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Editors’ Picks: 14 Events for Your Art Calendar This Week, From Joan Jonas in Times Square to Art Inspired by Courtroom Dramas

Joan Jonas, <eM>Wolf Light</em> in Times Square. Photo courtesy of Times Square Arts.

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.)

 

Tuesday, April 19

A stilt walker pours champagne for Liev Schreiber at the Tribeca Ball. Photo courtesy of the New York Academy of Art.

A stilt walker pours champagne for Liev Schreiber at the Tribeca Ball. Photo courtesy of the New York Academy of Art.

1. “Tribeca Ball” at the New York Academy of Art

Every year, the New York Academy of Art throws one of the most unique parties in the art world, opening up its studios and letting students sell their art directly to collectors amid flowing champagne and hors d’oeuvres. The dinner will honor Kenny Scharf, who painted a new mural for the occasion (and who has a solo show opening this at Totah Gallery). If you’re stuck in New York instead of jetting off to Venice this week, this is one party guaranteed to help alleviate FOMO.

Location: New York Academy of Art, 111 Franklin Street, New York

Price: Dinner tickets from $1,500; studio party $300

Time: VIP studio preview and dinner, 6 p.m.–10 p.m.; studio party, 8 p.m.–10 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Wednesday, April 20 and Thursday, April 21

Left: Mette Edvardsen, Black, 2011. Photo: Elly Clarke. Right: Amant, Géza performance space exterior and courtyard at 306 Maujer Street, Brooklyn. Photo: Rafael Gamo. Courtesy SO–IL.

Left: Mette Edvardsen, Black, 2011. Photo: Elly Clarke. Right: Amant, Géza performance space exterior and courtyard at 306 Maujer Street, Brooklyn. Photo: Rafael Gamo. Courtesy SO–IL.

2. “Performative Exhibition: Mette Edvardsen” at Amant, Brooklyn

On Wednesday, the dancer, choreographer, writer, and artist Mette Evardsen will perform her works Black (2011) and No Title (2014) as the first artist invited to Amant’s Compendio Performance Studio. Both pieces were recently featured at the 34th São Paulo Biennale. On Thursday, she’ll present Suppose a Room, a live one-day-only event that collects and revisits materials, spaces, and physical gestures of past performances.

Location: Amant, 315 Maujer Street, East Williamsburg, Brooklyn

Price: Free with registration

Time: Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.; Thursday, viewing 12 p.m.–4 p.m. and activation 5 p.m.–8 p.m.

—Eileen Kinsella

 

Thursday April 21

SoundSpace performers, clockwise from top left: claire rousay, Henna Chou (photo: Leon Alesi), José Villalobos, Akirash (photo: Michelle Akindiya), Alexa Capareda (photo: Sarah Annie Navarrete), Michael Anthony García, Graham Reynolds, and Michael J. Love. Courtesy Blanton Museum of Art at the University of Texas at Austin.

SoundSpace performers, clockwise from top left: claire rousay, Henna Chou (photo: Leon Alesi), José Villalobos, Akirash (photo: Michelle Akindiya), Alexa Capareda (photo: Sarah Annie Navarrete), Michael Anthony García, Graham Reynolds, and Michael J. Love. Courtesy Blanton Museum of Art at the University of Texas at Austin.

3. “SoundSpace,” at the Blanton Museum of Art, the University of Texas at Austin

For this year’s edition of the popular program “SoundSpace: Conversation Pieces,” curator Steve Parker invited eight artists to create new sonic works in dialogue with individual works from the Blanton’s collection. They include José Villalobos, Alexa Capereda, AKIRASH, Michael Anthony Garcia, Graham Reynolds, Henna Chou, claire rousay, and Michael J. Love.

Location: Virtual

Price: Free with registration

Time: 7:30 p.m ET 

—Eileen Kinsella

 

Thursday, April 21–Sunday, April 24

Attendees at the 2013 New York Antiquarian Book Fair. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Attendees at the 2013 New York Antiquarian Book Fair. Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images.

4. “New York International Antiquarian Book Fair” at the Park Avenue Armory, New York 

Rare books are just the beginning of what’s for sale at the Antiquarian Book Fair, which is back after canceling its September outing. It will also offer a range of illuminated manuscripts, historical documents, maps, illustrations, and other printed matter from nearly 200 dealers.

Location: Park Avenue Armory at 643 Park Avenue in New York

Price: $30 general admission, $60 preview pass, $45 run-of-show

Time: Thursday, 5 p.m.–9 p.m.; Friday, 12 p.m.–8 p.m.; Saturday, 12 p.m.–7 p.m.; Sunday, 12 p.m.–5 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Saturday, April 23

Dorothea Lange, Human Erosion in California (Migrant Mother) (March 1936). Image courtesy The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles.

