Art shows and exhibitions to see this fall
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, September 19, 2024


Art shows and exhibitions to see this fall
José Clemente Orozco (Mexican, 1883–1949), Rear Guard: women carrying rifles and children, 1929. Printed by George C. Miller (American, 1894–1965) Published by Weyhe Gallery, New York. Lithograph. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Harris Brisbane Dick Fund, 1929 (29.63.4) © 2024 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / SOMAAP, Mexico City.



NEW YORK, NY.- Dance is in vogue this fall, with a pair of major museum shows for choreographers Alvin Ailey and Ralph Lemon. Prints are having a moment, too, as Mexican and Japanese examples show up in New York and Washington, D.C. Otherwise, the onrushing season is the usual wild mix of Renaissance painting, innovative video art, subway car graffiti, documentary photography and quietly subversive corporate lobby art, from New York City to Columbus, Ohio, and on to California. (Dates are subject to change; locations are in Manhattan unless otherwise specified.)

September

SCOTT BURTON: SHAPE SHIFT


For this largest-ever show of Scott Burton’s work at an American museum, contemporary artists Brendan Fernandes and Gordon Hall have been commissioned to write performance scores and an experimental lecture in response to the furniture-like sculptural works of Burton (1939-1989), who was a multidisciplinary artist, critic and curator. (through Feb. 2, 2025; Pulitzer Arts Foundation, St. Louis)

PARIS 1874: THE IMPRESSIONIST MOMENT

Works from what became known as the first Impressionist exhibition will hang with paintings and sculptures from that year’s official Salon. (through Jan. 19, 2025; National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.)

MEXICAN PRINTS AT THE VANGUARD

Prints like José Guadalupe Posada’s unforgettable skeletons and collectible versions of Diego Rivera’s famous murals have been at the heart of Mexico’s visual identity for centuries — and a significant number of them live at the Metropolitan Museum in New York. (Sept. 12-Jan. 5, 2025; Metropolitan Museum of Art)

ELIZABETH CATLETT: A BLACK REVOLUTIONARY ARTIST AND ALL THAT IT IMPLIES

More than 150 works by a pioneering sculptor and printmaker (1915-2012) who combined the influence of Mexican muralists with a subject matter of Black liberation. (Sept. 13-Jan. 19, 2025; Brooklyn Museum)

PST ART: ART & SCIENCE COLLIDE

This large-scale successor to “Pacific Standard Time,” sponsored by the Getty, involves more than 800 artists in 50 shows at museums, galleries and other cultural institutions from Santa Barbara, California, to San Diego. Organizing themes include climate change, artificial intelligence and other pressing topics. (Sept. 15-Feb. 16, 2025; multiple venues)

LIFE DANCES ON: ROBERT FRANK IN DIALOGUE

On the centennial of his birth, Swiss-born American photographer and filmmaker Robert Frank is honored with a major show at Pace Gallery, a new edition of “The Americans” from Aperture — and his first ever solo exhibition at MoMA, in the form of this huge retrospective. (Sept. 15-Jan. 11, 2025; Museum of Modern Art)

ÁLVARO URBANO

Three years before his 1989 death, of AIDS-related illness, Scott Burton installed a multifaceted sculpture, which included an unusual marble bench, in the lobby of the Equitable Center in Midtown Manhattan, where it remained until it was dislodged during a renovation in 2020. Now, Spanish sculptor Álvaro Urbano will reconstruct pieces of the rescued sculpture along with accents that evoke a wooded section of Central Park known as the Ramble. (Sept. 19-March 24, 2025; SculptureCenter)

MING SMITH

Two concurrent shows at the Columbus Museum of Art headline a major homecoming for this Harlem-based, Columbus-raised photographer, best known for the lush precision of her candid street shots. (She also has shows at the Wexner Center for the Arts and at Kenyon College’s the Gund.) (Sept. 19-Jan. 26, 2025; Columbus Museum of Art, Ohio)

EDGES OF AILEY

A multimedia exhibition and a series of live performances aim to show the influential modern dancer and choreographer Alvin Ailey in his larger cultural context. (Sept. 25-Feb. 9, 2025; Whitney Museum)

October

MAKE WAY FOR BERTHE WEILL: ART DEALER OF THE PARISIAN AVANT-GARDE


Berthe Weill (1865-1951) promoted Matisse and Modigliani, and was Picasso’s first dealer. This overdue show will include many pieces that once hung in her gallery. (Oct. 1-March 1, 2025; Grey Art Museum, NYU. )

REINSTALLATION OF THE AMERICAN ART GALLERIES

In honor of its 200th anniversary, the Brooklyn Museum is staging a rehang of its millenia-deep Western Hemisphere collections informed by Indigenous and Black feminist perspectives, which will include more than a hundred works that have never been exhibited. (Oct. 4; Brooklyn Museum)

