
Show: Piers 92 and 94 on the Hudson River
Twelfth Avenue at 55 Street, New York
Party (8:00–9:00 p.m. VIP)
(9:00 p.m.–12:30 a.m. General Admission)
Live Performance by:
Kelela
DJ Set by:
Alexis Taylor (Hot Chip)
with special guest DJs
Business Class (Lawrence Abu Hamdan)
E*vax (Ratatat)
Ezra Koenig (Vampire Weekend)
Preview and party to benefit The Museum of Modern Art.
The Armory Show is New York’s foremost fair devoted to the most important art of the 20th and 21st centuries. In 2015, the fair will again feature The Armory Show – Modern, a section specializing in modern and secondary market material on Pier 92, while Pier 94 will continue to be a venue to premiere new works by living artists. The opening preview and party for The Armory Show 2015 helps sustain the world-renowned exhibition programming of The Museum of Modern Art.
The Armory Show is pleased to announce that Lawrence Abu Hamdan, based between Beirut and London, is the Commissioned Artist for the 2015 fair. In this capacity, Abu Hamdan will help create the visual identity of the upcoming edition and undertake a unique on-site project at the fair. He will also produce a limited-edition artwork with proceeds benefitting The Museum of Modern Art.
The fair introduced its annual commission in 2002, and four years later began publishing an annual series of editions by its commissioned artists to benefit The Museum of Modern Art.
March 04, 9pm - 12:30am
Tickets are available online
THURSDAY MARCH 5TH
XENOBIA BAILEY
MTA Arts & Design
34th Street-Hudson Yards Station, 7 train, NYC
Download a free podcast to learn more about Funktional Vibrations, a glass mosaic project by artist Xenobia Bailey for the new 34th Street-Hudson Yards station on the west side of Manhattan.
Open Daily
LAMAR PETERSON (SOLO EXHIBITION)
Fredericks & Freiser
536 West 24th Street, NYC
Fredericks & Freiser is pleased to announce an exhibition of new paintings by Lamar Peterson. Peterson dissects constructs of the American dream as he comments on domesticity, masculinity, representations of blackness, and class anxieties. Having shown for more than a decade, Peterson is now exploring new mediums as he increases the scale of his works and moves from acrylic to oil. His evolving practice mimics the narrative of his pieces as he captures movement and transformation, change and balance. Sourcing imagery from popular culture, fairytales, canonical art history, comic books, and science fiction, Peterson's vision is both biting and playful.
February 6, 2015 - March 14, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6 pm
ANTON VAN DALEN
P.P.O.W
535 West 22nd Street, 3rd Floor, NYC
P.P.O.W is pleased to present an exhibition by Anton van Dalen, 'New Works and the Avenue A Cut-Out Theatre,' the artist’s first show with the gallery and first solo exhibition in eight years. Since 1972 Van Dalen has lived in the East Village documenting the ever-changing culture of the neighborhood through paintings, drawings, prints, stencils, collage works, and performances that captured the evolving history of the place. Van Dalen immigrated to the United States from Holland in 1965 and was captivated by the vibrancy, violence, and cultural diversity of his neighborhood.
February 13, 2015 - March 14, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6 pm
ESKO MANNIKKO
Yancey Richardson
525 West 22nd Street, NYC
Yancey Richardson is pleased to present Time Flies, a selection of works by Finnish photographer Esko Männikkö, the artist’s fifth exhibition with the gallery. The selection is drawn from the artist’s current traveling museum retrospective which originated in Finland at the Kunsthalle Helsinki. Männikkö was previously the winner of the 2008 Deutsche Börse Photography Prize, the first time a Finnish artist has been recipient of this prestigious award.
January 29, 2015 - March 14, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6 pm
EDVINS STRAUTMANIS
Allan Stone Projects
535 West 22nd Street, 3rd Floor, NYC
This exhibit comprises five monumental paintings from the early 1970s. While Strautmanis took up the legacy of Abstract Expressionism with vigor, he pushed his large-scale canvases toward the brink of material overload and established his own performative brand of painting.
January 8, 2015 - March 21, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm
CHAMBERLAIN, DE KOONING & OTHERS
Allan Stone Projects
536 West 22nd Street, 3rd Floor, NYC
Selected works by antecedents of Edvins Strautmanis, including John Chamberlain, Willem de Kooning, Charles Ginnever, Franz Kline, and Alfred Leslie
January 8, 2015 - March 21, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm
ORI GERSHT: ON REFLECTION
CRG Gallery
548 West 22nd Street, NYC
CRG is pleased to present London-based artist Ori Gersht’s seventh solo exhibition with the gallery. Ori Gersht’s recent works examine how painting and photography represents reality. Gersht interacts with three of Jan Brueghel the Elder’s floral paintings from 1606, now in Vienna’s Kunst Historisches Museum. For Gersht, Brueghel’s painting and the city of Vienna embrace a certain sense of exuberant decadence and imperialism, a metaphor he connects to our own time.
January 29, 2015 - March 14, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm
LICHTENSTEIN, NUDE WITH YELLOW PILLOW
Susan Sheehan Gallery
136 East 16th Street, NYC
Monday - Friday, 10am - 6pm
Open by appointment only. info@susansheehangallery.com
CLAIRE FONTAINE "STOP SEEKING APPROVAL"
Metro Pictures
519 West 24th Street, NYC
Metro Pictures presents its second solo exhibition with Claire Fontaine. An artist collective based in Paris, Claire Fontaine works at the intersection between the modernist tradition and political activism. Stop Seeking Approval will introduce works from their newest series - the Fresh Paintings - as well as new sculptures and videos.
February 26, 2015 - April 4, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm; open on Monday by appointment
BLINKY PALERMO - PRINTS
Carolina Nitsch
534 West 22nd Street, NYC
A selection of the artist's editions and posters
February, 2015 - March, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 11am - 6pm
OLIVIER MOSSET
Koenig & Clinton
459 West 19th Street, NYC
Koenig & Clinton presents its second solo exhibition with Olivier Mosset, featuring nine recent large-scale color monochromes. Among them, four paintings each pay homage to an influential figure or peer Mosset has encountered over the course of his international career, from Bern, Switzerland to New York City to Tucson, Arizona: Robert Breer (blue), Alex Hay (brown), Alfred Leslie (green), and Duane Zaloudek (grey).
February 6, 2015 - March 14, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 11am - 6pm
HAYV KAHRAMAN, HOW IRAQI ARE YOU?
Jack Shainman Gallery
513 West 20th Street, NYC
Hayv Kahraman’s work grapples with the marginal spaces between Western and Middle Eastern culture, aesthetics, and concepts of gender through her personal history as an Iraqi émigré to Europe and ultimately the US. Her paintings elegantly recall Japanese style calligraphy, Italian Renaissance painting, and illuminated Arab manuscripts, though the subjects are deeply and psychologically brutal. Her work calls back to these Western and Middle Eastern art histories, but her aesthetic, as an immigrant, belongs to neither.
February 27, 2015 - April 4, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am - 6pm
MICHAEL SNOW
Jack Shainman Gallery
524 West 24th Street, NYC
Michael Snow’s extensive and multidisciplinary oeuvre includes painting, sculpture, video, film, sound, photography, holography, drawing, writing, and music. His work explores the nature of perception, consciousness, language, and temporality. Snow is one of the world’s leading experimental filmmakers, having inspired the Structural Film movement with his groundbreaking film Wavelength (1967).
February 27, 2015 - April 4, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am– 6pm.
WAFAA BILAL: LOVELY PINK
Driscoll Babcock Galleries
525 West 25th Street, NYC
Presenting Wafaa Bilal’s new exhibition at Driscoll Babcock “Wafaa Bilal: Lovely Pink" and celebrating the artist’s inclusion on the 2015 Armory Show. In the wake of ISIS’ brutality and the wanton destruction of Iraqi cultural heritage, Lovely Pink resonates with the destabilization of iconographic structures, exploring their potential to generate a multiplicity of meaning through aesthetic intervention. By harnessing a minimal language of signs, the focus shifts from an authoritative perspective to any number of possible interpretations.
February 26, 2015 - March 14, 2015
Tuesday - Friday, 10am - 6pm; Saturday, 12pm - 6pm
ART IS LONG, LIFE IS SHORT: MARSDEN HARTLEY AND CHARLES KUNTZ IN AIX-EN-PROVENCE
Driscoll Babcock Galleries
525 West 25th Street, NYC
DRISCOLL BABCOCK GALLERIES presents Art is Long, Life is Short: Marsden Hartley and Charles Kuntz in Aix-en-Provence in conjunction with the Greenville County Museum of Art, South Carolina. This exhibition explores the influence and originality of two artists whose paths crossed in Aix-en-Provence between 1925 and 1928: Marsden Hartley, who was already an internationally known artist and poet and Charles “Arlie" Kuntz, a young artist who was just beginning to make his own significant signature statement in large-scale expressionistic paintings.
January 5, 2015 - March 14, 2015
Tuesday - Friday, 10am - 6pm; Saturday, 12pm - 6pm
VICTOR MOSCOSO: PSYCHEDELIC DRAWINGS, 1967 - 1982
Andrew Edlin Gallery
134 Tenth Avenue, NYC
Andrew Edlin Gallery is excited to announce a retrospective of drawings by Victor Moscoso, one of the pre-eminent graphic artists of the 20th century, and widely renowned for his 1960s psychedelic posters and comics. The gallery will publish a 96-page catalog to accompany the exhibition. These works, executed as production art for printed pieces, reveal Moscoso’s dedication to expert draftsmanship in the service of graphics, as well as a sure and graceful approach to drawing everything from dinosaurs to spaceships to humans.
