New York February 22, 2023 It’s no secret that New York’s dynamic art scene is what brings our city to life. Dozens of museums, hundreds of art galleries, countless nonprofit spaces and temporary venues, and of course public art everywhere all add color and vitality to this sprawling metropolis. Spring may be the time for flowers, but we believe the real beauty of New York lies in its inclusiveness. There is something for everyone here, so go out and see it all! Take a walk through one of our many public parks and soak in the marvelous architecture, landscaping, and art projects, or check out the commercial art galleries of Lower Manhattan to see some work by emerging and established artists alike. Or better yet, make a day of it and go museum-hopping to see some of the best art the city has to offer. This guide is focused on the art institutions that help make this city great, highlighting the breadth of venues throughout the boroughs and a section on new art spaces we’re particularly excited about, as well as a few shows in the tri-state area for those who want to explore outside the city limits. Art in New York is unlike anything else in the world: Go make the most of it. —Hrag Vartanian, Editor-in-Chief, Co-founder See our full list of exhibition highlights for the season. SPONSORED This exhibition highlights a series of five monumental works on paper by Frederick J. Brown, a pioneering figure in New York City’s art scene of the 1970s and 1980s. It features a new essay by American art historian and curator Lowery Stokes Sims. Learn More ON OUR RADAR He was interested in a kind of realism, inseparable from the cold structures and isolated people that populate his compositions. | Ekin Erkan Edward Hopper’s New York Oct. 9–Mar. 5 Whitney Museum of American Art, 99 Gansevoort Street, Manhattan (whitney.org) Chinatown Art Brigade’s largest show to date examines the history of anti-displacement organizing. | Elaine Velie Degentrification Archives Feb. 10–Mar. 25 Pace University Art Gallery, 41 Park Row 1st Floor, FiDi (pace.edu) In advance of the museum’s opening, a series of rotating exhibitions in the Bronx Terminal Market offers a preview of what’s to come. | Taylor Michael Become a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. Become a Member MORE ON HYPERALLERGIC sTo Len, whose fascination with waste removal started when he was a child, is the agency’s current artist-in-residence. | Rhea Nayyar The burial ground resurfaced in 2006, when construction crews working on the New Museum’s extension found human remains. | Taylor Michael Applications are now open for Stoneleaf Retreat’s residency for artist mothers in New York’s Catskill Mountains. | Taylor Michael |