Paolo Pellizzari's show at Anastasia "overflows with detail and color to capture anecdotes of daily life, transporting the viewer deep within these landscapes."
Staff Picks, at Howard Greenberg, "includes an array of both well-known and unknown works by: Jacques Henri Lartigue, Robert Frank, Joel Meyerowitz, William Gedney, Danny Lyon, Bruce Davidson, Dorothea Lange, and Arnold Newman."
Détournement, at Jonathan LeVine, "is meant to both celebrate the lineage of détournement and bring attention to some of its current practitioners who embody its continued vitality."
Illuminated: The Art of Sacred Text, at the Rubin Museum, "explores the aesthetic and technological approaches used in creating and adorning sacred books from a variety of cultures."
Beer Here, at the New York Historical Society, "surveys the social, economic, political, and technological history of the production and consumption of beer, ale, and porter in the city from the seventeenth century to the present."
Josef Albers in America: Painting on Paper, at the Morgan, "provides insight into Albers' working process and, in contrast with the strict geometry of his final paintings, is remarkable for its freedom and sensuality."
Into the Woods, a group show at ClampArt, "brings together work by a wide-range of artists all employing lens-based technologies who have found inspiration in the natural world."
Tatzu Nishi: Discovering Columbus, commissioned by the Public Art Fund, "recontextualizes the historical monument at the center of Columbus Circle, placing it in the middle of a contemporary living room, six stories above the street."
photograph by Marcus Yam
The Hateful Years, Mark Flood's show at Luxembourg & Dayan, "examines the vapor trails of culturally exsanguinated people, places and objects in order to take the measure of culture."
Jim Marshall's show at Steven Kasher features "over 60 photographs and one-hundred vintage record covers mapping Marshall’s entire career and introduces never-before-seen images he captured during the Rolling Stones’ 1972 U.S. tour."
Jan Vercruysse's show at Gladstone Gallery "encompasses a selection of Vercruysse’s work created between 1990 and 2011 and is the artist’s first show in New York since 2009."