March 8, 2015 - April 18, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am - 6pm
PULP DRUNK: MEXICAN PULP ART FROM THE 1960S-1970S
Ricco/Maresca Gallery
529 West 20th Street, 3rd Floor, NYC
The lurid cover art of Mexican Pulp Art is a pop culture revelation. These sensationalized images from the sixties and seventies often feature surreal and lurid images of extraterrestrials, robots, dinosaurs, killers, Zorro, and many other icons involving suspense, mystery, romance, and the supernatural. The central characters in the narratives tend to be ordinary people facing the common challenges of day-to-day life.
January 23, 2015 - March 7, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am - 6pm
HADIEH SHAFIE: SURFACED
Leila Heller Gallery
568 West 25th Street, NYC
Surfaced, Hadieh Shafie's first solo show in New York, will be on view at Leila Heller Gallery's Chelsea location from February 26 to April 11, 2015. The exhibition will feature twenty new artworks and both builds on her much acclaimed past work and explores new mediums. An illustrated catalogue with an essay by Thyrza Nichols Goodeve will accompany the exhibition.
Shaftie's colorful and multidimensional works defy simple categorization. The artist layers thousands of strips of hand painted paper, which are then rolled into scrolls and placed within a frame or stacked flat. Persian words like eshgh ("love") are inscribed on and often concealed within the layers of paper. Shafie's repeated use of words and phrases references meditative practices that are central to Sufism.
Shaftie's colorful and multidimensional works defy simple categorization. The artist layers thousands of strips of hand painted paper, which are then rolled into scrolls and placed within a frame or stacked flat. Persian words like eshgh ("love") are inscribed on and often concealed within the layers of paper. Shafie's repeated use of words and phrases references meditative practices that are central to Sufism.
February 26, 2015 - April 11, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am - 6pm
ALISON ROSSITER, PAPER WAIT
Yossi Milo Gallery
245 Tenth Avenue, NYC
Alison Rossiter’s photographs are created without a camera on expired, vintage photo paper. The artist experiments with gelatin silver papers she collects from throughout the 20th century, making controlled marks by pouring or pooling photographic developer directly onto the surface of the paper. Dark forms emerge which often resemble mountainous landscapes or active tornados while other shapes are paired by the artist to create minimalist diptychs.
February 26, 2015 - April 4, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am-6pm
MICHAEL GOLDBERG: MAKING HIS MARK, PAINTINGS & DRAWINGS, 1985-2005
Michael Rosenfeld Gallery
100 Eleventh Avenue, NYC
Michael Rosenfeld Gallery is pleased to present Michael Goldberg: Making His Mark, Paintings & Drawings, 1985-2005, a single exhibition of paintings and works on paper running simultaneously in New York and Los Angeles. Spanning the last two decades of the artist’s career, the exhibition is the joint effort of Michael Rosenfeld Gallery on the East Coast and Manny Silverman Gallery on the West. Both galleries represent the estate of the artist, and the exhibition has been organized with the estate’s cooperation.
January 17, 2015 - March 14, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am – 6pm
NAM JUNE PAIK
James Cohan Gallery
533 West 26th Street, NYC
James Cohan Gallery is pleased to present the multi-monitor, sculptural installation M200/Video Wall, (1991) by the visionary and peripatetic artist Nam June Paik, along with selected works from the early 1990s. The exhibition opens on February 12 and runs through March 14, 2015. The Korean-born artist died at age 73 in January 2006.
Nam June Paik is commonly hailed as the “father" of new media art for his discoveries in music, video, performance, television broadcast and technological experimentation. He balanced a Utopian philosophy with a technical pragmatism and a subversive sense of humor, creating works that drew on chance encounters between ideas, the object and the public.
Nam June Paik is commonly hailed as the “father" of new media art for his discoveries in music, video, performance, television broadcast and technological experimentation. He balanced a Utopian philosophy with a technical pragmatism and a subversive sense of humor, creating works that drew on chance encounters between ideas, the object and the public.
February 12, 2015 - March 14, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm
JULIA DAULT: MAKER’S MARK
Marianne Boesky Gallery
509 West 24th Street, NYC
Marianne Boesky Gallery is pleased to present Maker's Mark, an exhibition of new work by Canadian-born, New York–based artist Julia Dault. This is the artist's first solo show in New York since joining the gallery in 2013, and will be on view from February 20 to March 21, 2015, at 509 W. 24th Street, New York.
For several years, Dault has created abstract paintings and sculptures that reveal the processes of their own creation. In this exhibition, she continues this exploration of artistic labor, in part through constraining, repeating, or mechanically reproducing her gestures. Similarly, compositional elements she devises for her paintings coexist with those produced industrially: some of her surfaces are created with brushes, others with non-traditional tools like rubber combs, sea sponges, or foam blocks; some paintings' patterns derive solely from printed fabrics, while others are accompanied by artist-designed frames that complement or contrast what's on the canvas. She creates each painting with a novel combination of materials, implements, and set of rules governing its making.
For several years, Dault has created abstract paintings and sculptures that reveal the processes of their own creation. In this exhibition, she continues this exploration of artistic labor, in part through constraining, repeating, or mechanically reproducing her gestures. Similarly, compositional elements she devises for her paintings coexist with those produced industrially: some of her surfaces are created with brushes, others with non-traditional tools like rubber combs, sea sponges, or foam blocks; some paintings' patterns derive solely from printed fabrics, while others are accompanied by artist-designed frames that complement or contrast what's on the canvas. She creates each painting with a novel combination of materials, implements, and set of rules governing its making.
February 21, 2015 - March 21, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am - 6pm
ALEC SOTH
Sean Kelly
475 Tenth Avenue, NYC
Sean Kelly is pleased to announce Songbook, an exhibition of over twenty-five new, monumental black and white photographs by Alec Soth. Known for his haunting portraits of solitary Americans in Sleeping by the Mississippi and Broken Manual, Alec Soth has recently turned his lens toward community life in the United States. To aid in his search, Soth, accompanied by his friend the writer Brad Zeller, assumed the increasingly obsolescent role of small-town newspaper reporter.
January 30, 2015 - March 14, 2015
Tuesday - Friday, 11am - 6pm; Saturday, 10am - 6pm
IPCNY EXHIBITION TOUR & ARTIST TALKS
International Print Center New York (IPCNY)
508 West 26th Street, 5th Floor, NYC
International Print Center New York (IPCNY) presents Artist Talks and a tour of 50/50: New Prints 2015/Winter. The exhibition consists of 50 prints by 34 artists, representing a variety of printmaking techniques, such as relief, silkscreen, lithography, and intaglio. Opening IPCNY’s 15th Anniversary year, 50/50 is the 50th in this unique exhibition series. Artist Talks will be given by Evan Bellantone, Mary Lynn Blasutta, and Jennifer Marshall. Mountain Views: Swiss Travel Posters from the Dana/Spencer Collection will also be on view in our Project Space, featuring Swiss lithographs from the 1930's/40's.
March 5, 5pm - 7pm
Stephanie@ipcny.org / call 212-989-5090.
HUGO MCCLOUD
Sean Kelly
475 Tenth Avenue, NYC
Sean Kelly is pleased to announce Palindrome, an exhibition of new work by Brooklyn-based artist Hugo McCloud. For his first solo exhibition with Sean Kelly, McCloud has created eleven new abstract works, mixing unconventional industrial materials—aluminum sheeting, silver aluminum butane paint, and black liquid tar—with traditional pigment and woodblock printing techniques. A self-taught artist unbound by classical academic strictures, McCloud approaches his work in a visceral, physical way, privileging blowtorches and hammers as much as brushes and palettes.
January 30, 2015 - March 14, 2015
Tuesday - Friday, 11am - 6pm; Saturday, 10am - 6pm
PALERMO: WORKS 1973-1976
David Zwirner
537 West 20th Street, NYC
David Zwirner is pleased to present an exhibition of works by German artist Palermo (1943-1977) at the gallery’s 537 West 20th Street location. The exhibition, organized in collaboration with the Palermo Archive, will feature a selection of rarely shown paintings, objects, and large-scale drawings made by the artist between 1973 and 1976.
February 26, 2015 - April 11, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am – 6pm
ALFREDO JAAR: SHADOWS
Gallery Lelong
528 West 26th Street, NYC
Galerie Lelong will present Alfredo Jaar's Shadows, the artist's first solo exhibition in New York since 2009, Shadows is the second project in a trilogy of works exploring the power and politics of an iconic single image and follows The Sound of Silence, 2006. In Shadows, Jaar employs a photograph by Dutch photojournalist Koen Wessing taken in Nicaragua at the height of the 1978 insurrection. The photograph, which Jaar has described as perhaps the "strongest expression of grief" he has ever seen, was taken in Estelí, Nicaragua during the final days of oppression by the Somoza regime.
February 14, 2015 - March 28, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm.
BARBARA T. SMITH
Andrew Kreps Gallery
537 West 22nd Street, NYC
February 28, 2015 - March 28, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm
SUZAN FRECON: OIL PAINTINGS AND SUN
David Zwirner
525 West 19th Street, NYC
David Zwirner is pleased to present an exhibition of paintings by Suzan Frecon, the artist’s third solo show at the gallery. On view will be recent large-scale oil paintings. For the past four decades, Frecon has become known for abstract oil paintings and watercolors that avoid facile explanations or recognizable visual associations. Instead, composition works with color, with surface, and with light to create an abstract visual reality that she intends to exist solely on its strength as art.
