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Editors’ Picks: 11 Events for Your Art Calendar This Week, From Derrick Adams’s Unicorn Playground to Kiki Kogelnik’s Portraits | Artnet News

Editors’ Picks: 11 Events for Your Art Calendar This Week, From Derrick Adams's Unicorn Playground to Kiki Kogelnik's Portraits | Artnet News

Each week, we search for the most exciting and thought-provoking shows, screenings, and events, both digitally and in-person in the New York area. See our picks from around the world below. (Times are all ET unless otherwise noted.)

 

Monday, June 27–Friday, July 29

Dorika, North Kivu, Democratic Republic of Congo © Finbarr O'Reilly for Fondation Carmignac / ICC A survivor of rape in conflict, Dorika, now 18, makes and sells clothes for a living. She plans to save enough money to buy her own small plot of land to build a home for herself and her daughter.

Dorika, North Kivu, Democratic Republic of Congo © Finbarr O’Reilly for Fondation Carmignac / ICC
A survivor of rape in conflict, Dorika, now 18, makes and sells clothes for a living. She plans to save enough money to buy her own small plot of land to build a home for herself and her daughter.

1. “Life After Conflict: Stories as Told to ICC Outreach by Survivors of the World’s Worst Crimes” at the United Nations, New York

The series “Life After Conflict” shares some of the stories witnessed by outreach staff of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and documented through the lenses of photographers Rena Effendi, Pete Muller, and Finbarr O’Reilly. The exhibition spans five countries—the Central African Republic, the Republic of Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Republic of Georgia, and the Republic of Uganda. Among the common threads and themes are home and land, what is lost when one is displaced by conflict, family and connection, and leadership and support.

Location: United Nations headquarters, visitors’ lobby, First Avenue at 46th Street, New York.
Price: Free
Time: Monday–Friday, 9 a.m.–5 p.m.

—Eileen Kinsella

 

Tuesday, June 28–Thursday, June 30

Paul Maheke, A fire circle for a public hearing (2018), installation view, at Chisenhale Gallery, London. Photo by Mark Blower, courtesy of High Line Art, New York.

Paul Maheke, A fire circle for a public hearing (2018), installation view, at Chisenhale Gallery, London. Photo by Mark Blower, courtesy of High Line Art, New York.

2. “Paul Maheke: A Fire Circle for a Public Hearing” at the High Line, New York

French sculptor, performance, installation, and video artist Paul Maheke presents A fire circle for a public hearing, a performance about the formation of history, memory, and identity, in the U.S. for the first time. Performers Morgan “Emme” Bryant, Lucy Hollier, and Rafaelle Kennibol-Cox will channel various identities in the politically engaged work, which considers the body’s ability to act as a personal and historical archive.

Location: High Line at 14th Street, New York
Price: Free, RSVP encouraged
Time: 7 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Wednesday, June 29

Steven Evans, <em>Songs for a Memorial</em> (2020-22). Photo courtesy of the New York City AIDS Memorial.

Steven Evans, Songs for a Memorial (2020–22). Photo courtesy of the New York City AIDS Memorial.

3. “Dance for a Memorial” at AIDS Memorial Park, New York

At the beginning of Pride Month, the New York City AIDS Memorial unveiled Steven Evans’s Songs of a Memorial (through September 6), adorning the permanent monument with 12 text-based, polychromatic, LED sculptures. To celebrate the close of the month-long celebration, DJ Lady Bunny and DJ Lina Bradford will lead a silent disco at the site—just leave an ID or a credit card for a free set of headphones.

Location: AIDS Memorial Park, St. Vincent’s Triangle, 76 Greenwich Avenue, New York
Price: Free
Time: 7 p.m.–9 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

Tuesday, June 28–Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Fred Wilson, <em>Mind Forged Manacle/Manacle Forged Minds</em>, rendering. Image courtesy of Fred Wilson and More Art.

Fred Wilson, Mind Forged Manacle/Manacle Forged Minds, rendering. Image courtesy of Fred Wilson and More Art.

4. “Mind Forged Manacles/Manacle Forged Minds” at Columbus Park, Brooklyn

Fred Wilson presents his first-ever large-scale public sculpture, a 10-foot-tall fence installation featuring decorative ironwork and statues of African figures. A project with More Art and the Downtown Brooklyn and Dumbo Art Fund with New York City’s Art in the Parks program, the gates in the piece reference both the incarceration of Black men and immigrant detainees, as well as wealthy gated communities. It’s a reflection on barriers and separation in society, both physical and psychological.

