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Art Spiel Picks: NYC Exhibitions in December 2025

HIGHLIGHTS

Colorful, mixed-media exhibitions bring vibrancy to the winter season with splashes of exhilaration and discovery.

Light Years
Cristin Tierney
49 Walker St. New York, NY
On view through: December 20, 2025
Featuring: Judy Pfaff

This presentation of works by Judy Pfaff is radiant, electrifying and magnetic. Light Years brings together large-scale mixed-media works. These architectural structures mirror the human figure in form, feeling a bit like abstracted mirrors revealing the haze of one’s psyche; indeed, these maximalist assemblage-paintings serve as ardent reminders of the objects we collect and hold onto with a cherishing grasp. Bright neon is juxtaposed against bits and bobs of packing materials, bits of plastic, paper, bubble wrap, and more. Slick resin coats flat acrylic panels on a wall, glistening under the lights with slickness and smoothness, their sheen spellbinding and grounding at the same time. Moving through the gallery, the various installations hold differing moods, alternating between the curious, the comforting, and the alien. The sensory plunge of light, color and form oscillates in a dance between warmth and coolness, all the while continuously engaging with new discoveries the longer one stays for the slow reveal.

In the Fold
James Howe Gallery
On View Through: December 19, 2025
Featuring Robin Feld, Kellie Lehr and Jamie Powell
Curated by Shazzi Thomas
Kean University
Union, NJ
@shazzileona @robin_feld @kellielehr @jamielinnpowell @galleriesatkean @keanuniversity @thepaintingcenter

In the Fold, a three-person exhibition in the James Howe Gallery at Kean University, is curated by Shazzi Thomas and features gorgeous works by Robin Field, Kellie Lehr, and Jamie Powell. This interplay between painting, textiles, and sculpture coalesces into a vibrant installation that feels like a thoughtful conversation among the artists. Melding the traditions of painting with various elements of assemblage and collage, each artist strives to make sense of a world that is rapidly changing with or without us. Feld’s acrylic and collage-printed acetate on canvas works evoke fast movement, while Lehr’s in contrast, embody a feeling of stillness and observation; and Powell’s painting-sculpture hybrids are a melding in-between. Poetic threads are enmeshed in this triangulation of poignancy. John Berger’s Ways of Seeing would make for an excellent text accompaniment to this exhibition, which draws out nuances and dialogues in abundance. Through gentle moments of intimacy, Feld, Lehr and Powell follow gestures and processes they’ve been articulating in their respective practices individually, while reflections are fleshed out in a shared language with Thomas’ curation, cultivating space to come together to reflect with thoughtfulness and intention.

My Barbarian
Cat Suit
Lubov
5 East Broadway #402 New York, NY
Info@lubov.nyc
On view through: January 17, 2026
@lubov_nyc @malik_juliang @jadelain @alexandro_segade

All photos courtesy of the writer.

My Barbarian is a collaboration among Malik Gaines, Jade Gordon, and Alejandro Segade. Through Cat Suit, we are brought into the profound world of all things feline, magical, and mystical. In an enthralling installation that features enlarged illustrative tarot cards in the main gallery and a potent video, a sculptural work brings them together in an exhibition honoring and worthy of our beloved companions. We traverse symbology and contemplate the feline presence in the wild, in ancient civilizations, throughout history across the globe, within our homes, and, of course, in the ubiquitous bodegas, our lifelines in the modern cityscape. Cats have replaced humans in this particular Arcana, which is a poignant reminder to anyone familiar with the feline/human relationship that we are subservient to their knowledge and power, and have been for millennia. The illustrations vary in style and theme, allowing an array of visceral moments to unfold for the viewer, like gazing into portals that expand across time and space. This dreamy, beautiful presentation draws visitors into the worlds built and narrated by these majestic beings, and like the love of cats, the experience is deeply meaningful.

About the writer: Yasmeen Abdallah is an interdisciplinary artist, writer, curator and educator examining history, contemporary culture, materiality, reuse, memory, and space. She has been a visiting and teaching artist at institutions including New Museum; Pratt Institute; Sarah Lawrence College; Residency Unlimited; BRIC; Kean University; Parsons; Columbia University; Children’s Museum of NYC; El Barrio Artspace; Fairleigh Dickinson; and University of Massachusetts. She holds Bachelor’s degrees in Anthropology (focus in Historical Archaeology) and in Studio Art with honors, with a Minor in Women’s, Gender & Sexuality Studies from University of Massachusetts; and received an MFA in Fine Arts, with distinction, from Pratt Institute. Exhibitions include Art in Odd Places; the Boiler; Bronx Art Space; Clemente Soto Velez Cultural Center; Cornell University; Ed Varie; Elizabeth Foundation; NARS Foundation; Open Source; Pratt Institute; PS122 Gallery; Spring Break Art Show; University of Massachusetts; and Westbeth. Publications include Anthropology of Consciousness; Ante Art; Art Observed; Bust Magazine; Emergency Index; Hyperallergic; Papergirl Brooklyn; Free City Radio; Radio Alhara; Tussle Magazine; the Urban Activist; and Transborder Art. Her work is in public, private, and traveling collections in the U.S. and abroad. @86cherrycherry

Art Spiel Picks: NYC Exhibitions in July 2025

HIGHLIGHTS

Installation view, Michael Pribich at Transmitter

Pathways of migration, transit, turbulence, and foundational knowledge lead us across the city through three boroughs that speak to time and reflection. Through the slightest gestures cleverly calculated by the selected artists, we can trace symbolic movements as indicative of something greater and inherently profound. This lineup is a reminder to delve into one’s humanity and to mine for empathy and change. These themes are as relevant today as they were long ago, and it’s important to acknowledge the work of artists who are using their talents to envision an equitable world for all. Let us carry forth this mindset so that the present we build is a true path forward towards a more mindful future.