February 19, 2015 - March 28, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am – 6pm
ALICE NEEL: DRAWINGS AND WATERCOLORS 1927-1978
David Zwirner
537 West 20th Street, NYC
David Zwirner is pleased to present an exhibition of drawings and watercolors by Alice Neel (1900–1984). The works are selected from throughout her career and span five decades. A fully illustrated catalogue by David Zwirner Books, featuring essays by the independent curator and writer Jeremy Lewison and the award-winning novelist Claire Messud, is published to coincide with the show.
Drawing was a fundamental, stand-alone component of Neel’s practice, persistently pursued alongside painting, for which she is primarily known.
Drawing was a fundamental, stand-alone component of Neel’s practice, persistently pursued alongside painting, for which she is primarily known.
February 19, 2014 - April 18, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am – 6pm
GROUP SHOW: SYSTEM AND VISION
David Zwirner
533 West 19th Street, NYC
David Zwirner is pleased to present the group exhibition System and Vision, organized in collaboration with Delmes & Zander in Berlin and Cologne. It includes artists whose unique ideas developed outside the circuit of art world institutions, often with limited interaction with other peers. Each offers a highly individualistic, authentic, and imaginative practice that roughly falls into one of four identifiable areas commonly absent from mainstream art-historical narratives: pseudo-science, science fiction, eroticism, and the occult.
February 28, 2015 - April 18, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am – 6pm
BRAD TROEMEL: ON VIEW: SELECTIONS FROM THE TROEMEL COLLECTION
Zach Feuer Gallery
548 West 22nd Street, NYC
Did you know I’m an emerging art collector? I am! I collect many things, but art is unique. By paying for something we love, collectors ensure the future production of more things made in the image of our purchased work, propelling artists’ careers through dynamic cycles of reflection, production, and exhibition. As the artist gains a higher profile the value of the work purchased escalates, validating the artist as well as us early adopters for having the insight to take a risk on the unforeseen talent others didn’t immediately recognize. Through hard work, innovation, and entrepreneurism everyone’s effort becomes jet fuel in the flight of culture. I present for the first time in a gallery, not an exploration of my own creative pursuits, but a look inside the mind and archive of Brad Troemel: the collector.
February 21, 2015 - March 29, 2014
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6 pm.
DE-FORMATIONS: A GROUP SHOW FEATURING ANDRE KERTESZ’S DISTORTIONS SERIES
Bruce Silverstein
535 West 24th Street, NYC
February 26, 2015 - April 18, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm
FUTURE SEASONS PAST
Lehmann Maupin
536 West 22nd Street & 201 Chrystie Street, NYC
Lehmann Maupin is pleased to present Future Seasons Past, a reflective celebration of its history and a look forward to its future. The gallery has garnered a reputation for supporting international artists at various stages of their careers and presenting work that reaches across disciplines, bringing forward new and challenging forms of creative expression. Known for its long relationships with artists, Lehmann Maupin has had a lasting impact on individual careers as well as on contemporary art and culture.
Curated by Manuel E. Gonzalez, this group exhibition highlights work by artists that the gallery has exhibited and those that have helped shaped the gallery program throughout its nearly 20-year history including: Kader Attia, Hernan Bas, Ashley Bickerton, Tracey Emin, Teresita Fernández, Anya Gallaccio, Gilbert & George, Shirazeh Houshiary, Klara Kristalova, Lee Bul, Liu Wei, Tony Oursler, Robin Rhode, Tim Rollins and K.O.S., Jennifer Steinkamp, Do Ho Suh, Juergen Teller, Mickalene Thomas, Adriana Varejão, Nari Ward, and Erwin Wurm.
Curated by Manuel E. Gonzalez, this group exhibition highlights work by artists that the gallery has exhibited and those that have helped shaped the gallery program throughout its nearly 20-year history including: Kader Attia, Hernan Bas, Ashley Bickerton, Tracey Emin, Teresita Fernández, Anya Gallaccio, Gilbert & George, Shirazeh Houshiary, Klara Kristalova, Lee Bul, Liu Wei, Tony Oursler, Robin Rhode, Tim Rollins and K.O.S., Jennifer Steinkamp, Do Ho Suh, Juergen Teller, Mickalene Thomas, Adriana Varejão, Nari Ward, and Erwin Wurm.
February 28, 2015 - April 12, 2015
Wednesday - Sunday, 11am - 6pm; Monday - Tuesday by appointment
DUANE MICHALS: THE PORTRAITIST
DC Moore Gallery
535 West 22nd Street, #2, NYC
DC Moore Gallery is pleased to present the exhibition Duane Michals: The Portraitist, a selection of new work in which Michals reinvigorates the possibilities of portraiture through the innovative use of sequencing, reflections, multiple exposures, overpainting, and handwritten annotations.
February 19, 2015 - March 21, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm.
ANDREW KUO AND SCOTT REEDER: IT GETS BETA
Marlborough Gallery
545 West 25th Street, NYC
Marlborough Chelsea is happy to announce a duo show with Andrew Kuo and Scott Reeder, titled It Gets Beta. The show runs from Saturday, February 21 - March 28, 2015 and has a second part at Marlborough Broome Street.
February 21, 2015 - March 28, 2015
Wednesday - Sunday, 11am - 6pm
LAUREN LULOFF: WATER VESSELS
Marlborough Gallery
545 West 25th Street, NYC
Marlborough Chelsea is happy to present Water Vessels, a solo exhibition by New York based artist, Lauren Luloff.
February 21, 2015 - March 28, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm
BROADWAY MOREY BOOGIE
Marlborough Gallery
545 West 25th Street, NYC
Marlborough Chelsea is proud to present Broadway Morey Boogie, a group exhibition of outdoor sculpture by Sarah Braman, Dan Colen, Paul Druecke, Lars Fisk, Drew Heitzler, Matt Johnson, Joanna Malinowska, Tony Matelli, Davina Semo, and Devin Troy Strother. The exhibition, in collaboration with the Broadway Mall Association, runs from Columbus Circle up to 166th and Broadway until April of 2015.
September 23, 2014 - April 1, 2015
Open Daily
BRUNCH VIEWING: THE CHINESE PHOTOBOOK EXHIBITION
Aperture Foundation
547 West 27th Street, #4, NYC
Brunch viewing of The Chinese Photobook exhibition, curated by Martin Parr and Wassink Lundgren. The selection of books on view includes key volumes published as early as 1900, as well as contemporary volumes by emerging Chinese photographers. Each and every featured photobook offers a new perspective on the complicated history of China, from the beginning of the twentieth century onward.
March 5, 2015
10am-12pm
WHITFIELD LOVELL: DISTANT RELATIONS, SELECTIONS FROM THE KIN SERIES
DC Moore Gallery
535 West 22nd Street, 2nd Floor, NYC
DC Moore Gallery is pleased to present Whitfield Lovell: Distant Relations, Selections from the Kin Series. In this exhibition of assemblages, Lovell juxtaposes masterful drawings of African Americans with found objects to powerfully recast our collective history. Lovell’s exquisitely drawn Conte crayon visages are sourced from his large archive of vintage I.D. photos, including passport pictures and mug shots.
February 19, 2015 - March 21, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm
ALDO ROSSI IN NEW YORK
AIA New York Chapter | Center for Architecture
536 LaGuardia Place, NYC
Architects and planners will discuss the contributions of Aldo Rossi's art and architecture to New York City’s landscape. Architect Morris Adjmi, who worked with Rossi and curated his latest Milan exhibition, will present works that they collaborated on for NYC as well as new buildings. Also from Rossi’s Studio, Frank Gerard Godlewski will conduct a discussion with Gigi Salomon, an urban planner and documentarian of the "Tribeca Pioneer Artist" community who helped transform the shape of Soho and Tribeca in the 1960s and 80s. The presentation will include material The Bonnefanten Museum in Maastrich (designed by Rossi).
Price: Free for AIA members and students; $10 for non-members.
Price: Free for AIA members and students; $10 for non-members.
March 5, 6pm - 8pm
OPENING OF ANICKA YI: YOU CAN CALL ME F
The Kitchen
512 West 19th Street, New York, NY
For You Can Call Me F, The Kitchen’s gallery will function as a forensic site in which the artist aligns society’s growing paranoia around contagion and hygiene (both public and private) with the enduring patriarchal fear of feminism and potency of female networks. Yi's new works will gather biological information from 100 women to cultivate the idea of the female figure as a viral pathogen, which undergoes external attempts to be contained and neutralized.
March 5, 6pm - 8pm
Tuesday - Friday, 12pm - 6pm; Saturday, 11am - 6pm
FRIDAY MARCH 6TH
VITO ACCONCI: WALL-SLIDE, 2002
MTA Arts & Design
161st Street-Yankee Stadium Station, N, R Trains, NYC
Vito Acconci creates the 161st Street Yankee Stadium station as an archaeological site and dislocates walls that allow the curious to "see" the stone and steel underneath. Elsewhere, protruding and receding walls provide seating for waiting travelers. Parts of the project thrust through floors and ceilings and at one point even project aboveground.
Download a free podcast to learn more about Wall-Slide, a mixed media installation by artists Vito Acconci, throughout the station complex at the 161st Street-Yankee Stadium.
