Mamma Andersson

David Zwirner

Characterized by a unique combination of textured brushstrokes, loose washes, stark graphic lines, and evocative colors, Mamma Andersson’s works embody a new genre of landscape painting that recalls late nineteenth-century romanticism while also embracing a contemporary interest in layered, psychological compositions. 

through April 11, 2020

Mimi Lauter

Blum & Poe

Lauter’s arrangements of radiant colors are meant to crescendo to a celebration of the human spirit—a joyous marking of the connections between memories and dreams, personal stories and myths, landscape and skyscape, birth and death.

through April 18, 2020

Arlene Shechet

Pace Gallery

Rich in idiosyncrasies, Arlene Shechet’s latest works combine disparate mediums, from ceramics to wood and metalwork, with playfully ambiguous titles that prompt endless associations.

through Apr 25, 2020

Serge Alain Nitegeka

Marianne Boesky Gallery

With his upcoming presentation, which will feature new paintings, a large-scale site-specific installation, and a voice recording, Nitegeka reasserts both the figural and the personal in his work. 

through April 18, 2020

Kaoruko

Lyons Wier Gallery

“Animism” explores the complex cultural and ideological divide between traditional and contemporary ideals that are inherently placed upon Japanese women by using carefully crafted narratives to navigates and call attention to the cultural contemporary standards.

through March 21, 2020

Norman Bluhm

Hollis Taggart

The exhibition will feature paintings and works on paper, dating from 1957-1997, offering audiences insight into the full arc of Bluhm’s creative output.

through March 14, 2020

Lee Seung Jio

Tina Kim Gallery

The exhibition will focus on works from Lee’s 25-year-long painting career, throughout which he dedicated himself to confronting the canvas plane and conceptualizing the dynamic relationship among flatness, form, and materiality.

through April 4, 2020

Abstract Romare Bearden

DC Moore Gallery

Abstract Romare Bearden’ featuring the extraordinary and fully abstract watercolors, mixed media collages, and stain paintings, sometimes as small as under three inches high or as large as over six feet tall.

through March 28, 2020

Sebastiaan Bremer

Edwynn Houk Gallery

Each unique image in the exhibition is characterized by Bremer’s meticulously hand painted white pointillist dots, however these three new series are distinct in the evolution of the techniques used, as he continues to push the bounds of his hybrid creative process.

through March 21, 2020

Dorothea Lange

MoMa

Words & Pictures, the first major MoMA exhibition of Lange’s in 50 years, brings iconic works from the collection together with less seen photographs—from early street photography to projects on criminal justice reform.

through May 5, 2020

Peter Saul

New Museum

Beginning in the early 1960s, Peter Saul began to incorporate imagery borrowed from a range of pop-cultural sources into his exuberant, brightly colored paintings, adopting a style that has proven to be far ahead of its time. 

through May 31, 2020

Doug Wheeler

David Zwirner

Over the past five decades, Wheeler has become known for his innovative constructions and installations that engage with the perception and experience of light, space, and sound.

through March 21, 2020

Nigel Cooke

Pace Gallery

Nigel Cooke is known for his evocative paintings which blend personal memories with art historical influences, classical themes with abstract interpretations of the natural world.

through February 29, 2020

Tara Lewis

Lyons Wier Gallery

Her portrait process happens organically as models go through her wardrobe, accessories and props to discover a ‘persona’.  These ‘play-dates’ serve as a pivotal ingredient for her practice as they are the underpinning of the subsequent photoshoot that serves as the source material for her paintings.

through February 22, 2020

Louis Draper

Bruce Silverstein Gallery

The unifying concern of his practice was to portray his subjects with respect, and what Draper referred to as "true grace". Coming of age in the South, and living in New York City during the Civil Rights movement greatly impacted not only Draper's politics, but also the kind of images he created, and how they served as their own form of resistance.

through February 22, 2020