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New YorkOctober 12, 2022 • View in browserSeven New Art Spaces to Visit in ManhattanFrom a basement gallery to a repurposed legendary punk-rock nightclub, these new kids on the block have something for everyone. | Elaine Velie, Jasmine Liu, Valentina Di Liscia We rounded up seven art galleries and nonprofits — all in Manhattan, with other boroughs to come soon! — that opened in the last year or so, rising from the ashes after the pandemic brought the art world to a screeching halt. SPONSORED Mark Your Calendar: Cooper Hewitt’s National Design Week Returns!Celebrate National Design Week! Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum’s doors are open with free admission for all, October 17–23. Experience Cooper Hewitt’s groundbreaking exhibitions, including Designing Peace, Design and Healing, and Sarah and Eleanor Hewitt. UPCOMING OPENINGS Edward Hopper, “Roofs, Washington Square” (1926) (© 2022 Heirs of Josephine N. Hopper/Licensed by Artists Rights Society; Carnegie Museum of Art; bequest of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Beal) Edward Hopper’s New York Edward Hopper lived in New York for almost 60 years and died in his studio near Washington Square Park. However, he is not thought of as a New York artist in the same way that some of his contemporaries were. The Whitney’s new show on Hopper and New York focalizes the artist’s relationship to his longtime home city. Sin Autorización: Contemporary Cuban Art In recent years, fluctuating domestic policies and foreign relations have galvanized Cuba’s independent art scene. Sin Autorización: Contemporary Cuban Art charts the scene’s evolution through its political and intellectual context. SPONSORED Ivo van Hove brings US stage premiere of A Little Life to NYC!No recent story has captivated millions of readers like Hanya Yanagihara’s A Little Life, a National Book Award and Man Booker Prize finalist. In its US stage premiere at BAM, director Ivo van Hove adapts this bestselling novel about the intense friendships between four men over three decades in NYC. Learn more. Photo by Jan Versweyveld EXPLORING NEW FORMS NYC Exhibition Celebrates Black and Brown Lives Taken by PoliceAt 1-800 Happy Birthday, payphones ring periodically with loving voicemails from families and strangers, and all the dates in the show are birthdays — “there are no deathdates.” | Faith Adiele SPONSORED Alexandre Arrechea’s Landscape and Hierarchies Features Works Inspired by Sports and NatureThis exhibition marks 20 years of Arrechea’s solo career with watercolors, sculptures, and multimedia installations created specifically for ArtYard in Frenchtown, New Jersey. Learn more. Immersing Yourself in the Works of Gustav KlimtGustav Klimt: Gold in Motion transforms a historic bank in Manhattan into the unlikely setting of an immersive art experience one visitor called “mesmerizing.” | Jasmine Liu In Times Square and Sunset Strip, “American Gurl” Subverts FemininityKilo Kish’s video on digital billboards, presented by Womxn in Windows, is accompanied by a print campaign on trash receptacles in Midtown Manhattan | Matt Stromberg SPONSORED Gowanus Open Studios Returns for Its 26th YearNearly 100 venues are participating in Brooklyn’s largest celebration of local arts and artists on October 15 and 16. Hosted by Arts Gowanus. Learn more. LATEST REVIEWS America’s Overlooked Landscape PaintersMasterworks of American Landscape Painting at the Center for Figurative Painting makes clear that the term “landscape” has been widely interpreted. | John Yau Peter Acheson Trades Heroism for HumilityIn an age dominated by narcissism and material excess, Acheson’s anti-heroic position as an admirer of other artists should be something that we reflect upon. | John Yau SPONSORED After Three Years, Printed Matter’s NY Art Book Fair Returns In PersonCatch a broad range of artists, publishers, antiquarian booksellers, and more from October 13 through 16 at the fair’s historic first location in Chelsea. Learn more. NEWS & MORE Nina Chanel Abney, “San Juan Heal” (2022) (photo by Nicholas Knight; courtesy Lincoln Center, Studio Museum in Harlem, and Public Art Fund) Nina Chanel Abney and Jacolby Satterwhite’s new public artworks for David Geffen Hall celebrate the vibrant history of the neighborhood. Christie’s removes its collaboration with Highsnobiety after it draws criticism for aestheticizing art handlers’ labor. A student screening of Till emphasizes the film's aim to educate young people about the fierce love and activism of Mamie Till-Mobley. Support Hyperallergic's independent journalismBecome a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. Become a MemberCLOSING SOON Jude Griebel, “Procession” (2020), on view in Nafas (courtesy Invisible Dog Art Center) Nafas Doreen Lynette Garner: REVOLTED Kapwani Kiwanga: Off-Grid Black Melancholia Eva Hesse: Expanded Expansion ON VIEW IN MUSEUMS & GALLERIES Mire Lee: Carriers Tiffany Chung: Terra Rouge & Archaeology for Future Remembrance Aubrey Levinthal: Neighbors, Strangers, Gazers, Bathers Jordan Casteel: In Bloom Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum: I have withheld much more than I have written Lisa Oppenheim: Spolia For the Birds Selections from Australia’s Western Desert: From the Collection of Steve Martin and Anne Stringfield LaJuné McMillian: The Black Movement Library Enrico Riley: Stand Elissa Blount-Moorhead and Bradford Young: Back and Song
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