Download a free podcast to learn more about Wall-Slide, a mixed media installation by artists Vito Acconci, throughout the station complex at the 161st Street-Yankee Stadium.
Open Daily
DUKE RILEY: BE GOOD OR BE GONE, 2011
MTA Arts & Design
Beach 98 Street Station, A, S Trains, NYC
At the Beach 98th Street station, faceted glass artwork panels feature scenes, symbols, and the sea that surrounds the community. There are three groupings of five panels and two sets of diptychs. Artist Duke Riley has long been interested in maritime history, folklore, and local customs - particularly around New York's waterways.
Download a free podcast to learn more about Be Good or Be Gone, a vibrant faceted glass work installed at the Beach 98 Street station in Rockaway, Queens. Artist Duke Riley has long been interested in maritime history, folklore, and local customs - particularly around New York's waterways.
Download a free podcast to learn more about Be Good or Be Gone, a vibrant faceted glass work installed at the Beach 98 Street station in Rockaway, Queens. Artist Duke Riley has long been interested in maritime history, folklore, and local customs - particularly around New York's waterways.
Open Daily
ELLEN HARVEY: THE HOME OF THE STARS, 2009
MTA Arts & Design
Yankees-E. 153rd Street Station, Metro-North Railroad, NYC
The Home of the Stars, created by artist Ellen Harvey, is a large-scaled series of mosaic panels that grace the walls of the pedestrian overpass of Metro-North Railroad's new Yankees-E. 153rd Street Station at in the Bronx.
Download a free podcast to learn more about The Home of the Stars, a series of mosaic panels created by artist Ellen Harvey that grace the walls of the pedestrian overpass of Metro-North Railroad's Yankees-E. 153rd Street Station at in the Bronx.
Download a free podcast to learn more about The Home of the Stars, a series of mosaic panels created by artist Ellen Harvey that grace the walls of the pedestrian overpass of Metro-North Railroad's Yankees-E. 153rd Street Station at in the Bronx.
Open Daily
SHINIQUE SMITH: MOTHER HALE’S GARDEN, 2013
MTA Arts & Design
Mother Clara Hale Bus Depot, Harlem, NYC
Graced with exuberant brush strokes and a vibrant collage, Mother Hale’s Garden created by Shinique Smith is inspired by the loving and generous nature of Mother Clara Hale who, for more than 50 years, cared for children -- orphaned, sick, and from broken homes -- and helped transform their lives.
Download a free podcast to learn more about Mother Hale’s Garden, Shinique Smith’s mosaic and glass artwork located on the façade and windows of the new Mother Clara Hale Bus Depot in Central Harlem.
Download a free podcast to learn more about Mother Hale’s Garden, Shinique Smith’s mosaic and glass artwork located on the façade and windows of the new Mother Clara Hale Bus Depot in Central Harlem.
Open Daily
MUSEUM OF MOVING IMAGE OPEN HOUSE
Museum of Moving Image
Museum of Moving Image, 36-01 35th Avenue, Astoria, NYC
Free admission to Museum galleries. On view: "Common Areas" (Sabrina Ratte); Tut’s Fever Movie Palace (Red Grooms and Lysiane Luong); "Behind the Screen" the museum's core exhibition.
March 6, 4pm - 8pm (free)
Wednesday – Thursday, 10:30am – 5pm; Friday, 10:30am – 8:00pm (free admission: 4:00pm – 8:00pm); Saturdays - Sundays, 11:30am – 7pm
NOGUCHI AS PHOTOGRAPHER: THE JANTAR MANTARS OF NORTHERN INDIA / HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE COLLECTION: ICONIC DISPLAY
The Noguchi Museum
The Noguchi Museum, 9-01 33rd Road, Long Island City, NYC
The Jantar Mantars of Northern India: In Northern India, Isamu Noguchi discovered the eighteenth-century astronomical observatories known as Jantar Mantar. A selection of his photographs of these instruments is shown along with objects related to his interest in linking mankind and its rituals to the cosmos.
Iconic Display: This exhibition features several excerpts from installations that have shaped the critical interpretation and public perception of Noguchi’s work.
Iconic Display: This exhibition features several excerpts from installations that have shaped the critical interpretation and public perception of Noguchi’s work.
January 8, 2015 - May 31, 2015
Wednesday - Friday, 10am - 5pm; Saturday - Sunday, 11am - 6pm
LITERARY DEVICES
Fisher Landau Center for Art
38-27 30th Street, Long Island City, New York
“LITERARY DEVICES", an exhibition dedicated to the methods & strategies displayed by visual artists using language to convey their message. Highlighting Emily Fisher Landau’s passion for collecting text based artwork, the exhibition includes over 100 pieces by 40 artists spanning all three floors of the Center. Emily Fisher Landau's insightful selection of works by contemporary masters, many of which she purchased from the artists at the outset of their careers, is reflected in exhibitions presented at Fisher Landau Center for Art. In May of 2010, Mrs. Landau made a historic pledge of over 400 artworks by nearly 100 artists to the Whitney Museum of American Art.
12pm - 5pm
RACHEL MASON: THE LIVES OF HAMILTON FISH
Art in General at ROOT Studios
ROOT Studios, 443 West 18th Street, NYC
A cinematic performance based on figures who lived in New York State during the Great Depression. A serial killer and a statesman—both named Hamilton Fish—die one day apart. Hamilton Fish II is a descendant of one of the most prominent families on the east coast, and Hamilton “Albert" Fish is a psychopath and notorious murderer. A newspaper editor, played by Mason in drag, becomes obsessed with this coincidence after publishing their simultaneous obituaries on his front page. Through original songs performed live, a surreal tale unfolds where supernatural events and historic facts merge in a wild, musical journey.
There will be an additional performance on March 7th, 7pm - 9pm. Please RSVP to lindsey@artingeneral.org.
There will be an additional performance on March 7th, 7pm - 9pm. Please RSVP to lindsey@artingeneral.org.
March 6, 7pm - 9pm
WAEL SHAWKY: CABARET CRUSADES
MoMA PS1
22-25 Jackson Avenue, Long Island City, NYC
For his first solo exhibition at a major American museum, Wael Shawky presents his epic video trilogy that recounts the history of The Crusades from an Arab perspective. Inspired by The Crusades Through Arab Eyes by Lebanese historian Amin Maalouf, Shawky’s videos chart the numerous European campaigns to the Holy Land, starting from the early Crusades from 1096–1099 A.D. that are depicted in CABARET CRUSADES: THE HORROR SHOW FILES (2010) and the First and Second Crusades from 1099–1145 A.D. in CABARET CRUSADES: THE PATH TO CAIRO (2012). The MoMA PS1 exhibition will feature both works and debut the third and final video from the series, CABARET CRUSADES: THE SECRETS of KARBALA.
January 31, 2015 - August 31, 2015
Thursday - Monday, 12am – 6pm
DIRECTOR’S TOUR, EAF14
Socrates Sculpture Park
Socrates Sculpture Park, 32-01 Vernon Blvd, Long Island City, NYC
Join Socrates Sculpture Park’s Executive Director for the final tour of “EAF14" before the exhibition closes this March. “EAF14," the Emerging Artist Fellowship Exhibition, is a cornerstone of the park’s visual arts programming and widely acclaimed for the ambition, breadth, and innovation of the works on view. “EAF14" is a survey of the compelling and diverse state of sculpture today, featuring 15 artists: Matt Callinan, Jordan Griska, Meredith James, Fitzhugh Karol, Lilian Kreutzberger, Zaq Landsberg, Heidi Lau, Amanda Long, Christopher Mahonski, Kimberly Mayhorn, Eto Otitigbe, Brie Ruais, Edward Schexnayder, David J. Wilson, and Dane R. Winkler. Hot beverages will be served during this sunset tour.
March 6, 5pm - 7pm
Email rsvp@socratessculpturepark.org by March 4th.
BRONX SPEAKS: NO BOUNDARIES OPENING RECEPTION
Bronx Arts Alliance
Bronx Museum of the Arts, 1040 Grand Concourse, Bronx, NYC
Bronx Speaks: No Boundaries is the latest exhibit presented by the Bronx Arts Alliance (BxAA) including artworks selected by a curatorial committee featuring International, US and Bronx Artists from over 20 Bronx Art Organizations (Museums, Galleries, Art Spaces). The exhibit will take place at the Bronx Museum of the Arts and be installed by independent curator, Sarah Corona.
There are no boundaries anymore for the vibrant artwork that is being created and shown within the Bronx. It is as varied as those who live within its space – all cultures, nationalities, and ages – with creative visions all their own. The exhibit will highlight this range and diversity.
There are no boundaries anymore for the vibrant artwork that is being created and shown within the Bronx. It is as varied as those who live within its space – all cultures, nationalities, and ages – with creative visions all their own. The exhibit will highlight this range and diversity.
March 6, 5pm - 8pm
Thursday, Saturday & Sunday, 11am - 6pm; Friday, 11am - 8pm
SATURDAY MARCH 7TH
BRENDAN FERNANDES
Harvestworks Digital Media Art Center
596 Broadway, #602, NYC
Harvestworks Digital Media Art Center presents Brendan Fernandes’ multichannel moving image work “(buli)" and recent video works. "(buli)" explores the barriers and codes that language creates through the lens of ethnicity. The work looks at Dada writing fashions that play on repetition and nonsensicality, while referencing wall labels and provenance reports of African objects in museum collections. The work offers a minimalist aesthetic with complex moments that question colonial histories through the removal and loss of cultural goods. Buli was produced in part through the Harvestworks Artist in Residence Program.
