8 New York City Art Shows to Kick Off the New Year
From the visual pleasures of Mary Sully to the cultural critique of Gary Simmons, to a lesson in Haitian art history, there’s plenty of great art to see right now. by Natalie Haddad, Hakim Bishara, AX Mina, Seph Rodney, Julie Schneider and Daniel LarkinSubscribe to our newsletter
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Romare Bearden: Paris Blues/Jazz and Other Works
DC Moore Gallery, 535 West 22nd Street, Chelsea, Manhattan
Through January 18, 2025
Walking between Romare Bearden’s paintings at DC Moore, I felt a sudden urge to have music in my ears. When I realized that I had left my headphones at home, I became deeply frustrated. That is until I understood that the music I really wanted to hear was begging to burst out of Bearden’s jazz-infused images of Paris, New York, and New Orleans. It was at this point that I began not just seeing, but also listening. Keep your eyes and ears open in this great show, and dream. —Hakim Bishara
Sohrab Hura: Mother
MoMA PS1, 22–25 Jackson Avenue, Long Island City, Queens
Through February 17
Sohrab Hura’s first US survey show is far too expansive to summarize in a paragraph, much like the New Delhi-based artist’s multilayered practice. Encompassing video, painting, sculpture, and photography, Motherdeserves time and attention, and rewards it with an intimate look into Hura’s world and experiences. A room filled with gouache paintings of remembered scenes and people, including Hura’s family, has a warm, inviting feel. While each individual work feels like a window into a moment in time, together, sweeping across the walls, they form the ebbs and flows of life. Best known as a photographer and filmmaker, Hura’s recent explorations of painting in the series Things Felt But Not Quite Expressed(2022–ongoing) and Ghosts in My Sleep(2023–ongoing) reveal a more introspective side of a prolific talent. —NH
The Three Perfections: Japanese Poetry, Calligraphy, and Painting from the Mary and Cheney Cowles Collection
Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1000 Fifth Avenue, Upper East Side, Manhattan
Through August 3
Surveying a millennium’s worth of works, The Three Perfections: Japanese Poetry, Calligraphy, and Painting from the Mary and Cheney Cowles Collectionshows how these three art forms merge in Japanese aesthetic traditions. “The Thirty-Six Poetic Immortals” is a gorgeous set of painted screens from the 17th century that portrays courtly poets — only five of them women — deemed important at the time. It’s a good example of the three perfections in one: the calligraphy, portraits, and poems are by different people. This sits in dialogue with 159 other works on view, including the 20th century “Handscroll of Tyrannical Government,” depicting a woman who lost her entire family to tigers but still preferred life in the mists, far from an authoritarian government, where soldiers were enlisted to reinforce class inequality. —AX Mina
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