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Gallery listings plus highlights from our favorite exhibitions this month

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“SASCHA MALLON: INNEN WELTEN-INNER WORLDS” AT WAAM

The Woodstock Artists Association & Museum reopens its on-site galleries on November 13 with two solo exhibitions, Mallon’s and “C. J. Matherne: Stacked Against You,” both chosen by Kristen Dodge, owner and director of September Gallery in Hudson. Mallon makes small ceramic sculptures representing female figures, plants, and animals, which she groups in sitespecific installations.Her work is predominantly about the cycle of life, and within that context her sculptures serve as pictograms, carriers of hidden messages, and memento mori, creating dreamlike worlds whose narratives illustrate relationships, transitions, and dichotomies such as life/death. There is a surreal quality to Mallon’s work, with figures covered by flowers and insects, an unusual sense of scale, and bodies opening up to reveal scenes inside. “Innen Welten-Inner Worlds” will be on display through February 1. Woodstockart.org Poppy Mountain, Sascha Mallon

“KIKI SMITH: RIVER LIGHT” AT STORM KING ART CENTER

This solo exhibition of outdoor works marks Kiki Smith’s first presentation of flags—a new element within her expansive production—in the United States. For this exhibition (which closes November 9) Smith has created a new collection of flags whose unpredictable, ever-changing movements mimic the ebb and flow of water in a river. Installed on Storm King’s Museum Hill with long views of Storm King Mountain and the Hudson Highlands, the flags present an ephemeral installation that is activated by the natural world around it. Arranged in a circular procession, the images in the nine blue flags are pulled from a film Smith created in 2005 of glints of sunlight on the East River. Do make sure to reserve a spot ASAP as Storm King tends to sell out, especially on weekends. Stormking.org An installation view of "Kiki Smith: River Light" Photo by Jeffery Jenkins

“RANSOME: THE VIEW FROM HERE” AT BARRETT ART CENTER

Part of Barrett’s series of solo shows selected by leading curators from across the country, “Ransome: The View from Here” was chosen by Ashley James, associate curator of contemporary art at the Guggenheim Museum. Ransome’s work focuses on images that centered around his African-American lineage, a through line that connects back to his sharecropper ancestors. Combining acrylic paint with an array of found, created, and purchased papers, Ransome’s work is imbued with the spontaneity of hip hop artists and the resourcefulness of rural quilters, creating a fusion that unites historical folkways with a modern, urban sensibility. The pictorial narratives are personal, yet the symbols interplay with larger social, racial, ancestral, economic, and political histories that speak to current issues. The show in Poughkeepsie runs through November 14. Barrettartcenter.org

Who Should Own Black Art?, Ransome

Electrolux, Pamela Zaremba

“PAMELA ZAREMBA: TRANSPOSED” AT BAU

Running from November 14 through December 6 at BAU in Beacon, Pamela Zaremba’s new series of photographs created during the pandemic, “Transposed.” Zaremba captures a skewed domesticity in her work, imbuing the seemingly banal scenes with an undertone of The Stepford Wives-style creepiness. That the photographer happens to live in the suburban idyll of Westport, Connecticut, which the town of Stepford was based on in Ira Levin’s satirical thriller, is a fitting subtext for the series. The photos also try and marry the current moment of heightened domesticity, when we are all spending more time in our homes, with the historical confinement of women to homes and householding. As Zaremba notes in her artist’s statement: “This pandemic prompted a resurgence of finding comfort in the day-to-day chores under a profoundly complex context, one that continues to unfold seemingly indefinitely.” Baugallery.org

“WE’RE ALL IN THIS TOGETHER” AT ARTPORT KINGSTON

Though November 9 at the newly opened contemporary art space in the historic Cornell Steamboat building in Kingston’s Rondout neighborhood, works that address the challenging times we live in and invites the twin questions: What is our communal awareness? What do we all have in common? The works in “We’re All in This Together” are frankly optimistic and refreshingly upbeat. Artists in the exhibition: Doreen McCarthy, Alexander Hammond, Kirsten Hassenfeld, Jacinta Brunnel, Jennifer Dalton, Ann Tarantino, Patricia Tewes Richards, Mary Ann Strandell, Roxanne Faber Savage, Stefan Saffer, Jeila Gueramian, Susan Rowe Harrison, Karlos Carcamo, Dan Devine, Michelle Weinberg, and Christine Stiver. Artportkingston.com

Memory Blanket, Jacinta Bunnell

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.