Roll Out - New Video Works
Taking inspiration from the notion of being still these abstract videos of the body are playful and perverse but oscillate between looking like lunar landscapes and a quiet space of contemplative desire.
Roll Out - New Video Works
Taking inspiration from the notion of being still these abstract videos of the body are playful and perverse but oscillate between looking like lunar landscapes and a quiet space of contemplative desire.
March 9, 2015 - March 29, 2015
Monday – Friday, 10am – 5pm
LEO VILLAREAL, HIVE, 2012
MTA Arts & Design
Bleecker Street/Lafayette Street Station, 6, B, D, F, M Trains
Hive (Bleecker Street) is a light installation for the Bleecker Street Station by Leo Villareal. The LED sculpture takes the form of a honeycomb, dramatically filling an architectural space in the shape of an ellipse above the stairs that marks the new transfer point connecting the IRT and IND subway lines.
Download a free podcast to learn more about Hive (Bleecker Street), an LED installation for the Bleecker Street Station by Leo Villareal.
Download a free podcast to learn more about Hive (Bleecker Street), an LED installation for the Bleecker Street Station by Leo Villareal.
Open Daily
JANET ZWEIG AND EDWARD DEL ROSARIO: CARRYING ON, 2004
MTA Arts & Design
Prince Street Station, N, R Trains, NYC
Carrying On is composed of almost two hundred silhouettes of people hauling "stuff" with them as they walk the city streets. The artist team worked from photographs of individuals moving around the city and in and out of the subway.
Download a free podcast to learn more about Carrying On, a delightful mixed media installation by artists Janet Zweig and Edward Del Rosario, along the platform walls of the Prince Street Station in SoHo.
Download a free podcast to learn more about Carrying On, a delightful mixed media installation by artists Janet Zweig and Edward Del Rosario, along the platform walls of the Prince Street Station in SoHo.
Open Daily
TINA KIM GALLERY SPONSORS GIMHONGSOK SCULPTURE IN TRIBECA PARK
Tina Kim Gallery
Tribeca Park
Gimhongsok, Bearlike Construction, 2012
May 5, 2014 - March 3, 2015
Morning till dusk
BIANCA BECK & JOSH BRAND
Rachel Uffner Gallery
170 Suffolk Street, NYC
Rachel Uffner Gallery is pleased to present two new shows. An exhibition of work by Bianca Beck and Josh Brand will occupy the first floor of the gallery, while a solo presentation by Bianca Beck will be on view in the upstairs space.
Beck will exhibit gouache drawings, oil paintings on wood panel, small “page paintings" on thin sheets of wood, carved reliefs, and painted sculptures in varying scales. Brand will exhibit photographs, collages, and video. Beck and Brand share a commitment to an open-ended and continuous process influenced by their private life together.
For Beck’s second solo show with the gallery, she goes deeper into the landscape of the body. Fueled by grey skies, political madness, music, and dreams, these new works survey a surrealist field of recurring images: memories and visions of birth, sex, death, dance, and childhood. Her materials (mirrors, found wood, human hair) and colors (blues, blacks, neons, earth hues) create a literal and symbolic structure for her explorations of flesh, sensation, and consciousness.
Brand makes art via the processes of photography, drawing, collage, and filmmaking. His work shifts between various categories including abstraction, autobiography, and perceptual experimentation. Brand’s works in this show generate psychological depth from minimal materials: sticks, curtains, glass, vague figures, scraps of paper. His three most recent solo shows were titled Nature, Face, and Peace Being.
Beck will exhibit gouache drawings, oil paintings on wood panel, small “page paintings" on thin sheets of wood, carved reliefs, and painted sculptures in varying scales. Brand will exhibit photographs, collages, and video. Beck and Brand share a commitment to an open-ended and continuous process influenced by their private life together.
For Beck’s second solo show with the gallery, she goes deeper into the landscape of the body. Fueled by grey skies, political madness, music, and dreams, these new works survey a surrealist field of recurring images: memories and visions of birth, sex, death, dance, and childhood. Her materials (mirrors, found wood, human hair) and colors (blues, blacks, neons, earth hues) create a literal and symbolic structure for her explorations of flesh, sensation, and consciousness.
Brand makes art via the processes of photography, drawing, collage, and filmmaking. His work shifts between various categories including abstraction, autobiography, and perceptual experimentation. Brand’s works in this show generate psychological depth from minimal materials: sticks, curtains, glass, vague figures, scraps of paper. His three most recent solo shows were titled Nature, Face, and Peace Being.
March 1, 2015 - April 12, 2015
Wednesday - Sunday, 10am - 6pm
MARWA ARSANIOS: ARTIST-LED TOUR OF THE EXHIBITION NOTES FOR A CHOREOGRAPHY
Art In General
Art in General, 79 Walker Street, NYC
Special artist-led tour by Marwa Arsanios of this exhibition that includes the newly commissioned film OLGA's NOTES, all those restless bodies (2014), a co-production of Art in General and Kunsthalle Lissabon, Portugal. Inspired by a 1963 article in Al Hilal magazine that described the ballet school in Cairo as a ‘factory of the bodies’, this film examines dance as a way to train and adapt the body to the modern industrial world, and therefore to labor and work.
March 7, 5pm - 6pm
Tuesday - Saturday, 12pm - 6pm
Please rsvp to aimee@artingeneral.org
PSYCHLOTRON
Whitebox Art Center
Whitebox Art Center, 329 Broome Street #1, NYC
Whitebox Art Center and curator Lara Pan are introducing a multi disciplinary performance platform,¨PSYCHLOTRON conceived by artist John Bonafede. Based in NYC, Psychlotron* is an interdisciplinary art and performance event, the name comes from the term psychologist Timothy Leary coined in the 1960s. Leary assimilated the term from the field of subatomic physics, in particular the spiral of magnets that align atoms before they are smashed together in a particle collider. That spiral of magnets is known as a cyclotron. The colliding particles in Leary’s social experimentation are the humans present. The concept is that psyches ¨smash¨ together in a creative context wherein unknown outcomes arise in an autonomous space.
March 7, 6pm - 11pm
Monday - Sunday, 11am - 6pm
THIAGO ROCHA PITTA: STILL FROM TEMPORAL MAPS OF A NON-SEDIMENTED LAND
Marianne Boesky Gallery
20 Clinton Street, NYC
BOESKY EAST is pleased to present Temporal Maps of a Non-Sedimented Land, a solo exhibition of work by Thiago Rocha Pitta. This is Rocha Pitta’s first show at the gallery, organized in collaboration with curator Simon Watson. The exhibition will run from February 22 – March 22, 2015, at 20 Clinton Street, New York.
Thiago Rocha Pitta’s temporal and sensitive art often depicts environments from his native Brazil. Through watercolor, photography, sculpture, and video, Rocha Pitta focuses on small, yet emotive elements of the natural world, whether ocean tide, rainclouds, or trails of sap. His work manages to decelerate the passage of time within a single frame or subject, requiring the viewer’s close attention and quiet introspection.
In this exhibition, Rocha Pitta develops his study of nature through an installation of five videos, each depicting a different desert terrain in Argentina. Referred to as “maps," these videos capture a deceptively small physical alteration in the land that causes it to either fall, collapse, or become wet or dry. Although an organic process is not at play here (the alterations are the artist’s experiments), the videos still surge with activity and transformation which allude to universal forces like entropy and death.
Thiago Rocha Pitta’s temporal and sensitive art often depicts environments from his native Brazil. Through watercolor, photography, sculpture, and video, Rocha Pitta focuses on small, yet emotive elements of the natural world, whether ocean tide, rainclouds, or trails of sap. His work manages to decelerate the passage of time within a single frame or subject, requiring the viewer’s close attention and quiet introspection.
In this exhibition, Rocha Pitta develops his study of nature through an installation of five videos, each depicting a different desert terrain in Argentina. Referred to as “maps," these videos capture a deceptively small physical alteration in the land that causes it to either fall, collapse, or become wet or dry. Although an organic process is not at play here (the alterations are the artist’s experiments), the videos still surge with activity and transformation which allude to universal forces like entropy and death.
February 22, 2015 - March 22, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am - 6pm
WAVE & PARTICLE: A GROUP EXHIBITION TO CELEBRATE CREATIVE CAPITAL'S 15TH ANNIVERSARY
Ronald Feldman Fine Arts
31 Mercer Street, NYC
Ronald Feldman Fine Arts will present Wave & Particle, a group exhibition of more than two dozen artists who are awardees of the Creative Capital Foundation, in celebration of the foundation’s 15th anniversary. In general, the artists in the exhibition address contemporary issues surrounding conditions that might be rectified; and the selection of artworks embraces the notion of synthesizing contradictory elements. Using the principles of quantum physics based on duality as a metaphor, the exhibition muses on how one might describe or consider objects that can be read in more than one way.
February 14, 2015 - March 21, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10-6 pm; Monday by appointment
TAMAR HALPERN MY VOICE AT THE PACE OF DRIFTING CLOUDS
On Stellar Rays
1 Rivington Street
Halpern presents new paintings on linen, using photography, collage, and ink-jet printing to build layered surfaces combining graphic elements and more atmospheric imagery.
