Liz Larner

NEW YORK Anton Kern Gallery Perhaps Larner is able to better illuminate, by way of cold metal abutments that strike at the core of material and form-based juxtaposition, that which is visually sensuous and apposite for organic-seeming sculptural objects. Indeed, her most pleasing forms are those that appear to be collected from nature and hardly contrived.

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Steve Locke

NORTH ADAMS, MASSACHUSETTS MASS MoCA Locke may be acting as witness, but he is also an artist. The work’s interpretive moment occurs in the neon words, “a dream,” which hover over the list of the dead. Which dream, and who gets to dream this dream?

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Keith Tyson

MÄNTTÄ, FINLAND Serlachius Serlachius provides two very different perspectives on Keith Tyson’s “Universal Symphony.” While the elevated observation point offers a sweeping overview, disclosing what appears to be a grab bag of objects, the proximity afforded on the gallery floor amends and contradicts that original impression.

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Michael Rakowitz

ATHENS Acropolis Museum “Allspice: Michael Rakowitz & Ancient Cultures” (on view through October 31, 2025) marks the first time that the Acropolis Museum has shown contemporary work next to historical artifacts. Named for a spice frequently used in the cooking of Rakowitz’s Jewish-Iraqi mother, the show is in many ways a search for the missing ingredient linking lost heritage, diasporic longings, and phantom motherlands.

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Gill Gatfield

NEW YORK NARS Foundation Set against the collapsing tides of the Anthropocene, Aotearoa New Zealand artist Gill Gatfield’s current installation (on view through September 20, 2025) brings the urgency of habeas corpus to New York City, a place long mythologized as a refuge, but also pulsing at the crossroads of data, capital, and control.

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Do Ho Suh

LONDON Tate Modern Spanning three decades and multiple cities that he has called home—including Seoul, New York, and London—the exhibition coalesces around a Korean phrase that references an old idea of packing up a house and moving it through time and place. Rather than thinking of time as linear, however, Suh thinks of cycles of time and returns, carrying elements of one home to another.

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Iman Issa

CHICAGO Art Institute of Chicago The seven works from Issa’s ongoing “Heritage Studies” series installed outdoors on the Institute’s Bluhm Family Terrace reveal her interest in history as well as the specificity of place.

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