ANN STREET GALLERY

104 ANN STREET, NEWBURGH “Black Renaissance Festival.” Juried group show curated by Kirsten Kucer. Through November 28.

ARTPORT KINGSTON

110 EAST STRAND STREET, KINGSTON “We Are All in This Together.” Artists: Doreen McCarthy, Alexander Hammond, Kirsten Hassenfeld, Jacinta Brunnel, Jennifer Dalton, Ann Tarantino, Patricia Tewes Richards, Mary Ann Strandell, Roxanne Faber Savage, Stefan Saffer, Jeila Gueramian, Susan Rowe Harrison, Karlos Carcamo, Dan Devine, Michelle Weinberg, Christine Stiver. Through November 7.

BARD COLLEGE : CCS BARD GALLERIES

ANNANDALE-ON-HUDSON “Sky Hopinka: Centers of Somehwere.” First solo museum exhibition of artist and filmmaker Sky Hopinka. Through February 14.

BARRETT HOUSE ART CENTER

55 NOXON STREET, POUGHKEEPSIE “New Directions 2020.” 36th annual national juried contrmporary art exhibition juried by Nic Brierre Aziz of the New Orleans Museum of Art. Through Novermber 14. “Ransome: The View From Here.” Through November 14.

BAU GALLERY

506 MAIN STREET, BEACON “Splits: Jebah Baum.” Lithographic transfer prints. “Double/Exposure.” New work by Melissa Schlobolm. Both shows Through November 7. “Pamela Zaremba: Transposed.” November 14-December 6.

BOARDMAN ROAD BRANCH LIBRARY

141 BOARDMAN ROAD, POUGHKEEPSIE “Lynn Schamberger: Needlepoint and Fiber Art.” November 3-January 3.

CARRIE HADDAD GALLERY

622 WARREN STREET, HUDSON “Man & Machine.” Group show with Mark Beard, Matthew Hopkins, Robert Goldstrom, Harry Orlyk, Joseph Richards, Allan Skirloff, Lee Musselman, and Nick Simpson. Through November 29.

CLARK ART INSTITUTE

225 SOUTH STREET, WILLIAMSTOWN, MA “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.

CORNELL CREATIVE BUSINESS & ARTS CENTER

129 CORNELL STREET, KINGSTON “We Are All Human.” Group show juried by MariaElena Ferrer. Through November 30.

DIA:BEACON

3 BEEKMAN STREET, BEACON Works by Lee Ufan, Sam Gilliam, Mel Bochner, Barry Le Va, Richard Serra, Dan Flavin, and others on long-term view.

EMERGE GALLERY & ART SPACE

228 MAIN STREET, SAUGERTIES “Petit: Smaller Sized Art.” Works sized 11” x 14” and under. November 7-29.

FRANCES LEHMAN LOEB ART CENTER

VASSAR COLLEGE, POUGHKEEPSIE “Miracles on the Border: Retablos of Mexican Migrants to the United States.” Retablos are thank-you notes to the heavens dedicated to Christ, the Virgin, or saints to consecrate a miraculous event. The votives in this exhibition— spanning the entirety of the 20th century—were offered by Mexican migrants and their families to commemorate the dangers of crossing the border and living in the United States. Through December 13.

FERROVIA STUDIOS

17 RAILROAD AVENUE, KINGSTON “David Schoichet: Recent Work.” Schoichet’s black and white photographs are exclusively of people of color; his subjects range from brief interactions with strangers at public events such as protests, rallies, and marches, to intimate portraits of family and friends. Ongoing.

GARRISON ART CENTER

23 GARRISON’S LANDING, GARRISON “Chairs: Re-Created.” An online auction of chairs by esteemed reginal artists to benefit GAC. Through November 14.

HOLLAND TUNNEL ART

46 CHAMBERS STREET, NEWBURGH “Terra/Derma.” Work by Marieken Cochius, Kent Peterson, and Romina Gonzales. Through November 22.

LABSPACE

2642 NY ROUTE 23, HILLSDALE “In My Room: Susan Carr.” Paintings, drawings, sculpture and ceramics. Through November 8.

MAGAZZINO ITALIAN ART

2700 ROUTE 9, COLD SPRING “Bochner Boetti Fontana.” Examines the formal, conceptual and procdural affinites in the work of Mel Bochner, Alighiero Boetti, and Lucio Fontana. Curated by Mel Bochner. Through January 11.

MARK GRUBER GALLERY

NEW PALTZ PLAZA, NEW PALTZ “Barns and Boats.” Through November 28.