Location: Columbus Park on the plaza between Johnson Street and Montague Street, Brooklyn
Price: Free (RSVP for opening reception)
Time: Opening reception, 6 p.m.–7:30 p.m.; on view daily at all times

—Sarah Cascone

 

Wednesday, June 29–Friday, September 9

"Derrick Adams: Funtime Unicorns" (rendering). Image courtesy of Art Production Fund.

“Derrick Adams: Funtime Unicorns” (rendering). Image courtesy of Art Production Fund.

5. “Derrick Adams: Funtime Unicorns” at Rockefeller Center, New York

Derrick Adams looks to bring Black joy to the heart of Midtown Manhattan with his new Art Production Fund public installation Funtime Unicorns, featuring interactive black unicorn sculptures-cum-playground toys. The figure of the black unicorn first appeared in Adams’s “Floater” painting series, of portraits of Black people resting on pool floats that the artist later fabricated as actual inflatables. Now, kids will be able to play on a coiled spring playground rocker version of the colorful figure, for a project that pushes back against the narrative that Black art needs to foreground pain and suffering, rather than joy and play.

Location: Rockefeller Center, Channel Gardens, between Fifth Avenue and Rockefeller Plaza, New York
Price: Free
Time: On view daily at all times

—Sarah Cascone

 

Through Thursday, June 30

“Georgia Dymock: Eyes Closed, Wide Open,” installation view, Courtesy of JD Malat Gallery.

6. “Georgia Dymock: Eyes Closed, Wide Open” at JD Malat Gallery, New York

This is the last week to catch British artist Georgia Dymock’s solo exhibition at JD Malat Gallery’s New York location. Dymock plays with the notions of femininity and identity, where her work is influenced by her study of anthropology. There are 10 new paintings in her signature style, with curvy, joyous figures partaking in everyday activities.

Location: JD Malat Gallery, 508 West 28th Street, New York
Price: Free
Time: Tuesday–Saturday, 11 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Neha Jambhekar

 

Saturday, July 2–Sunday, July 31

Eddie Martinez, DDSE (Flower up-close and personal 2 (2022). Photo by Jeffrey Sturges, courtesy the artist, Dieu-Donné, Brooklyn, and the South Etna Montauk Foundation, Montauk. Sam Moyer, Not Yet Titled (2022). Photo by JSP Art Photography, courtesy the artist, Sean Kelly Gallery, New York, and the South Etna Montauk Foundation, Montauk.

Eddie Martinez, DDSE (Flower up-close and per- sonal 2 (2022). Photo by Jeffrey Sturges, courtesy the artist, Dieu-Donné, Brooklyn, and the South Etna Montauk Foundation, Montauk. Sam Moyer, Not Yet Titled (2022). Photo by JSP Art Photography, courtesy the artist, Sean Kelly Gallery, New York, and the South Etna Montauk Foundation, Montauk.

7. “Eddie Martinez and Sam Moyer” at the South Etna Montauk Foundation

It seems like artist spouses have always been drawn to Long Island’s East End, from Elaine and Willem de Kooning and Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner to contemporary power couple Eric Fischl and April Gornik. The latest husband and wife duo to make waves on the North Fork are Eddie Martinez and Sam Moyer, the subject of a joint outing at Amalia Dayan and Adam Lindemann’s non-profit space South Etna Montauk Foundation. Featured works include stone paintings and concrete backgammon boards by Moyer as well as new paper-pulp paintings Martinez made during a recent residency at Dieu-Donné in Brooklyn. The show coincides with the artists’ taking over the annual “Sculpture in the Garden” exhibition at the Landcraft Garden Foundation in Mattituck, New York (through October 29).

Location: South Etna Montauk Foundation, 6 South Etna Avenue, Montauk, New York
Price: Free
Time: Saturday and Sunday, 12 p.m.–5 p.m., Fridays by appointment

—Sarah Cascone

Through Saturday, July 8

"Kiki Kogelnik: Women" at Mitchell-Innes and Nash, New York. Photo courtesy of Mitchell-Innes and Nash, New York.

“Kiki Kogelnik: Women” at Mitchell-Innes and Nash, New York. Photo courtesy of Mitchell-Innes and Nash, New York.