As with previous work, photography plays an essential role in Halpern’s studio, capturing simple visual information available in her immediate environment — walls, floors, water, textiles, a cat, a screen, the work itself — in an improvisational and nondiscriminatory manner that acknowledges the subjective nature of photography, while further actuating the fragmentary and non-specific nature of circulated images.
As with previous work, photography plays an essential role in Halpern’s studio, capturing simple visual information available in her immediate environment — walls, floors, water, textiles, a cat, a screen, the work itself — in an improvisational and nondiscriminatory manner that acknowledges the subjective nature of photography, while further actuating the fragmentary and non-specific nature of circulated images.
February 22, 2015 - March 29, 2015
Wednesday through Saturday, 10am - 6pm Sunday, 12 - 6pm
THE LEFT FRONT: RADICAL ART IN THE “RED DECADE," 1929 – 1940
Grey Art Gallery
100 Washington Square East
The Left Front highlights the work of American artists who took to their brushes amid the economic and social devastation brought on by the Great Depression. Joining forces in the John Reed Club and its successor, the American Artists’ Congress, a group of intellectuals and artists — among them Isabel Bishop, Louis Lozowick, John Sloan, and Raphael Soyer — tackled themes ranging from class struggle, labor organizing, unemployment, civil and workers’ rights, immigration, socialist mysticism, and utopian communities to the Spanish Civil War.
January 13, 2015 - April 4, 2015
Tuesdays, Thursdays - Fridays: 11am – 6pm; OPEN LATE Wednesdays, 11am – 8pm; Saturdays, 11 – 5pm
ABBY GREY AND INDIAN MODERNISM: SELECTIONS FROM THE NYU ART COLLECTION
Grey Art Gallery
100 Washington Square East, NYC
In the wake of India’s independence from British rule in 1947, the country’s artists experimented with new approaches, forming its first modernist schools. During five trips to India from the late 1960s to early ’70s, Abby Weed Grey — founder of NYU’s Grey Art Gallery — set out to explore this burgeoning art scene. Abby Grey and Indian Modernism: Selections from the NYU Art Collection spotlights her pioneering collecting efforts, which resulted in a significant trove of post – Indian Independence art in the United States.
January 13, 2015 - April 4, 2015
Tuesdays, Thursdays & Fridays, 11am – 6pm; OPEN LATE Wednesdays, 11am – 8pm; Saturdays, 11am – 5:00pm
BOOKS BY EDWARD RUSCHA
Zucker Art Books
Zucker Art Books at Gagosian Shop Gagosian, 976 Madison Ave at 76th street, New York
This exhibition of Ed Ruscha’s early books is an homage to his first presentation of artists’ books at Gal- erie Heiner Friedrich in Munich 45 years ago (exhibition dates: March 17 to April 4, 1970) and to Henry T. Hopkins, (1928–2009), an eminent museum director, curator, and educator, who played a leading role in establishing the Los Angeles art scene in the 1960s and 1970s. The current exhibition showcases Ruscha’s extraordinary books, all those published before 1978, plus a collection of the first 17 books. Several are in- timately inscribed to Hopkins. The original catalogue from the 1970 show is on display, together with documents and ephemera related to Ruscha’s books. Also included is the more recent On the Road, published by Gagosian Gallery and Steidl in 2010, a book on the 1957 classic novel of the same title by Jack Kerouac, in which Ruscha added black and white images (his own and other people’s) to the original text.
March 3, 2015 - April 4, 2015
Monday - Saturday, 10am - 7pm
LAMIA JOREIGE: RECORDS FOR UNCERTAIN TIMES
Taymour Grahne
157 Hudson Street, NYC
Taymour Grahne Gallery is proud to present Records for Uncertain Times, Lamia Joreige’s first solo exhibition in the United States. A visual artist and filmmaker based in Beirut, Lebanon, Lamia Joreige uses archival documents and elements of fiction to reflect on history and its possible narration, and the relation between individual stories and collective memory. Her practice is rooted in Lebanon’s historic experiences, and explores the possibilities of representation of the Lebanese wars and their aftermath, particularly in Beirut, a city at the center of much of her practice. Joreige's work essentially centers on the recording of time, of its trace and its effects on us, underlining the process of memory and the impossibility of accessing a complete narrative. The exhibition includes several interconnected and ongoing projects set in the context of Beirut among which, her latest body of work: One Night of Sleep, Under–Writing Beirut – Mathaf and Under–Writing Beirut – Nahr.
February 29, 2015 - April 9, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm
OPEN STUDIO EVENT: ANDERS KRISÁR, MATTHIAS VAN ARKEL & CAJSA VON ZEIPEL
OPEN STUDIOS at 255 CANAL
255 Canal Street, NYC
In connection to this week of non-profit art-related events, the Swedish Consulate is supporting an open studio event at 255 Canal Street in Chinatown on March 7, featuring Swedish artists Anders Krisár, Matthias van Arkel and Cajsa von Zeipel. Supported by the Consulate General of Sweden, with refreshments served from 4pm to 6pm.
March 07, 10am - 6pm
BREAKFAST VIEWING AND ARTIST TALK WITH FILMMAKER AND PHOTOGRAPHER, WIM WENDERS, ON THE OCCASION OF HIS FILM RETROSPECTIVE AT THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART.
James Cohan Gallery
533 West 26th Street, NYC
Join us for a breakfast viewing and artist talk with filmmaker and photographer, Wim Wenders, on the occasion of his film retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art. Several of Wenders’ large-format photographs will be on view and he will briefly discuss his differing approaches to filmmaking and photography. Light breakfast refreshments will be served.
Wim Wenders is a renowned German film director, photographer, author and playwright. Born in 1945 in Dusseldorf, Germany, Wenders began his career with the rise of the New German Cinema at the end of the 1960s. Life on the road holds much allure for Wenders and has been the driving force in his cinematic and photographic oeuvres. His images of urban and rural landscapes function both as stories unfolding within a single frame and as archaeological dioramas, recording a specific moment in the life of a place. Wenders is the President of the European Film Academy and has received numerous honors for his work in film, including the Golden Lion, Golden Bear and Palme d’Or. Wim Wenders lives and works in Berlin, Germany.
Wim Wenders is a renowned German film director, photographer, author and playwright. Born in 1945 in Dusseldorf, Germany, Wenders began his career with the rise of the New German Cinema at the end of the 1960s. Life on the road holds much allure for Wenders and has been the driving force in his cinematic and photographic oeuvres. His images of urban and rural landscapes function both as stories unfolding within a single frame and as archaeological dioramas, recording a specific moment in the life of a place. Wenders is the President of the European Film Academy and has received numerous honors for his work in film, including the Golden Lion, Golden Bear and Palme d’Or. Wim Wenders lives and works in Berlin, Germany.
March 07, 10am - 12pm
Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm
101 SPRING STREET
Judd Foundation
101 Spring Street, NYC
Please join us for guided visits of 101 Spring Street, the former New York home and studio of Donald Judd. 101 Spring Street is considered to be the birthplace of "permanent installation," now a hallmark of contemporary art, as well as an inspiration for much of Judd's work. Judd's concept of "permanent installation," centered on the belief that the placement of a work of art was as critical to its understanding as the work itself. Works on view at 101 Spring Street remain as they were installed by Judd prior to his death. Artists represented in the collection include Carl Andre, Frank Stella, David Novros, Claes Oldenburg, and Lucas Samaras.
Guided visits available for 11am, 1pm, 2pm & 4pm
https://web.ovationtix.com/trs/cal/34321/1425232800000
JAMES CARPENTER: SKY REFLECTOR-NET, 2014
MTA Arts & Design
Fulton Center, 2, 3, 4, 5, A, C, J, Z, R Trains, NYC
Sky Reflector-Net is an integrated artwork by James Carpenter Design Associates, Grimshaw Architects and ARUP, designed specifically for the Fulton Center. The monumental sculpture embraces light and air, creating a distinctive focal point within Lower Manhattan’s urban fabric.
Download a free podcast to learn more about Sky Reflector-Net, a ground-breaking sculpture designed for the newly opened Fulton Center in Lower Manhattan. Sky Reflector-Net is an integrated work by James Carpenter Design Associates (JCDA), Grimshaw Architects and Arup Associates.
Meet At: Fulton Center entrance at the corner between Broadway and Fulton Street
Look for Arts & Design sign for Armory Arts Week Tour
Download a free podcast to learn more about Sky Reflector-Net, a ground-breaking sculpture designed for the newly opened Fulton Center in Lower Manhattan. Sky Reflector-Net is an integrated work by James Carpenter Design Associates (JCDA), Grimshaw Architects and Arup Associates.
Meet At: Fulton Center entrance at the corner between Broadway and Fulton Street
Look for Arts & Design sign for Armory Arts Week Tour
Tuesday, March 3, 10:00 am – 11:00 am
Open Daily
PIXELATION WORKSHOP
Children’s Museum of the Arts
Children's Museum of the Arts, 103 Charlton Street (between Hudson and Greenwich Street), NYC
Participate in a special pixelation workshop at CMA! Inspired by the exhibition on view, Pixelated: Sum of its Pieces, young artists will work collaboratively to create their very own pixelated film! Participants will learn about stop motion animation and the pixelation process and try their hand at acting in front of the camera! Register for one of two reserved pixelation workshops, either 10-11 AM or 11-12 PM. Participants and families are welcome to explore the museum for the rest of the day after the workshop. Workshops are for ages 6+ and a caregiver is required to attend with the child. RSVP at rsvp@cmany.org by March 5, 2015.