MOTHER GALLERY

1154 NORTH AVENUE, BEACON “The Hunch.” Daniel Giordano, Marcy Hermansader, and Caitlin MacQueen. Through November 22.

NEW YORK RESTAURANT

353 MAIN STREET, CATSKILL “Sirpa Cowell: Paintings.” Through January 1.

OLIVE FREE LIBRARY

4033 ROUTE 28, WEST SHOKAN “If Only.” Group show of feminist artwork by Katharine Umstead, Jacinta Bunnell, Carole Kunstadt, Yvette Lewis, and Natali Bravo-Barbee. Through November 7.

PAMELA SALISBURY GALLERY

362 1/2 WARREN STREET, HUDSON “Escape Clause.” An exhibition of works by thirteen recent graduates of Bard College and Bennington College. Escape Clause is curated by Gee Wesley, a current student at the graduate program at the Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard. November 7-December 6.

THE POUGHKEEPSIE TROLLEY BARN

489 MAIN STREET, POUGHKEEPSIE “The Art Effect Alumni Show.” Drawing, painting, sculpture, tattoo, and more from alumni from Spark Media, Mill Street Loft, and the Art Effect. Through November 21.

ROCA

27 SOUTH GREENBUSH ROAD, WEST NYACK “Fire & Indigo: Gerardo Castro.” Puerto Rican-born Gerardo Castro tells stories through burnings on paper. Castro’s art work is drenched with powerful narratives—supernatural forces influenced by Afro-Cuban religions and spirituality that enables a connection to history and a courageous confrontation of meaning and myth, ethnicity, and gender. Through November 21.

SAMUEL DORSKY MUSEUM OF ART

1 HAWK DRIVE, NEW PALTZ “Dos Mundos: (Re)Constructing Narratives.” Twleve artists who center stories at the fringe of public attention: hidden sanctuaries, subcultures, painful identities, far-away homes, spirituality, transcendence, broken promises, and all too easily ignored social ecologies. Through November 22. ‘We Wear the Mask: Race and Representation in the Dorsky Museum Permanent Collection.” Curated by Jean-Marc Superville Sovak. Through November 22.

STORM KING ART CENTER

1 MUSEUM ROAD, NEW WINDSOR “A stone that thinks of Enceladus: Martha Tuttle.” Outdoor exhibition is series of human-made stone stacks or cairns, built of boulders gathered at Storm King, and molded glass and carved marble stones. Ongoing.

THE RE INSTITUTE

1395 BOSTON CORNERS ROAD, MILLERTON “Together in Isolation”. Long-term outdoor exhibition about the pandemic. Through November 13.

THOMAS COLE NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE

218 SPRING STREET, CATSKILL “Pollinator Pavilion.” A 21 ½-foot-high, painted wood, architectural confection draped with flowers, plants, and paintings by Mark Dion and Dana Sherwood. Ongoing.

TIVOLI ARTISTS GALLERY

60 BROADWAY, TIVOLI “Members’ Best.” Exhibit of member work. Through November 15.

WOODSTOCK ART EXCHANGE

1398 ROUTE 28, WOODSTOCK “Small Etchings: Joseph Owczarek”. A registered architect and interior designer, Owczarek studied drawing and printmaking at the Illustrators Society, Spring Street Studio, and the Salmagundi Club. Through December 28.

WOODSTOCK ARTISTS ASSOCIATION AND MUSEUM

28 TINKER STREET, WOODSTOCK “C.J. Matherne: Stacked Against You.” Matherne’s body of work is informed by an experience the artist had a number of years ago teaching art in Miami with a population of chronically homeless adults. The vulnerability of their condition left an indelible mark on Matherne. Using both the human body and architectural forms, the paintings explore this vulnerability. November 13-February 1.

“TERRA/DERMA” AT HOLLAND TUNNEL

This three-person show in Newburgh brings together the work of Marieken Cochius, Kent Peterson, and Romina Gonzales. A central theme running through the exhibit: the ways in which natural and humanmade forces are changing the surface of the Earth in both subtle and dramatic ways. Cochius’ mixedmedia collage series, “Elements of the Motherboard,” includes a variety of natural materials and shows how natural forms change over time, addressing the destruction of the environment as man-made systems collapse and damage the world around them. The cracked surfaces of Peterson’s “Strata” paintings are made by painting over tar, reminiscent of geological structures that have been eroded over time. Gonzales’ series of sculptures, “Finding the Window” are life-sized masses of pulled glass. Hollandtunnelgallery.com

Romina Gonzales working on a piece from her "Finding the Window" series.