Dorothea Lange, Human Erosion in California (Migrant Mother) (March 1936). Photo courtesy the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles.

5. Written from Images: Literature Inspired by Dorothea Lange” at the Getty, Los Angeles

Poet Tess Taylor and author Jasmin Darznik will discuss and read from recent works inspired by the iconic photographer Dorothea Lange. Sally Stein, professor emerita, in the department of art history, at UC Irvine, will serve as moderator.

Location: Virtual

Price: Free with registration

Time:  5 p.m. ET

—Eileen Kinsella

 

Sunday, April 24

The ruins of Persepolis, view from the southeast. Image courtesy of Ali Mousavi

The ruins of Persepolis, view from the southeast. Photo courtesy of Ali Mousavi.

6. Art of the Empire: Monumental Cities of Ancient Persia” at the Getty, Los Angeles

The founders of the Achaemenid Persian Empire conceived dynamic monumental architecture and sculpture to convey their mastery of the ancient world. This form of Persian art achieved its highest expression in powerful cities such as Pasargadae, Persepolis, and Susa. Archaeologist Ali Mousavi of UCLA will take a closer look at these ancient cities that served as hubs of multicultural and artistic interaction.

Location: Virtual

Price: Free with registration

Time:  5 p.m. ET

—Eileen Kinsella 

 

Through Saturday, April 23

Leidy Churchman, <em>Eternal Life, New You</em> (2021). Photo courtesy of Matthew Marks, New York.

Leidy Churchman, Eternal Life, New You (2021). Photo courtesy of Matthew Marks, New York.

7. “Leidy Churchman: New You” at Matthew Marks, New York

Leidy Churchman, whose large, Monet-like canvas is a highlight of the Whitney Biennial, presents a wide range of paintings at Matthew Marks, from landscapes to abstractions, to depictions of everyday objects like the calculator. The artist’s practice, rooted in Buddhist philosophy, considers these seemingly disparate subject matter to nonetheless be part of an interconnected body of work.

Location: Matthew Marks Gallery, 523 West 24th Street, New York

Price: Free

Time: Tuesday–Saturday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Austin Lee, <em>Bezos</em> (2021). Courtesy of Jeffrey Deitch, New York.

Austin Lee, Bezos (2021). Courtesy of Jeffrey Deitch, New York.

8. “Austin Lee: Like It Is” at Jeffrey Deitch, New York

Austin Lee uses digital software in concert with traditional techniques to create colorful paintings, sculptures, and animations. His second solo show with Jeffrey Deitch features works designed in virtual reality and then physically fabricated—plus an augmented reality sculpture on the gallery roof, visible via an Instagram filter. “With each new tech expansion comes both positive and negative side effects,” Lee said in a statement. “Isolation mixed with mediated interaction, subversive advertising, facing overwhelming tragedy alone and through a screen—these are just some of the confusing, disorienting experiences that are hard to adapt to and highlight our need for authentic connection.”

Location: Jeffrey Deitch, 76 Grand Street, New York

Price: Free

Time: Tuesday–Saturday, 12 p.m.–6 p.m.

—Tanner West

 

Alix Lambert, <em>Judge 2</em> (2018). Courtesy of Theodore Gallery.

Alix Lambert, Judge 2 (2018). Courtesy of Theodore Gallery.

9. “Alix Lambert: Pleadings and Proceedings” at Theodore, New York

Taking advantage of the fact that U.S. courtrooms are open to the public, artist Alix Lambert has spent several years sitting in on trials. Following in the footsteps of courtroom sketch artists, she has illustrated the proceedings, creating snapshots of lawyers, judges, witnesses, family members, jurors, stenographers, court officers, and defendants. The resulting works, captioned with snippets from legal exchanges she has witnessed, are a portrait of the criminal justice system, and how it treats those ensnared in it.

Location: Theodore, 373 Broadway, F10, New York

Price: Free

Time: Thursday–Saturday, 12 p.m.–6 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Jordan Nassar, <em>The River Behind</em> (2022). Photo courtesy of James Cohan, New York.

Jordan Nassar, The River Behind (2022). Photo courtesy of James Cohan, New York.

10. “Jordan Nassar: To Light the Sky” at James Cohan, New York

Whether weaving colored glass beads on a wire armature, or embroidering thread on monumental panels, Jordan Nassar’s wall-hanging works turn abstract fields of color into extraordinary landscapes.

Location: James Cohan, 48 Walker Street, New York

Price: Free

Time: Tuesday–Saturday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Nan Stewert

 

Joan Jonas, <eM>Wolf Light</em> in Times Square. Photo courtesy of Times Square Arts.

Joan Jonas, Wolf Light in Times Square. Photo courtesy of Times Square Arts.

