exhibits ALDRICH CONTEMPORARY ART MUSEUM 258 MAIN STREET, RIDGEFIELD, CT
“Through the Eye of a Needle.” First major solo museum exhibition of New York-based artist Genesis Belanger. “Frank Stella’s Stars: A Survey.” Outdoor installation. Both shows through May 9.
ARTS SOCIETY OF KINGSTON (ASK) 97 BROADWAY, KINGSTON
“Nicole Fossi: Grounding Narratives.” Paintings. February 6-27.
BARRETT ART CENTER
55 NOXON STREET, POUGHKEEPSIE “Photowork 2021.” Audrey Sands, Assistant Curator of Photography, Phoenix Museum of Art and the Center for Creative Photography, selected 39 photographic artworks for this show. Through February 21.
BARD COLLEGE : CCS BARD GALLERIES PO BOX 5000, ANNANDALE-ON-HUDSON
"Sky Hopinka: Centers of Somewhere." First solo museum exhibition of artist and filmmaker Sky Hopinka. Through February 14.
BAU GALLERY
506 MAIN STREET, BEACON “Dream.” Group show with painting, sculpture, photography, ceramics, and blown glass by Faith Adams, Jebah Baum, Daniel Berlin, John De Marco, Lukas Milanak, Eileen Sackman, Melissa Schlobohm, Ilse Schreiber-Noll, Diana Vidal, Pamela Zaremba, and Steve Derrickson. Through February 7.
BOARDMAN ROAD BRANCH LIBRARY 141 BOARDMAN ROAD, POUGHKEEPSIE
“Linda Lynton: Seasons.” Oil paintings of trees. Through March 2.
THE CENTER FOR PHOTOGRAPHY AT WOODSTOCK The Checkered Dress (Portrait of O’Keeffe), Hilda Belcher, 1907
Sadie Kelly, 11 years old, Peerless Oyster Co., Lewis Hine, 1911
59 TINKER STREET, WOODSTOCK
“Members Show 2021.” February 15-March 21.
CLARK ART INSTITUTE
225 SOUTH STREET, WILLIAMSTOWN, MA
“WOMEN PICTURING WOMEN” AT THE LEHMAN LOEB ART CENTER Curated by Patricia Phagan, “Women Picturing Women: From Personal Spaces to Public Ventures” studies the themes that emerged when selecting only images of women by women artists. Drawn from the permanent collection of the Lehman Loeb, this exhibit shows how women artists frequently communicated the idea of an intimate or sheltered enclosure even though these women participated in a more public arena to show or even make their work. Other women artists relayed the idea of venturing into a public place such as a street or an office, or into the more public, intellectual world of a narrative found in religion, mythology, or social critique. Artists in the exhibition include Kathe Kollwitz, Berthe Morisot, Hilda Belcher, Emma Conant Church, and Elizabeth Rebecca Coffin, among others. February 6–June 13. Fllac.vassar.edu
LEWIS HINE AT THE DORSKY MUSEUM Lewis Hine (1874-1940) was an American sociologist and photographer who used his camera as a tool for social reform. Hine’s photographs were instrumental in changing child labor laws in the United States. “Lewis Hine, Child Labor Investigator,” curated by Anna Conlan with Amy Fredrickson, showcases a collection of photographs, recently donated to the Dorsky. These powerful photographs were made between 1908 and 1922, while Hine was employed by the National Child Labor Committee (NCLC) to investigate and document widespread instances of young children working in unsafe conditions. Hine’s work for the NCLC was often dangerous—he was frequently threatened with violence or even death by factory police and foremen. February 6–July 11. Newpaltz.edu/museum
“Ground/work.” First outdoor exhibition at the Clark featuring work by Kelly Akashi, Nairy Baghramian, Jennie C. Jones, Eva LeWitt, Analia Saban, and Haegue Yang. Through October 2021. “A Change in the Light: The Cliché-Verre in Nineteenth-Century France." This exhibition presents clichés-verre (a hybrid process developed in the mid-nineteenth century, combined the techniques of the graphic arts—namely drawing and printmaking—with those of the new medium of photography) by five French artists—Jean Baptiste Camille Corot, Charles-François Daubigny, Eugène Delacroix, Jean François Millet, and Théodore Rousseau. February 13-May 16.
DIA:BEACON
3 BEEKMAN STREET, BEACON Works by Lee Ufan, Sam Gilliam, Mel Bochner, Barry Le Va, Richard Serra, Mario Merz, and others on long-term view.
EMERGE GALLERY & ART SPACE 228 MAIN STREET, SAUGERTIES
“Exit 20.” Work by artists from Saugerties. February 6-28.
MISON KIM AT GARRISON ART CENTER “Games, Guns, and Glory” at Garrison Art Center presents bold diagrammatic drawings by Mison Kim that suggest semi-automatic rifles, board games, and icons. Within the confines of these rigid graphics, Kim has woven a multitude of lyrical lines that make their way in and around the graphic design. Upon closer examination, the viewer discovers that these are, in fact, architectural plans for government buildings and houses of worship. “The grandest architecture is both eloquent and beautiful, and I thought, that’s where I’d like my lines to live,” says Kim. “These architectures are also associated with presenting society’s greatest aspirations. They were purportedly constructed to support the highest of ideals.” Kim’s intricate wanderings offer pleasure in the simple act of looking and getting lost in an image. Through February 28 Garrisonartcenter.org St. Tommy Gun, Canterbury Cathedral, Mison Kim
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