Hop from the Seaport District to Madison Avenue without despairing with our run-down of next week’s art-fair extravaganza. | Valentina Di Liscia Whether you view the prospect of back-to-back art fairs as a soporific schmoozefest or a welcome opportunity to see a lot of art in a short amount of time — and let’s face it, for most of us, it’s somewhere in between — you will most likely need some sort of guide to navigate it all. That’s where we come in! We’ve compiled a digestible list of fairs to check out this week. Use promo code HYPER20 for a 20% discount. Your list of must-see, fun, insightful, and very New York art events this month, including birdhouses at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Rodrigo Valenzuela, Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum, and more. | Billy Anania Everyone knows September to be the month of art fairs, but the big Manhattan attractions are just a few of New York’s autumnal offerings. It isn’t quite winter yet, so you can still catch the tail end of an artist-made birdhouse show beside Prospect Park. All the same, a group exhibition of politically charged textiles along the Long Island Sound packs a punch in an area otherwise flooded with wealth. Our other highlights for this month include a sanctuary of African healing out on Governors Island, colorful deconstructions of gender and sexuality, and transmissions from a post-worker dystopia in Brooklyn. The Clark Art Institute pairs new work by Tauba Auerbach and Yuji Agematsu under the rubric of the meander in a new exhibition. In plainly different ways, both artists sharpen perceptions of the flows of matter and energy around us, oscillating between intuition and analysis, the quotidian and the cosmic. Learn more. Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum, “Sinner Get Ready” (2022) (courtesy the artist and Galerie Lelong) Pamela Sunstrum has already lived many lives in the United States, Africa, and Southeast Asia. But as her latest exhibition title reveals, much of that experience has yet to be expressed. Thus, the individual painted canvases that comprise I have withheld — many of which are paired into diptychs or built into three-dimensional installations — together form a surreal tableau of placelessness. From September 8 to 11, the fair will showcase top modern and contemporary paper-based art from 95 galleries, including works from Bang Geul Han, Yuko Nishikawa, and more. Learn more. Henri Matisse, "The Red Studio" (1911), oil on canvas, 71 1/4 x 7 feet x 2 1/4 inches. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Mrs. Simon Guggenheim Fund (© 2022 Succession H. Matisse / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York) Become a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. |