11. “Joan Jonas: Wolf Light” at Times Square, New York

Times Square Arts kicked off a year-long celebration of the 10th anniversary of its Midnight Moment video series, which screens three minutes of video art across 90 electronic Times Square billboards, starting at 11:57 p.m., with Joan Jonas’s Wolf Light. The video depicts a female figure in a papier-mâché wolf mask in Las Vegas. It’s the first of 12 works by women artists that will run over the next year, honoring artists who have helped bring video art to New York City since the Public Art Fund’s “Messages to the Public” series, from 1982 to 1990.

Location: Times Square, New York
Price: Free
Time: Daily, 11:57 p.m.–12 a.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Duane Michals, Cavafy, 2022 Courtesy of DC Moore Gallery

12. “Duane Michals: Kaleidoscope” at DC Moore Gallery, New York

DC Moore Gallery presents a solo exhibition by 90-year-old artist Duane Michals. The show comprises wooden sculptures, paintings on paper, film, and photographs that highlight the artist’s diverse talent across a wide range of media.

Location: DC Moore Gallery, 535 West 22nd Street, New York

Price: Free

Time: Tuesday–Saturday, 10 a.m. – 6 p.m.

—Neha Jambhekar

 

Through Saturday, May 7

Roy Nachum, <i>Rosie Lopez</i> (2015). Image courtesy the artist and A Hug From The Art World.

Roy Nachum, Rosie Lopez (2015). Image courtesy the artist and A Hug From the Art World.

13. “Roy Nachum: Portraits” at A Hug From the Art World, New York

The process for creating this show is done in two parts. Roy Nachum takes over a year in some cases to create these large, hyperreal portraits, using tiny brushes to capture every microscopic detail of the subjects’ faces, all of whom are visually impaired. Then he invites each subject to “finish” the work by marking the surface of their respective portrait with their own interpretive brushstrokes, in the color of their choosing. “It is only after part two, the individuals’ participation, that Nachum feels the portraits gather their soul and unearth their raw presence,” according to the gallery.

Location: A Hug From the Art World, 515 West 19th Street, New York

Price: Free

Time: Tuesday–Saturday, 11 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Eileen Kinsella

 

Through Sunday, June 5

“With Her Voice, Penetrate Earth’s Floor” installation view. Photo courtesy of Eli Klein Gallery

14. “With Her Voice, Penetrate Earth’s Floor: A Group Exhibition in Memory of Christina Yuna Lee” at Eli Klein Gallery, New York

Christina Yuna Lee, who was tragically killed on February 13 in New York, was a beloved employee of Eli Klein Gallery for more than four years. To honor her memory, celebrate her life, and create a space to grieve her untimely death, the gallery will present a group exhibition of nine contemporary femme artists, all belonging to the AAPI community, including work by Lee herself. Curated by stephanie mei huang, the show is made up of paintings, sculpture, and photography and addresses broader themes of Asian hate in U.S. culture. Part of the proceeds will go to organizations that Lee held in high regard.

Location: Eli Klein Gallery, 398 West Street, New York
Price: Free
Time: Monday–Saturday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Neha Jambhekar

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Artist Stan Douglas unveils historical work inspired by political events

Artist Stan Douglas unveils historical work inspired by political events

Artist Stan Douglas on the Vancouver set for his photo series Penn Station’s Half Century in 2020.Handout

During a March snowstorm in 1914, a vaudeville troupe stranded in New York’s Penn Station spent the night entertaining itself. What might such a scene have looked like?

With dramatic lighting and vintage costumes, the Canadian artist Stan Douglas conjured up the acrobats and musicians for a photographic series devoted to key moments in the life of the famed Beaux Arts building before it was demolished in 1963. Penn Station’s Half Century features elaborate set pieces that were shot at Vancouver’s Agrodome early in the pandemic and then laid over computer-generated recreations of the lost station’s grandiose waiting room.

The images were commissioned as murals for the new Moynihan Train Hall, which opened at the current Penn Station in December 2020, but the whole series can now also been seen in Canada. Montreal’s PHI Foundation for Contemporary Art ordered exhibition prints of the giant photographs as part of a show devoted to Douglas’s work that includes Penn Station’s Half Century and the 2012 photo series Disco Angola. Consider it something of an appetizer for Douglas’s next big assignment: He will be unveiling new work, inspired by political events of 2011, at the Canada Pavilion at the Venice Biennale in April.

Douglas’s photography devoted to past events is usually displayed without any history lessons taped to the wall and often raises an immediate question about context. Does the viewer in Montreal or New York need to know about vaudevillian Bert Williams and his stranded performers or – to name two other scenes featuring folk celebrities arriving at Penn Station – the Black union organizer Angelo Herndon or the Brooklyn armed robber Celia Cooney?