March 7, 10am - 12pm
Monday & Wednesday, 12 - 5pm; Thursdays - Fridays, 12 - 6pm; Saturday - Sunday, 10am - 5pm
Please RSVP to rsvp@cmany.org with number of children & adults. Please indicate if you would like to attend the 10 AM or 11 AM session. Please note your registration is not complete until you receive confirmation from CMA.
BLUEPRINT
Storefront for Art and Architecture
97 Kenmare Street, NYC
For over three decades, Storefront has presented exhibitions and projects at the intersection of art and architecture. Its unique triangular ground floor exhibition space includes a facade comprised of rotating panels, designed collaboratively by artists Vito Acconci and architect Steven Holl. The space is host to site-specific installations, events, and exhibitions.
Blueprint is based on the exhibition of the same name from 1998, curated by Sebastiaan Bremer and Pieter Woudt. This time, Bremmer is joined by Florian Idenburg and Jing Liu of SO-IL. The exhibition asks individuals from the world of art and architecture to embark on a trip of self-reflection to identify a place of origination for their work in the literal and metaphorical form of a blueprint.
Blueprint is based on the exhibition of the same name from 1998, curated by Sebastiaan Bremer and Pieter Woudt. This time, Bremmer is joined by Florian Idenburg and Jing Liu of SO-IL. The exhibition asks individuals from the world of art and architecture to embark on a trip of self-reflection to identify a place of origination for their work in the literal and metaphorical form of a blueprint.
January 23, 2015 - March 21, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 11am - 6pm
MEDARDO ROSSO (1858-1928)
Center for Italian Modern Art
421 Broome Street, 4th floor, NYC
The Center for Italian Modern Art, which opened in February 2014, presents its second exhibition, on Medardo Rosso (1858-1928). Anchored by major loans from the Museo Medardo Rosso in Italy, this exhibition marks the first time in the United States that a large body of Rosso’s experimental photography and drawings are on view together with examples of his wax, plaster, and bronze sculptures. CIMA is open on Fridays and Saturdays at 11am, 1pm, and 3pm ($10; free for students and members).
In celebration of the Armory Show, on Saturday March 7th CIMA will host a free open house from 11am to 7pm.
In celebration of the Armory Show, on Saturday March 7th CIMA will host a free open house from 11am to 7pm.
October 17, 2014 - June 27, 2015
Visits on Fridays & Saturdays at 11am, 1pm, and 3pm
PRAGUE FUNCTIONALISM
Center for Architecture
536 LaGuardia Place, NYC
The exhibition presents photos of Prague’s functionalism buildings, projects and drawings. The first section of the exhibition is focused on functionalism projects from the twenties and thirties and the second part includes contemporary realizations influenced by Czech Functionalism tradition. The photographs are accompanied by texts of scholars and researchers in architecture. Originally presented at Jaroslav Fragner Gallery in Prague, the New York presentation will include models of historic and contemporary buildings, Czech furniture, industrial design from the era, and a to scale reproduction of a 1930s Czech minimal housing unit.
BxW: Built by Women (BxW) is a competition for NYC organized by The Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation (BWAF). The competition set out to identify 100 built environments led by women (architects, engineers, developers, construction, or teams of women). The exhibition, presented during Women’s History Month, will highlight the competition winners through storyboards and showcase all applicants via a map of the five boroughs.
BxW: Built by Women (BxW) is a competition for NYC organized by The Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation (BWAF). The competition set out to identify 100 built environments led by women (architects, engineers, developers, construction, or teams of women). The exhibition, presented during Women’s History Month, will highlight the competition winners through storyboards and showcase all applicants via a map of the five boroughs.
Monday - Friday, 9am - 8pm; Saturday, 11am - 5pm
IRREVERENT: A CELEBRATION OF CENSORSHIP
Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art
26 Wooster Street, NYC
Curated by Jennifer Tyburczy, Irreverent is inspired by the censorship of works of art by artists such as Robert Mapplethorpe, David Wojnarowicz, and others. It will explain how sexuality has been, and continues to be, used as a tool to censor LGBTQ cultural artwork. The exhibition will include work excluded due to issues of immigration, religion, race, gender, disability and politics.
February 13, 2015 - May 3, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 12am - 6pm; Thursday, 12am - 8pm
PK WORRYSHOP
Recess
41 Grand Street, NYC
Recess is pleased to present work by PK Worryshop, whose two month long Session at Recess will take the early sixties barroom cinema cabinets Scopitone and SonoVision as a starting point. The group will develop a new version of these boxes: the Mirroscope, a cinematic sadness machine. In collaboration with other artists, PK Worryshop will create emotive short videos set to subdued musical scores situated within the Mirroscope to be viewed at Recess and nearby participating bars. The sights and sounds of these spaces will slowly amalgamate into the cinematic mix-tape of the machine.
January 22, 2015 - March 12, 2015
Tuesday – Saturday, 12pm - 6pm; Thursday, 2pm - 8pm
The Renee and Chaim Gross Foundation
526 LaGuardia Pl, NYC
Built in the 1830s as a townhouse and converted in the 1880s for industrial use, this four-story building was remodeled in 1963 after purchase by sculptor Chaim Gross (1904-91) and his wife Renee to serve as a home and studio. On the first floor, see Chaim's sculpture studio with his works from the 1920s-80s lit by an enormous skylight. On the second floor is a temporary exhibition space featuring thematic exhibitions related to 20th-century American art (seewww.rcgrossfoundation.org for the current exhibit). On the third floor, experience how the Grosses lived amidst their world-class art collection. Featuring a Salonstyle installation of European and American art designed by Gross, the third floor also houses significant African and Pre-Columbian collections.
Thursday - Friday, 1pm -5pm or by appointment; open special weekend hours Saturday March 7, 12pm - 6pm
TOMI UNGERER: ALL IN ONE
The Drawing Center
35 Wooster Street, NYC
This exhibit will be the first career retrospective in the United States dedicated to this extraordinary artist. Ungerer is best known as the award winning author and illustrator of such beloved 1960s children’s classics as The Three Robbers (1963) and Moon Man (1967). But the virtuoso draftsman made a name for himself with witty advertising campaigns for The New York Times and The Village Voice, biting satirical illustrations about the business world, and brutal pictorial responses to racism, fascism, and the Vietnam War. Ungerer also made graphic erotic drawings throughout his career. Tomi Ungerer: All in One will reintroduce this wildly creative individual to New York City.
January 16, 2015 - March 22, 2015
Wednesday, 12am - 6pm; Thursday, 12am - 8pm; Friday - Sunday, 12am - 6pm
WORK HARD: SELECTIONS BY VALENTIN CARRON
Swiss Institute
18 Wooster Street, NYC
The exhibition, curated by artist Valentin Carron, who represented Switzerland in the 2013 Venice Biennale, will feature a selection of seminal artworks combining his key homegrown influences and inspiring contemporaries. Through May 24, 2015. Participating artists include Edmond Bille, Vittorio Brodmann, Marguerite Burnat-Provins, Luciano Castelli, Claudia Comte, Sylvain Croci Torti, Latifa Echakhch, Frédéric Gabioud, Mathis Gasser, Fabrice Gygi, Andreas Hochuli, Trix and Robert Haussmann, David Hominal, Bernhard Luginbühl, Urs Lüthi, Fabian Marti, Méret Oppenheim, Simon Paccaud, Mai-Thu Perret, Ugo Rondinone, Denis Savary, Louis Soutter, Daniel Spoerri, and Jean Tinguely.
March 4, 2015 - May 24, 2015
Wednesday - Sunday, 12pm – 6pm
WALTER DE MARIA’S THE NEW YORK EARTH ROOM AND THE BROKEN KILOMETER
Dia Art Foundation
The New York Earth Room, 141 Wooster Street, New YorkThe Broken Kilometer, 393 West Broadway, NYC
Visit Walter De Maria’s The New York Earth Room and The Broken Kilometer. In celebration of The Armory Show’s Soho Night, The New York Earth Room and The Broken Kilometer will stay open until 7pm on March 7, 2014. Please note that the center will be closed from 3-3:30pm on Saturday.
The New York Earth Room, 1977, is an interior earth sculpture. It is the third and only existing Earth Room sculpture executed by the artist. The other two were installed in Germany in 1968 and 1974. The Broken Kilometer, 1979, is composed of 500 highly polished, round, solid brass rods, each measuring two meters in length and five centimeters in diameter. The 500 rods are placed in five parallel rows of 100 rods each. This work is the companion piece to De Maria's 1977 Vertical Earth Kilometer at Kassel, Germany.
The New York Earth Room, 1977, is an interior earth sculpture. It is the third and only existing Earth Room sculpture executed by the artist. The other two were installed in Germany in 1968 and 1974. The Broken Kilometer, 1979, is composed of 500 highly polished, round, solid brass rods, each measuring two meters in length and five centimeters in diameter. The 500 rods are placed in five parallel rows of 100 rods each. This work is the companion piece to De Maria's 1977 Vertical Earth Kilometer at Kassel, Germany.
Friday – Monday, 11am – 4pm
OPEN HOUSE
CITYarts
525 Broadway Street, 6th Floor, NYC
Guests will be able to get to know CITYarts as a pioneering public art organization that brings youth and artists together to create public art in the five boroughs of NYC and around the world. At our headquarters attendees will be able to view art, see videos of the creative process and discuss ways of producing public art with executive and creative director Tsipi Ben-Haim, as well as purchase artworks by Vik Muniz, Daniel Libeskind, Peter Sis and other artists who support CITYarts.