Everything you always wanted to know about COVID

but were afraid to ask

THURSDAY, 11/19, 4:30-6PM

Phillip Pantuso Managing Editor, The River Newsroom

Lissa Harris Staff Writer, The River Newsroom

Reporters from The River Newsroom will host a conversation with panel guests from the public health, local business, and community service worlds, and answer reader questions about the pandemic—from its eff ects to what it’s like to cover it. therivernewsroom.com/events

MENTAL WHIPLASH, SOCIAL ROT, AND REVOLUTION

Mental whiplash is the most likely injury during the first week of November. Mercury retrograde in justice-loving Libra is knocked off balance by a square to status quo seeking Saturn in Capricorn November 1. Revolt around perceived unfairness flavors Mercury’s direct station on Election Day, November 3, and Mercury squares Saturn again November 6. Confusion around communication, authority, and questions of “what is fair” and “who’s in charge” are not immediately resolved.

By the Venus-Mars opposition on November 9, the polarization of the collective good vs. individual rights reaches a breaking point. Mercury enters Scorpio on November 10, empowering deep investigation into long-held secrets. The third of 2020’s Jupiter-Pluto conjunctions occurs November 12, right before Mars stations direct November 13. The lessons we didn’t learn in early April and late June come back to hit us in the collective face. If that face isn’t wearing a mask, that blow will do more than simply sting. The New Moon in Scorpio on November 14 at the Sun’s sextile to both Pluto and Jupiter demands a rebirth of basic respect for life and death, including the life of our planet, which supports all.

Mercury’s third opposition to Uranus November 17 completes the trifecta of oppositions since mid-October. The discovery of subterfuge and the threat to communally shared values are revealed when Venus squares Pluto and Jupiter November 15. Deceit and distortion are exposed when Neptune stations direct November 18, though those who profit from confusion and disinformation resist with technological tools designed to sow chaos. The Full Moon Lunar Eclipse in Gemini on November 30 demonstrates that we’re only as secure as our information systems. Rot from the inside is revealed when trust in formerly respected institutions collapses. Self-respect and a firm foundation inside save us from external chaos when revolution is in the air.

ARIES (March 20–April 19) Planetary ruler Mars stations direct Friday the 13th and not a moment too soon, as his retrograde through Aries by squares to Jupiter, Saturn, and Pluto during September and October has forced confrontation with the power structures in your life. Your hard-won maturity is challenged to perform in partnership at the opposition of Venus to Mars on November 9. Sun in Mars-ruled Scorpio through November 20 fuels your urge to connect in a powerful, passionate way. Sun in inspirational Sagittarius after November 21 and a surge of charismatic superpowers November 24–26 at the Aries Moon empowers your pursuit of desire.

TAURUS (April 19–May 20) Planetary ruler Venus in Libra through November 20 continues October’s feel-good momentum. The opposition of Venus to Mars in retrograde Aries on November 9 challenges you to go the distance in relationships. Put out extra effort to find common ground and maintain harmony with loved ones when Venus squares Pluto, Jupiter, and Saturn November 15–19. Venus enters solar opposite Scorpio on November 21, injecting an intense sense of urgency into developing your own resources and protecting your existing assets. And now for something completely different: Prepare for the big reveal when Venus in Scorpio opposes Uranus in Taurus November 27.

A practicing, professional astrologer for over 30 years, Lorelai Kude can be reached for questions and personal consultations via email (lorelaikude@yahoo.com) and her Kabbalah-flavored website is Astrolojew.com.

GEMINI (May 20–June 21) Sandwiched between two Mercury/Saturn squares— retrograde November 1 and direct November 6—is Mercury’s direct station in Libra on November 3 in a hard square to Capricorn in the ultra-sensitive area of the zodiac, which has been bombarded by hard-core conjunctions of Saturn, Pluto, and Jupiter since January. Internal tensions must be resolved through unflinching and utterly ruthless honesty with yourself. Mercury re-enters Scorpio on November 10, empowering the deepest dive into intense self-examination. Lunar Eclipse/ Full Moon in Gemini November 30 with Mercury’s sextile to Saturn launches the next phase of intellectual inspiration, flowering maturity, and personal emotional growth.

CANCER (June 21–July 22) The Sun in Scorpio through November 20 sharpens and defines your desires. Though it’s hard to let go, ultimately, you’ll be grateful at Last Quarter Moon in Leo November 8, prompting a conscious distinction between luxury and necessity. New Moon in Scorpio November 14 resurrects your creative forces; you start to believe in your own capacity to imbue significance into every encounter. First Quarter Moon in Pisces November 21 sparks a refreshing and much-needed spiritual renewal. Lunar Eclipse/Full Moon in Gemini November 30 reveals unconscious thought processes enabling ambiguity—root out subconscious impediments, and right the ship of state.