8. “Kiki Kogelnik: Women” at Mitchell-Innes and Nash, New York

Mitchell-Innes and Nash’s second solo presentation of Kiki Kogelnik comes on the heels of the artist’s posthumous inclusion in the current Venice Biennale. It features 10 of her graphic, boldly colorful paintings and 21 works on paper, dating from 1962 to 1985. Kogelnik’s depictions of women seemingly in search of personal determination were inspired by her own struggles as a woman artist, such as when she and her fiance, artist Arnulf Rainer, moved in together and she was relegated to the attic, while he got a whole floor as a studio.

Location: Mitchell-Innes and Nash, 534 West 26th Street, New York
Price: Free
Time: Tuesday–Saturday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Through Friday, July 15

Zinaïda, <em>Dakini</em>, still. Photo courtesy of Sapar Contemorary, New York.

Zinaïda, Dakini, still. Photo courtesy of Sapar Contemorary, New York.

9. “Women and Other Wild Creatures: Matrilineal Tales” at Sapar Contemporary, New York

A quartet of women artist from Ukraine are among those featured in this group show inspired by photographs of generations of women fleeing the country, and of the destruction of the landscape, following the Russian invasion in February. Each artist presents nature as a source of strength for women as they look to move forward in this time of crisis, drawing on rituals and healing practices. Works on view include Dakini, a video by Ukrainian artist Zinaïda, filmed in a remote Ukrainian village and celebrating the role of women in the regions cultural traditions.

Location: Sapar Contemporary, 9 N. Moore Street, first floor, New York
Price: Free
Time: Tuesday–Saturday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Through Saturday, July 16

Alexandra Rubinstein, The Moon Also Rises 1 (2022). Courtesy the artist and Mother.

Alexandra Rubinstein, The Moon Also Rises 1 (2022). Courtesy the artist and Mother.

10. “Alexandra Rubinstein: The Moon Also Rises” at Mother, New York

Nude men become larger than life landscapes in Alexandra Rubinstein’s oil-on-canvas paintings. It’s easy to miss the sexual imagery at a quick glance, but those are six-pack abs and a flaccid penis, not desert dunes; firm butt cheeks, not rounded hills, with waterfalls cascading down muscular backs. It’s a natural progression from the artist’s 2019 series “Dick Diaries,” which featured person-sized male genitalia working at laptops, lying on the couch, and in other everyday situations. But the meaning is darker this time around, inspired by the impending climate crisis, which Rubinstein view as a consequence of cis male complacency and inaction.

Location: Mother, 368 Broadway, Fourth Floor, Suite 415, New York
Price: Free
Time: Tuesday–Thursday, 12 p.m.–6 p.m.; 10 a.m.–4 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

 

Through Sunday, July 31

Estefania Puerta, Tierna Tierra(2020). Courtesy of the Fortnight Insitute

Estefania Puerta, Tierna Tierra (2020). Courtesy of the Fortnight Insitute.

11. “Ashes Denote That Fire Was” at the Fortnight Institute, New York

Fire speaks to the primordial part of the human experience, and comes to us with tales of magic and trickery—most famously as the Greek god Prometheus’s defiant gift to humanity. This intimate group show at Fortnight Institute brings together works by 12 contemporary artists who in some way allude to the element’s enduring lure—from the fiery passions of love to the quest for survival in the wilderness of our times. The exhibition title references a poem by Emily Dickinson, and the works on view do often possess the hauntingly unsaid qualities of verse. Krystel Cárdenas’s beeswax sculpture Reliquary Box, Pendant, and Candles conjures up visions of cloistered prayer, while the softness of the materials, one realizes, would quickly dissolve near the heat of a flame. Meanwhile, Lizette Hernandez’s ceramic works themselves have been hardened into enduring shapes through exposure to the element. The aura of the exhibition is sacrosanct and ancient and enduring and the works on view offer a moment of respite and contemplation amid the tumult of the news cycle.

Location: Fortnight Institute, 21 East 3rd Street, New York
Price: Free
Time: Wednesday–Sunday, 12 p.m.–6 p.m.

—Katie White

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Editors’ Picks: 9 Events for Your Art Calendar This Week, From a Talk on Eric Adams’s Arts Priorities to a Show by an Artist-Turned-Dragon

Nollywood Portraits: A Radical Beauty by Iké Udé. Published by Skira.

Each week, we search for the most exciting and thought-provoking shows, screenings, and events, both digitally and in-person in the New York area. See our picks from around the world below. (Times are all EST unless otherwise noted.)

 

Tuesday, February 8

Vikky Alexander. Photo by Peter Bellamy, courtesy of the Audain Art Museum, Whistler, Canada.