March 7, 5pm - 7pm
SUNDAY MARCH 8TH
ALYSON SHOTZ: NAUTICAL CHARTS – GOWANUS & RED HOOK FROM 1733-1922; FATHOM POINTS + COMPASS BEARINGS, 2013
MTA Arts & Design
Smith-9 Street Station, F, G Trains, NYC
At the Smith-9 Street Station, Alyson Shotz uses the local maritime history of the surrounding Gowanus and Red Hook communities to create a series of windows and large wall mosaic. Shotz has a studio near the station, in Red Hook, and has long been fascinated by the history in the area’s cobblestone streets and old factory buildings.
Download a free podcast to learn more about Nautical Charts – Gowanus & Red Hook from 1733-1922; Fathom Points + Compass Bearings, a large-scale mixed media installation by Alyson Shotz for the Smith-9 Street Station in Brooklyn.
Download a free podcast to learn more about Nautical Charts – Gowanus & Red Hook from 1733-1922; Fathom Points + Compass Bearings, a large-scale mixed media installation by Alyson Shotz for the Smith-9 Street Station in Brooklyn.
Open Daily
CAL LANE: THE DIGS, 2013
MTA Arts & Design
Knickerbocker Avenue Station, M Train, NYC
At the Knickerbocker Avenue subway station on the M line, artist Cal Lane created The Digs, a series of steel sculptural panels that adorn the elevated station platforms with intricate lace-like pattern in the form of steel shovels.
The shovels are arranged in a pattern that is reminiscent of architectural arch often seen in the station’s Bushwick neighborhood. Lane was drawn to the image of the shovel for its contrasting relationship between the functional shape of a utilitarian object and the elegance of a classic arch.
Download a free podcast to learn more about The Digs, a series of steel sculptural panels created by artist and welder Cal Lane.
The shovels are arranged in a pattern that is reminiscent of architectural arch often seen in the station’s Bushwick neighborhood. Lane was drawn to the image of the shovel for its contrasting relationship between the functional shape of a utilitarian object and the elegance of a classic arch.
Download a free podcast to learn more about The Digs, a series of steel sculptural panels created by artist and welder Cal Lane.
Open Daily
DAWN CLEMENTS: MONDAY'S DAY
PIEROGI
177 North 9th Street, Brooklyn, NYC
New large-scale works on paper by Dawn Clements
February 27, 2015 - March 29, 2015
Tuesday - Saturday, 11am - 6pm
“DESTROY, SHE SAID" AT THE BOILER
The BOILER / PIEROGI
191 North 14th Street, Brooklyn, NYC
"Destroy, she said," Curated by Saul Anton and Ethan Spigland. Including work by: Beth Campbell, Jeff Gibson, Nina Kathadourian, Peter Rostovsky, Ward Shelley, Dexter Sinister, Bob and Roberta Smith, and Ray Smith.
March 1, 2015 - April 5, 2015
Thursday - Sunday, 12pm - 6pm
BEYOND THE BEDROOM II
Norte Maar
83 Wyckoff Avenue, #1B, Brooklyn, NY
Bushwick’s premiere non-profit arts organization, Norte Maar, presents a special exhibition for Armory Week. Heralded as the most underground, exciting and fiercely independent and championed by Holland Cotter in The New York Times, Norte Maar will host an open house at the apartment gallery featuring an exhibition of Bushwick based artists and beyond.
12pm - 6pm
VISION QUEST
Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts (MoCADA)
MoCADA, 80 Hanson Place, Brooklyn, NY 1127
Vision Quest is a collection of whimsical, visual tales of powerful female protagonists on earthly and otherworldly adventures. Artists Amaryllis DeJesus Moleski and Sheena Rose use works on paper, hand-drawn animations and mixed-media works to recount their experiences and create new stories of voyages through time and space. Existing at the crux of the playful and the political, the artists have invented their own visual languages to document women’s stories in ways that diverge from dominant narratives of female experience. Each body of work exists as a travel narrative that blurs the lines between past, present and future, and invites viewers to faraway lands while exposing the magic that exists all around us.
Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, 12pm - 7pm; Thursday, 12pm - 8pm; Sunday, 12pm - 6pm
AN AESTHETICS OF SLOWNESS
Dorsky Gallery Curatorial Programs
11-03 45 Avenue Long Island City, NY 11101
Curated by Chuong-Dai Vo with artsits, Ashley Billingsley, Sandy de Lissovoy, Chris Freeman, Margaret Honda, Paul Qaysi, Frédéric Sanchez, Jeannie Simms and Brian Wills
Technology and globalization have transformed travel and speed into the mundane accoutrements of daily life for many people. We can view art and take virtual tours of exhibitions from anywhere. How do we attend to our bodies and our sense of place, time and location when speed and accessibility are the priorities?
Technology and globalization have transformed travel and speed into the mundane accoutrements of daily life for many people. We can view art and take virtual tours of exhibitions from anywhere. How do we attend to our bodies and our sense of place, time and location when speed and accessibility are the priorities?
January 18, 2015 - March 29, 2015
Thursday – Monday, 11:00am - 6:00pm
SARA MAGENHEIMER: THE RHYTHM OF PLAIN WHITE
Interstate Projects
66 Knickerbocker Ave. Brooklyn
Interstate Projects is pleased to present The Rhythm of Plain White, Sara Magenheimer’s first solo exhibition in New York. Working across a variety of media - including video, sculpture and photography - Magenheimer’s language-
based practice treats objects, images and the human voice as raw material, personal signifiers and semantic stand-ins. Through rhythm and syncopation of visual détournement, she creates experimental strategies for reading the world.
based practice treats objects, images and the human voice as raw material, personal signifiers and semantic stand-ins. Through rhythm and syncopation of visual détournement, she creates experimental strategies for reading the world.
February 13, 2015 - March 15, 2015
Saturday & Sunday, 12am - 6pm
HITO STEYERL
Artist's Space
38 Greene Street, 3rd Floor; Artist Space Books & Talks: 55 Walker Street
Visit Artists Space for the opening reception of Hito Steyerl, the first survey exhibition in the United States of the work of this exceptional artist. Steyerl’s work has developed through her dual practices as a filmmaker and writer. Her films, essays and lectures uniquely articulate the contemporary status of the image, its production and its circulation. Central to Steyerl’s work is the notion that global communication technologies, and the attendant mediation of the world through images, has had a dramatic impact on conceptions of politics, culture, economics and subjectivity.
Saturday March 7, 5 pm - Lecture by Hito Steyerl
Sunday March 8, 7 pm - Hito Steyerl and Keller Easterling in Conversation
Saturday March 7, 5 pm - Lecture by Hito Steyerl
Sunday March 8, 7 pm - Hito Steyerl and Keller Easterling in Conversation
March 08, 2015 - May 24, 2015
Wednesday-Sunday, 12pm - 6pm
SPRING EXHIBITION OPENING
The Invisible Dog Art Center
51 Bergen Street, Brooklyn, NY
Sunday, March 8 will be the second day of the Invisible Dog Art Center’s grand spring opening! In our main gallery we will feature two new projects by Brooklyn artists Ian Trask and Nicolas Touron. For his new project, Blister Pact, Trask has collected hundreds of thermoformed plastic packages to create a monumental sculpture. Touron’s Artificial Moment will feature paintings and drawings depicting phantasmagorical stories and sculptures inspired by the Brooklyn Botanical Garden.
In the Glass House we will feature Sophie Klafter’s CorpoReality. Klafter graduated Bard in 2013 and was a recipient of the prestigious Tierney Fellowship for her work in photography. CorpoReality is comprised of interview texts and photographed portraits of disabled people in their homes.
In the Glass House we will feature Sophie Klafter’s CorpoReality. Klafter graduated Bard in 2013 and was a recipient of the prestigious Tierney Fellowship for her work in photography. CorpoReality is comprised of interview texts and photographed portraits of disabled people in their homes.
Thursday - Saturday, 1 - 7pm; Sunday 1 - 5pm; Tuesday & Wednesday by appointment only; closed on Monday.
R/F/A/V
NURTUREart Non Profit Inc.
56 Bogart Street, Brooklyn, NY
R/F/A/V is a performance by Matthew C. Lange, Michelle Leftheris, Adam Ryder, and Phoebe Streblow in conjunction with their exhibition, Rational Formal at NURTUREart. The artists will select and organize prints and objects from one another's work in order to question notions of authorship, meaning, and the informational value of images. R/F/A/V will overlay the exhibition space with videos, slide projections, field recordings, spoken word, mix-tapes and other materials that have informed or inspired the works exhibited in Rational Formal. The artists will exchange images and audio, juxtapose them against each other's exhibited works, and reconfigure them in abstract narratives.
7pm - 8pm
Thursday - Monday, 12pm - 6pm
Next week Armory Arts Week 2015 will be celebrated around NYC, March 3rd-8th, with special shows, gallery exhibitions and installations around the city. The Armory Show will take place March 5th-8th, 2015 at Piers 92 and 94. The Volta Show will take place March 5th-8th at Pier 90. The Scope Show will take place March 6th-8th at 639 W. 46th St. The ADAA Art Show will be on exhibit at the Park Avenue Armory, March 4th-8th. Pulse New York will be held at the Metropolitan Pavilion, March 5th-8th. The Spring Break show will be at Moynihan Station, March 3rd-8th. The Independent Show will be at 548 W. 22nd St., March 5th-8th.
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