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Guy Nelson: Tales from the Understory at The North Dakota Museum of Art

Hot Air
Guy Nelson, The Road Not Taken, North Dakota Museum of Art

The North Dakota Museum of Art’s latest exhibition, Guy Nelson: Tales from the Understory, is a multidisciplinary solo show focused on the woodlands and prairies of the upper Midwest. Featuring sculpture, painting and video, the exhibition will be on display through July 20, 2025. This exhibition marks the tenth in the Museum’s Art Makers Series, an annual award for artists with connections to the region, which is underwritten by Dr. William F. Wosick of Fargo.

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Art Spiel Picks: Manhattan Exhibitions in May 2025

HIGHLIGHTS
Holding Water: Mary Mattingly

This month’s Manhattan highlights focus on artists tapping into the natural world, where these practices converge with the man-made in a clash of stunning reinvention and compelling engagement. These exhibitions channel the experimental through exploratory processes that harness our attention and hold us in their spell.

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Art Spiel Picks: Manhattan Art Fair Week

HIGHLIGHTS
Image courtesy of Michele Jaslow/Radar Curatorial

An energetic jaunt through the various art fairs over the past week revealed curious findings and trends: Relational aesthetics, atmospheric landscapes, the human psyche, and acts of care are on view in the forms of plants, animals, & organisms. Rendered in splashy colors, text-based media and kitschy coolness, the various moods are quirky and earnestly expressed through painting, sculpture/ceramics, textiles and installations. Here is a roundup of some booths that hit the mark and kept it refreshing.

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Metamorphosis at Taplin Gallery, Arts Council of Princeton: Yasmeen Abdallah with Anna Shukeylo

In dialogue
Installation view

Metamorphosis at the Arts Council of Princeton brings together 4 mid-career artists whose work artist and curator Anna Shukeylo has long admired—and envisioned sharing the same space. Each piece explores transformation or shapeshifting in its own way, reflecting the theme that gives the exhibition its name. Since its initial conception, the show has undergone some changes, with some works so new they haven’t even fully cured. Shukeylo invites the artists to interpret the theme freely and engages them in the selection process, though she makes the final curatorial decisions. I spoke with Shukeylo about her process and how the show has evolved.

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Art Spiel Picks: All Around NYC Exhibitions in March 2025

HIGHLIGHTS
Nick Cave at Jack Shainman photo courtesy of Yasmeen Abdallah

Spatial dynamics and human hybridity are central to this month’s roundup of highlights in New York. From monumental sculpture to works intimately interspersed within the home, all things great and small commune and offer reflection upon their relationships to the environments in which they currently reside. The hierarchy between the natural and the manmade is in conversation within this selection of shows through shifting currents of tenuous and harmonious moments.

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Art Spiel Picks: Manhattan Exhibition in February 2025

HIGHLIGHTS
Hassan Sharif, Gathering at Alexander Gray Associates

Alternative worlds abound, collide, and gravitate in a transfixing lineup that is circumspect of the new year and ruminations of what lies ahead. Unique in presentation, yet united in exploring the vulnerabilities of coexistence amidst a delicate balance, their clandestine orbits intersect and align around the precarity of humanity. Shape-shifting, portals, relics, and worlds collide and mystify in alchemical formulations. As our planet spins on an axis beyond human capacity, one can find solace and pleasure in the mystery and adventure that awaits through these masterful and delightful odysseys of discovery. Michael Brennan and Matthew Deleget create pathways of knowledge through otherworldly means. David Dixon melds stories seamlessly that serve as portals into realms that might exist in such a world.

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Art Spiel Picks for January 2025: The Earthly and Celestial in Manhattan

HIGHLIGHTS

Lorna Simpson, did time elapse, 2024, acrylic and screenprint on gessoes fiberglass @Lorna Simpson

Cecilia Vicuña, Lorna Simpson and Nour Mobarak powerfully and eloquently broach heavy subject matter with diligent research in their attempts to preserve significant stories amidst the burdens of colonialism. Each artist speaks to various experiences as they contend with complicated histories of peoples, lands, and the dynamics between them in an array of circumstances. These exhibitions take on the task of engaging with past and present, depicting resourcefulness and perseverance amid the tangled threads of imperialism that wreak havoc across the globe. Viewers are offered context as they enter works that embody life through organic matter, curious objects, and ethereal modalities.

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