Vikky Alexander. Photo by Peter Bellamy, courtesy of the Audain Art Museum, Whistler, Canada.

1. “Tuesday Night Talks: Vikky Alexander” at the Audain Art Museum, Whistler, Canada

The Audain Art Museum kicks off season three of its virtual Tuesday Night Talks programming with Canada’s Vikky Alexander, whose piece Orange Ceiling (2010) was recently acquired by the institution. The photographer, sculptor, and installation artist will speak with director and chief curator Curtis Collins about her career—including her ties to the Vancouver School of photo-conceptualism as well as New York’s Pictures Generation—as well as how she finds inspiration in landscape, architecture, and design.

Price: Free with registration
Time: 11 p.m.

—Tanner West

 

 

Thursday, February 10

New York City Mayor Eric Adams in front of the Brooklyn Museum on Juneteenth Holiday, June 19, 2021, during his campang. Photo by John Lamparski/Getty Images.

New York City Mayor Eric Adams in front of the Brooklyn Museum on Juneteenth Holiday, June 19, 2021. Photo by John Lamparski/Getty Images.

2. “More or Less: Notes to Our Next Mayor, Culminating Panel” at More Art, New  York

Ahead of last year’s mayoral election, social justice-minded public art nonprofit More Art hosted a three-part conversation series about what New York City residents need most—namely, food, shelter, and healthcare. Those discussions have been condensed into an open letter of demands from artists, activists, and community members to new Mayor Eric Adams’s administration. The moderators of the three discussions, artists Candace Thompson, Betty Yu, and Jeff Kasper, will return to talk about the intersection of art and activism, the contents of the letter, how it hopes to ensure all New Yorkers have guaranteed access to food, healthcare, and housing.

Price: Free with registration
Time: 7 p.m.–8:30 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Thursday, February 10–Saturday, March 12

Suchitra Mattai, Fitting In, 2022 Courtesy of Hollis Taggart

3. “Suchitra Mattai: Herself as Another” at Hollis Taggart

Suchitra Mattai is a Guyanese artist who uses imagery from her Indian heritage to comment on colonialism and patriarchy. In her solo show at Hollis Taggart, Mattai presents mixed-media paintings, sculptures, and installations to explore the theme of “othering.” The artist used The Ashgate Research Companion to Monsters and the Monstrous as the main source for her research into folklore monsters, tales that reflect the taboos and stereotypes often applied to those denied power. Through the works in this show, Mattai creates “a space to confront these misunderstandings… and to reflect on the experience and perspective of the ‘other’ as a means of fostering empathy and connection,” the gallery states.

Location: Hollis Taggart, 521 West 26th Street, 1st Floor, New York
Price: Free
Time: Opening reception, Thursday, 6 p.m.–8 p.m.; Tuesday–Saturday, 11 a.m.–5 p.m.

—Neha Jambhekar

 

Thursday, February 10–Saturday, March 19

Asif Hoque, Music of the sun Courtesy of Yossi Milo Gallery

4. “Asif Hoque: Before Sunrise” at Yossi Milo Gallery, New York

“Before Sunrise” is the first solo exhibition of New York-based Bangladeshi artist Asif Hoque. Born in Rome, Hoque moved to Florida at a young age with his family. The title of the exhibition alludes to early morning beach visits he took with his brother during his trips home, where the changing light greatly inspired the works shown here. Hoque’s new work builds on previous imagery of deified brown male and female figures, lions, and vases with the addition of a dynamic new form, the Bengal tiger, and a softening of the surface inspired by Rubens’ sfumato technique.

Location: Yossi Milo Gallery, 245 Tenth Avenue, New York
Price: Free
Time: Opening reception, Thursday, 6 p.m.–8 p.m.; Tuesday–Saturday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Neha Jambhekar

 

Friday, February 11

Iké Udé, Nollywood in Focus, still image.

Iké Udé, Nollywood in Focus, still image.

5. “African Is Beautiful” at the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, Washington, D.C.

Following a virtual screening of portrait photographer and artist Iké Udé’s new film, Nollywood in Focus, about the Nigerian film scene, Touria El Glaoui, founding director of 1:54 Contemporary Art Fair, will moderate a discussion with Udé and industry insiders Eku Edewor, Alexx Ekubo, Enyinna Nwigwe, and Joke Silva. They’ll consider such topics as beauty, self-love, and the power of art.

Price: Free with registration
Time: 12 p.m.–6 p.m.