LEO (July 22–August 23) Oh 2020, you thought you were already intense? Sun in Scorpio through November 20 wrote the book on intensity. The possibilities unlocked during the square of your planetary ruler to your natal Sun herald tremendous creative opportunity, wrested from resolving inner conflict. Sun trine Neptune November 9, strengthening your faith and your self-confidence. Sun sextile Pluto and Jupiter at the New Moon in Scorpio November 14: Others trust your stability and determination. Sun sextile Saturn November 18; you are rewarded for hard work and a job well done. Sun enter Jupiter-ruled Sagittarius November 21, bringing bounty, buoyancy, and blessings.

VIRGO (August 23–September 23) Possible confusion and subsequent fear around finances when Mercury retrograde in Libra squares Saturn in Capricorn November 1. Don’t panic. Mercury stations direct November 3, then squares Saturn again November 6 and confusions untangle into manageable and actionable information. Mercury enter Scorpio November 10, empowering a sense of accuracy and self-control. The third in a series of opposition of Mercury to Uranus occurs November 17, returning you to conditions around October 7, second and even third chances appear when Mercury trines Neptune November 23. Make peace with prudence and practicality when Mercury sextiles Pluto, Jupiter, and Saturn November 27–30.

LIBRA (September 23–October 23) Like a warrior preparing for battle, you’ve assembled weapons and you’re not afraid to use them when planetary ruler Venus in Libra opposes retrograde Mars in Aries November 9. You insist on a fair fight; you’ve got justice on your side November 15 at Venus’s square to both Pluto and Jupiter in Capricorn. Display maturity and wisdom at the Venus-Saturn square November 19 and when Venus enters Scorpio November 21, you’ll be richly rewarded. Prepare for shocking, abrupt, or unexpected disruptions November 27 at the opposition of Venus to Uranus, affecting values, valuables, resources, and intimacies shared with others.

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SCORPIO (October 23–November 21) Sun in Scorpio through November 20 nourishes personal empowerment and your sense of self-control in a world increasingly out of control. The Venus-Mars opposition November 9 catches you unawares; if you’re schooled for unbalanced behavior, take it to heart. Correction offered in love is to be valued. New Moon in Scorpio sextile Pluto and Jupiter November 14 is an emotional rebirth. The third of 2020’s three Jupiter-Pluto conjunctions occurs on November 12. If you’ve worked consciously on communicating with integrity, you’re empowered to speak some life changing, magical words to the heart—both your own and that of the beloved.

SAGITTARIUS (November 22–December 22) The third of 2020’s Jupiter/Pluto conjunctions occurs November 12, your deadline to solidify intentionalities, if not actual commitments, you made in early April and late June. You’ve transformed your personal values into something of external, measurable, and quantifiable worth. Adjustments made now to the structures and hierarchies you’ve helped to create will support your future. Sun sextile Jupiter at the New Moon in Scorpio November 13 blesses with bounty, Venus square Jupiter November 15 cautions prudence and wise restraint. Sun enter Sagittarius November 21, and at Mercury’s sextile Jupiter November 28 please have your cake and eat it too.

CAPRICORN (December 22–January 20) It’s a whiplash-y start to the month when Mercury retrograde squares Saturn November 1, followed by Mercury direct squares Saturn November 6. Communication confusion threaten structures and security, but don’t panic. You’ve ingrained and integrated Saturn’s many lessons during 2020 not because it was fun—it wasn’t!—but because it was a matter of life and death. Demonstrate your hard-earned patience, maturity, wisdom, and practicality, supported by Sun’s sextile Saturn November 18, and be an example to those around you. Your friends, family, and community need the stability your presence provides them, and you need to be a giver.

AQUARIUS (January 20–February 19) Mercury opposite Uranus November 17, completing the trifecta of oppositions which began in October and enabling a reset of the deep disconnect you’ve found between your public and private life. This issue has caused internal dissonance, which has sapped your focus and has you running on backup power to whatever degree your personal values are misaligned with your public persona. Prepare for a reality show revelation in the realm of relationships when Venus opposes Uranus November 27. If you think you’ve been keeping secrets, you may find out that you are the secret and you’re the one being kept.

PISCES (February 20-March 19) A harmonious trine of the Sun to Neptune November 9 illuminates all the many reasons you’re grateful, if only by contrast to the “there-but-for-the-grace-of-God-go-I” contingent. Conscious gratitude strengthens faith and starts to gain momentum against overwhelming external events at First Quarter Moon in Pisces November 21. Put inspirational ideas into both words and action when Mercury trine Neptune November 23. A long period of dormancy ends when Neptune stations direct November 28, though this may not be the physical freedom you crave, but a mental empowerment ultimately leading to inner liberation.

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