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A major retrospective of Dawoud Bey's career, "An American Project" features around 80 photographs spanning the years of 1975—2017.
April 17, 2021 - October 3, 2021
Titled “An American Project,” a major retrospective of Dawoud Bey’s career is open at The Whitney Museum of American Art through October 3. On view, a total of around 80 works spanning the artist’s 46-year career features photographs from eight of his most notable series. Co-organized by the SFMOMA’s curator of photography, Corey Keller, and The Whitney’s assistant curator, Elisabeth Sherman, viewers will find images spanning the years of 1975—2017, demonstrating Bey’s technical mastery of his medium and his commitment to creating an accurate representational dialogue on African American history, contemporary society, and politics—seen through images like A Woman Waiting in the Doorway, captured in Harlem, NY in 1976, portraits from the 2006 “Class Pictures” series, and images from the 2012 “Birmingham Project.”
An exhibition of new paintings, Marina Adams’s “What Are You Listening To?” is open from May 17 through June 25 at LGDR.
The Costume Institute’s annual exhibition at The Met, “In America: An Anthology of Fashion” examines the foundations of fashion in the U.S.
Presented simultaneously at Gagosian’s 980 and 976 Madison Avenue galleries is Takashi Murakami’s “An Arrow through History."
In Sasha Gordon’s “Hands Of Others,” the artist has employed a suite of new paintings to face the discomfort of examining oneself.
52 Walker is presenting its third exhibition and Nora Turato's first solo show in the U.S., "govern me harder," through July 1.
Adam Silverman’s “Marks and Markers” offers a narrative of self-reflection looking at the artist’s career-long evolution.
David Zwirner’s gallery at 34 East 69th Street offers an intimate setting for an exhibition of the artist Fred Sandback, on view through May 21.
Go inside the worlds of art, fashion, design, and lifestyle.