—Nan Stewert

Friday, February 11–Sunday, April 10

Carlos Motta and Tiamat Legion Medusa, <em>When I Leave This World</em> (2022), still. Courtesy of the artist, P.P.O.W. Gallery, and OCDChinatown.

Carlos Motta and Tiamat Legion Medusa, When I Leave This World (2022), still. Courtesy of the artist, P.P.O.W. Gallery, and OCDChinatown.

6. “Carlos Motta and Tiamat Legion Medusa: When I Leave This World” at OCD Chinatown, New York

Performance and body-modification artist Tiamat Legion Medusa has collaborated with artist Carlos Motta on a new two-channel video installation documenting Medusa’s transition from male to female to reptile. (The end goal of the artist, who goes by it pronouns, is to become a dragon.) Medusa, who explains in one of the videos how childhood abandonment and assault inspired it to reject its own humanity, bills itself as “interspecies and the most body-modified transexual in the world.”

Location: OCD Chinatown, 75 East Broadway NYC
Price: Free
Time: Opening reception,  6 p.m.–8 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, 12 p.m.–6 p.m. or by appointment

Sarah Cascone

 

 

Saturday, February 12–Sunday, January 8, 2023

Chris Schanck, <em>Banglatown</em> (2018). Photo by Michelle and Chris Gerard, courtesy the artist and Friedman Benda, New York.

Chris Schanck, Banglatown (2018). Photo by Michelle and Chris Gerard, courtesy the artist and Friedman Benda, New York.

7. “Chris Schanck: Off-World” at the Museum of Arts and Design, New York

Chris Schanck’s work exists at the boundary between sculpture and furniture, straddling the line between art and design with chairs, lighting, and other functional objects produced in his Detroit studio with the assistance of local Bangladeshi craftspeople. Schanck’s forms recall objects from nature, like coral reefs, but also suggest an otherworldly, extraterrestrial origin, at times futuristic, other times reminiscent of ancient civilizations.

Location: Museum of Arts and Design, 2 Columbus Circle, New York
Price: Free
Time: Tuesday–Sunday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m..

—Sarah Cascone

 

Sunday, February 13

Alex Strada and Tali Keren, <em>Proposal for a 28th Amendment? Is it Possible to Amend an Unequal System?</em> in "Year of Uncertainty (YoU) — Phase I: Participate & Build." Photo by Zynab Cewalam, courtesy of the Queens Museum.

Alex Strada and Tali Keren, Proposal for a 28th Amendment? Is it Possible to Amend an Unequal System? in “Year of Uncertainty (YoU) — Phase I: Participate & Build.” Photo by Zynab Cewalam, courtesy of the Queens Museum.

8. “Defending Our Bodily Autonomy in a Broken System” at the Queens Museum

Artists Alex Strada and Tali Keren’s participatory installation, Proposal for a 28th Amendment? Is it Possible to Amend an Unequal System?, on view in “Year of Uncertainty (YoU) — Phase III: Synthesize and Reflect” (through February 13) will serve as the stage for programming addressing the ways in which many Black, Indigenous, and other people of color face reproductive and gender-based oppression. A presentation by CUNY Law professor Cynthia Soohoo will discuss the inadequacies of legal protection for reproductive rights, the likely overturn of Roe v. Wade, and how we can ensure reproductive justice for all. A hands-on self-defense workshop, led by Deena Hadhoud of Malikah, will follow.

Location: Queens Museum, Flushing Meadows Corona Park, Meridian Road, Queens
Price: Free with registration
Time: 1 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Through March 19

Lucia Love, <I>BDW</I>, 2021

Lucia Love, BDW, 2021. Courtesy JDJ and the artist.

9. “Lucia Love: Angel At The Wheel” at JDJ Tribeca

The new show of paintings by Lucia Love at JDJ World’s recently opened location in Tribeca see the artist taking a darker, more cynical turn. Love’s surrealist and often figurative paintings are inspired by fraught political situations, and she does not seem to think things have gotten much better since her last show with the gallery in 2020. As fellow artist Emily Mae Smith wrote in the press release for the show, “The figures in Love’s paintings are amalgamated bodies, often balancing on impossible podiums or floating in broken geometries that defy perspectival logic. Love captures the instability of moral ground in our time of global peril.”

Location: JDJ Tribeca, 373 Broadway B11
Price: Free
Time: Tuesday–Saturday, 12 p.m.–6 p.m.

—Annie Armstrong

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