AMERICAN, BORN HUNGARY: KERTESZ, CAPA AND THE HUNGARIAN AMERICAN PHOTOGRAPHIC LEGACY

Andre Kertesz, Robert Capa and Laszlo Moholy-Nagy are just three of the more than 30 influential photojournalists and photographers included in this tribute to the Hungarian contribution to the American visual experience. (Oct. 5-Jan. 26, 2025; Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, Virginia)

REIMAGINE: HIMALAYAN ART NOW

Your last chance to visit the final show — a roundup of work by contemporary artists of Himalayan descent — before the Rubin Museum closes its doors for good. (Closing Oct. 6; Rubin Museum)

CHARLES ATLAS: ABOUT TIME

Video and film pioneer Charles Atlas started his career by getting his own camera moving as he documented dances for Merce Cunningham’s company. For his first survey at an American museum, he’ll revisit and remix 50 years of portraits, studies and collaborations, with Yvonne Rainer, Leigh Bowery and others, and turn several early videos into multiscreen immersive installations. (Oct. 10-March 16, 2025; ICA/Boston)

TACITA DEAN: BLIND FOLLY

Monumental blackboard drawings, “portraits” of trees and a rotating group of 16 mm films, including one of Claes Oldenburg at work, are among the delights in this first major American survey for Tacita Dean, a Turner Prize-winning British artist. (Oct. 11-April 19, 2025; Menil Collection, Houston)

THE WAY I SEE IT: SELECTIONS FROM THE KAWS COLLECTION

Hugely successful pop artist KAWS has amassed a spectacular trove of drawings, including works by Robert Crumb, Gladys Nilsson and Adolf Wölfli. Where better to show them than the trusty SoHo nonprofit dedicated to the form? (Oct. 10-Jan. 19, 2025; the Drawing Center)

WILLIAM GROPPER: ARTIST OF THE PEOPLE

A timely look at the work of an early 20th-century social realist illustrator who took on every sort of injustice in the pages of the New York Tribune and the Sunday Worker. (Oct. 12-Jan. 5, 2025; Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.)

SIENA: THE RISE OF PAINTING, 1300-1350

Loans from the National Gallery, London, and many others round out the Met’s own exceptional collection of golden, mysterious paintings from the smoldering dawn of the Italian Renaissance. (Oct. 13-Jan. 26, 2025; Metropolitan Museum of Art)

AUDREY FLACK: MIDCENTURY TO POST-POP BAROQUE

A wide-ranging exhibition of work by the doyenne of photorealism, beginning with her early abstractions and continuing through the cartoonlike “Post-Pop Baroque” style of her final years. Complementing Audrey Flack will be the Parrish’s concurrent show of the even more extravagantly detailed street scenes of contemporary artist Bertrand Meniel. (Oct. 13-April 6, 2025; Parrish Art Museum, Water Mill, New York)

EGON SCHIELE: LIVING LANDSCAPES

The Austrian boy wonder best known for emaciated figures put just as much character into his flat, childlike houses and winsome anthropomorphic trees. (Oct. 17-Jan. 13, 2025; Neue Galerie)

BELLE DA COSTA GREENE: A LIBRARIAN’S LEGACY

Passing for white, though she was the daughter of Harvard’s first Black graduate, Belle da Costa Greene was the personal librarian to J.P. Morgan before spending nearly a quarter of a century directing what is now called the Morgan Library & Museum, which was founded as a public institution in 1924. (Oct. 25-May 4, 2025; Morgan Library & Museum)

SOPHIE CALLE: OVERSHARE

The largest-ever North American exhibition of work by a French photographer and conceptual artist who anticipated the boundary-blurring effect of social media. (Oct. 26-Jan. 26, 2025; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis)

NOUR MOBARAK: DAFNE PHONO

Lebanese American artist Nour Mobarak scores the 1598 opera “Dafne” for 15 singing sculptures, in some of the world’s most phonetically complex languages. (Oct. 26-Jan. 12, 2025; MoMA)

THE ART SHOW

Of the 75 galleries setting up booths at this annual fair that benefits the Henry Street Settlement, more than 40 will be presenting solo exhibitions. (Oct. 30-Nov. 2; Park Avenue Armory)

November

HARMONY AND DISSONANCE: ORPHISM IN PARIS, 1910-1930


Between cubism and full-blown abstraction came Orphism, a colorful, almost musical style of painting pioneered by Robert and Sonia Delaunay and named by poet Guillaume Apollinaire after an ancient Greek mystery religion. This show of more than 80 paintings, sculptures and works on paper brings the music to all five levels of the Guggenheim. (Nov. 8-March 9, 2025; Guggenheim Museum)

DRAW THEM IN, PAINT THEM OUT: TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK CONFRONTS PHILIP GUSTON

Four years ago, a decision by several institutions to postpone a major Philip Guston show was widely criticized. Now, the Jewish Museum puts Guston’s satirical, self-conscious, complicated cartoons of Ku Klux Klansmen in conversation with the contemporary painter Doyle Hancock’s Black superhero, Torpedo Boy. (Nov. 8-March 30, 2025; Jewish Museum)