Knowing all the historic detail may enrich the experience but it shouldn’t suggest to the viewer that these works are simply records of events.Handout

“That’s always a question with my work. People say: ‘You have all this backstory, how can we be expected to know that?’ I don’t expect it at all,” Douglas said in a recent interview. “People who do know that will have a different experience of the work, but there should be something in the pictorial experience that should give you a clue as to what’s going on. So, it’s not a requirement to know that stuff, but it does make it a more rich experience.”

Knowing all the historic detail may enrich the experience but it shouldn’t suggest to the viewer that these works are simply records of events, moments in the life of a train station or, in the case of Disco Angola, the unlikely juxtaposition of the Angolan civil war that erupted in 1975 with the simultaneous rise of disco in New York. Instead, the scenes play with storytelling, relying on the unconscious education in image-making that we have all received through media to conjure up scenes that are as much about their own creation as their content – hence the Montreal show’s title, Revealing Narratives.

The Penn Station scenes, for example, are visibly stagy, with chiaroscuro lighting and expressive postures. In the most meta moment of the series, Douglas recreates Hollywood recreating the station for the 1945 Judy Garland movie The Clock. The Disco Angola series, imagined as the work of a fictional photojournalist who intersperses his trips to the war zone with nights at dance clubs, might let the viewer consider the way both conflict and entertainment are presented for the camera.

“If we are informed by our knowledge of the language of film and television we will understand these works,” said Cheryl Sim, the PHI curator who organized the show and compares Douglas and his photographs with the great history painters of old. “They have that grandiose and gravitas. There are so many narratives going on in the frame. … His ability to master composition is central to the work.”

Douglas is interested in history’s secondary plots and bit players – the now forgotten figures such as Cooney, the so-called Bobbed-Hair Bandit who robbed Brooklyn stores at gunpoint.

“One of my key habits or interests is to look at minor histories and to see how minor histories actually reflect a larger condition,” he said. He cites the situation of the vaudevillians trapped in the station – they had to travel to entertain – as a specific example of a more general cultural condition: Before film and TV, all entertainment was live.

Not coincidentally, the African diaspora features in many of these forgotten histories: Williams, a Bahamian-American, broke the colour barrier in vaudeville; Herndon was convicted for “insurrection” after his attempts to organize Black and white workers in Atlanta. And, in the faded spaces of midtown Manhattan’s abandoned hotels, disco emerged from Black and Latino communities as a counterculture dance movement before it ever hit Studio 54.

“I have always depicted Black people but with a very broad sense of what blackness actually is. What is Afro-German? Afro-Cuban, Afro-English, Afro-Canadian, Afro-American? All these kinds of blackness are manifested in different ways,” he said.

Douglas, born in Vancouver to Caribbean immigrants, has a long and subtle relationship with such content. He’s not that impressed with the current rage for Black art.

Douglas, born in Vancouver to Caribbean immigrants, is not that impressed with the current rage for Black art.Handout

“There’s a certain homogeneity to the way in which Black bodies are being represented these days. Unfortunately you can’t tell the artist is a person of colour unless it’s a representational image, and this has allowed a lot of regressive art to get a lot visibility. A lot of art that kind of verges on kitsch is being shown because it’s got a Black body or something, even though there are still many interesting Black artists who are doing nonrepresentational work, conceptual work.”

Educated at what was then the Emily Carr College of Art and Design (now University), Douglas has made his career in Vancouver and, despite ever-increasing international attention, still lives there when not teaching at the ArtCenter College of Design in Los Angeles. Part of the fertile school of West Coast photo artists that emerged in the 1980s, and which also includes Jeff Wall and Ken Lum, he finds Vancouver a useful place to work because its busy film-production industry means he can easily source lights, costumes and extras.

But it is not a large enough centre for any practitioner of the visual arts to be parochial or complacent: Douglas, who has shown around the world, will be representing Canada in Venice this spring. He is the first Black artist to be featured in the Canada Pavilion, but this is not his first Biennale; his work has been included in four previous group exhibitions there, most recently in 2019.

The Venice Biennale always encourages big and surprising unveilings, so Douglas is keeping details under his hat, but he does give a broad hint as to the historic events that will feature in the work. This Biennale, he reminds you, was supposed to take place in 2021, a decade after 2011, the year of the Occupy Wall Street and Arab Spring protests. Douglas will be showing a series of photographs in the light-filled Canada Pavilion at the Biennale’s main Giardini site and screening video work at an off-site location on Giudecca. More revealing narratives are sure to follow.

Educated at what was then the Emily Carr College of Art and Design (now University), Douglas has made his career in Vancouver.Handout

Stan Douglas: Revealing Narratives continues at the PHI Foundation in Montreal to May 22 and will then tour to the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia in Halifax in June through November. The Venice Biennale runs from April 23 to Nov. 27.