THE AMERICAN WING AT 100

Recent acquisitions and a few key loans will anchor a thoughtful new design for the Met’s American wing in its centennial year. (Nov. 8; Metropolitan Museum)

THE LIVING END: PAINTING AND OTHER TECHNOLOGIES, 1970-2020

It should be clear by now that, contra the radicals of a previous generation, painting never died. But how exactly did it survive the onslaughts of photography, television and conceptual art? Works by more than 40 artists, in a variety of formats, showcase the ingenuity and everlasting adaptability of mankind’s most glamorous artistic medium. (Nov. 9-April 13, 2025; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago)

CHRISTIAN MARCLAY: THE CLOCK

Marclay’s spectacular movie — a transfixing, anxiety-producing, 24-hour-long collage of film clips containing watches and clocks — goes back on public display. (Nov. 10-Spring, 2025; MoMA)

CEREMONIES OUT OF THE AIR: RALPH LEMON

In addition to sculpture, photography, drawing and painting, this first museum survey for the choreographer and polymath will include collaborative performances and dance premieres. (Nov. 14-March 24, 2025; MoMA PS1)

JOSÉ PARLÁ: HOMECOMING

The highlights of this diverse, large-scale exhibition of work, by hometown multimedia favorite José Parlá, include a replica of the artist’s studio, a site-specific mural painted live and paintings that include reclaimed tatters of outdoor posters. (Nov. 14-April 27, 2025; Pérez Art Museum Miami)

JOSEPH BEUYS: IN DEFENSE OF NATURE

Between 1982 and 1987, Joseph Beuys planted 7,000 oak trees in Kassel, Germany, each paired with a basalt pillar. In concert with this show of more than 400 pieces from the 1960s to the 1980s — and as part of PST ART — the Broad will replant 100 California coast live oak trees in Elysian Park in Los Angeles. (Nov. 16-April 6, 2025; the Broad, Los Angeles)

THE PRINT GENERATION

The 19th-century Japanese woodblock prints that made such an impression on Western modernists were almost as elaborate as movies — designed by auteurs such as Hokusai or Hiroshige but carved and printed by hordes of specialists. It wasn’t until the early 20th century that Japanese artists began to do everything themselves, making works, like the ones displayed here, that were “rough, raw and unique.” (Nov. 16-April 27, 2025; Smithsonian National Museum of Asian Art, Washington, D.C.)

MARTHA DIAMOND: DEEP TIME

The influential downtown painter of semi-abstracted Manhattan buildings, who died in 2023, gets her first major monograph and an in-depth survey, organized with the Colby College Museum of Art. (Nov. 17-May 18, 2025; Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, Connecticut)

FLIGHT INTO EGYPT: BLACK ARTISTS AND ANCIENT EGYPT, 1876-NOW

Named for Henry Ossawa Tanner’s 1923 painting of the Holy Family fleeing King Herod, this major show will explore the fertile, complicated and ongoing interest artists have had in ancient Egypt. With nearly 200 works, in a range of media, that include significant loans from around the world, it will also be the Met’s first show to ever include a dedicated performance space, the “Performance Pyramid.” (Nov. 17-Feb. 17, 2025; the Met)

December

NADA MIAMI


Get your feet wet in Miami at this annual fair staged by the young, hip and increasingly muscular New Art Dealers Alliance. (Dec. 3-7; Ice Palace Studios, Miami)

IMAGINARY BOOKS: LOST, UNWRITTEN AND FICTIVE WORKS FOUND ONLY IN OTHER BOOKS

This irresistible conceptual-art installation displays meticulously constructed simulacra of books that don’t exist — some because they’ve been lost, others because they never did exist. Look for “Love’s Labour’s Won,” Ernest Hemingway’s first novel, and the “Necronomicon.” (Dec. 5-Feb. 15, 2025; Grolier Club)

ART BASEL MIAMI BEACH

This first edition of the undisputed headliner of American art fairs is under the direction of innovative gallerist Bridget Finn. It brings together nearly 300 galleries of all sizes and types from around the world. (Dec. 6-8; Miami Beach Convention Center)

PICASSO AND PAPER

Prints, sketchbooks, constructed paper guitars and “Femmes à leur toilette,” a 14-foot collage never before shown in the United States, join several hundred drawings in this monster exhibition organized with the Royal Academy of Arts, London, in collaboration with the Musée Picasso, Paris. (Dec. 8-March 23, 2025; Cleveland Museum)

IMAGINING BLACK DIASPORAS: 21ST-CENTURY ART AND POETICS

Works by 60 artists based in Africa, Europe and the Americas tease out the aesthetic themes that have traveled with the African diaspora. (Dec. 15-Aug. 3, 2025; Los Angeles County Museum of Art)

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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September 12, 2024

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