The Depot Art Gallery, at the Montauk railroad station at the corner of Flamingo Avenue and South Edgemere Street in Montauk, will open “The Print Show,” with a reception on Saturday, August 16, from 5 to 7 p.m., with live music in the upstairs studio. “The Print Show” features six artists who explore and have fun with monoprints, wood cuts, linoleum cuts and more. Each artist has a distinct style and both framed work and unframed works are available. Featured artists are AG Duggan, Andrea Sher, Cheryl Richer, Laurie Hall, Setha Low and Ted Shaine.
For more information, visit montaukartistsassociation.org
The Lucore Art, 87 South Euclid Avenue in Montauk, is showing “Unravel,” a solo exhibition featuring Imani Bilál. Through vibrant color fields and layered textures, Bilál explores transformation, and the grace found in unraveling.
For more information, visit thelucoreart.com.
The Drawing Room, 55 Main Street in East Hampton, is featuring new works by Claire Watson, through Monday, August 18. The show spotlights Watson’s longtime engagement with using elements salvaged from leather garments as a springboard for creating abstract art.
For more information, visit drawingroom-gallery.com.
Halsey McKay Gallery, 79 Newtown Lane in East Hampton Village, is showing “Life Paintings,” Joseph Hart’s seventh solo show with the gallery. Upstairs, the gallery is featuring Andrew Schoultz’ immersive installation of murals and paintings, "Rhythms.
For more information, visit halseymckay.com.
The White Room Gallery, 3 Railroad Avenue in East Hampton, is showing “Red Carpet,” featuring Nelson De La Nuez, Markus Klinko, The Guys with the Same Name, Pascal Guetta and Simon Waranch, through Sunday, August 17.
For more information, visit thewhiteroom.gallery.
Tripoli Gallery, 26 Ardsley Road in Wainscott, has been joined by the Vito Schnabel Gallery in presenting “Sunday,” featuring Trey Abdella, Katherine Bernhardt, Katherine Bradford, Francesco Clemente, Mary Heilmann, Rashid Johnson, Christoph Matthes, Lola Montes, Robert Nava, Julian Schnabel and Lucy Winton, through Monday, August 18.
For more information, visit tripoligallery.com.
LTV Studios, 75 Industrial Road in Wainscott, is showing “Having a Long Coarse Daunting Peak,” an exhibition of color, urgency and unmapped terrain, curated by Haim Mizrahi, through Wednesday, August 20. The exhibit features six artists who were given one directive: to paint a 4-by-12-foot canvas with brushes and paint and nothing else. Participating artists include Bob Sullivan, Panyu Lin, Nick Weber, Chris Lucore, Jody Gambino and Mizrahi.
For more information, call 631-537-2777 or visit ltveh.org or email haimmizrahi@hotmail.com.
Chase Edwards Gallery, 2462 Main Street in Bridgehampton, is showing “The Circus Comes to the Hamptons,” featuring the works of renowned Danish sculptor Bjørn Skaarup. Viewers are invited to step into Skaarup’s distinctive sculptural universe where bronze animals take center stage in his imaginative “Circus” installation, a playful reinterpretation of the 19th-century circus featuring 33 fantastical characters, including a Hippo Ribbon Dancer, Rhino Strongman, Crocodile Tightrope Walkers, and an Elephant Magician. Each work draws on a vast palette of influences from medieval bestiaries and Renaissance allegory to pop culture, mythology, and modern-day satire.
For more information, visit chaseedwardsgallery.com.
Stella Flame Gallery, 2385 Montauk Highway in Bridgehampton, will host a celebratory reception to open a solo show by Portuguese artist Emanuel De Sousa on Saturday, August 16, from 5 to 7 p.m. De Sousa’s conceptual, Dada inspired paintings, characterized by bold colors and chunky brushstrokes, feature an engaging cast of imaginative characters. The exhibition will remain on view through September 15.
De Sousa’s works on canvas will be complemented by Katey Brunini’s “Il Sangue.” Brunini’s latest art jewel collection combines rare gems in shades of red, sunset and gold featuring dominant materials from the deep seas and is conceptualized with color, texture and symbolism. For over three decades, K. Brunini has been covered by every major fashion publication, shown in
museums and galleries around the world and garnered international acclaim and a slew of industry awards.
A portion from the opening night’s proceeds will benefit Holiday House Hamptons.
For more information, visit stellaflamegallery.com.
The Ezra Gallery of the Hamptons at the Center for Jewish Life - Sag Harbor, 22 Long Island Avenue in Sag Harbor, is showing “Ocean,” a group show featuring contemporary artists exploring the relationship between nature, humanity and place. Curated by Jessica De Cort and Samuel Abelow, the exhibition features works by Abelow, De Cort, Doug Argue, Sam Bornstein, Emily Croteau, Daniel Heidkamp, Benjamin Klein, Raffi Kalendrian, Naomi Salfati, Sarah Schechter, Eugene Shvidler and Orli Swergold and will remain on view through September 4.
For more information, visit ezragallery.com.
Monika Olko Gallery, 95 Main Street in Sag Harbor, is showing works by Joey Farrell, “Still | Moving: A Graceful Dichotomy of Stillness + Motion.”
For more information, email monikaolkogallery@gmail.com.
The Superposition Gallery is showing its first contemporary collection at the Eastville Heritage House Museum, 139 Hampton Street in Sag Harbor. “Mami Wata” is a group exhibition curated by Storm Ascher and featuring Derrick Adams, Patrick Alston, Jessica Taylor Bellamy, Sanford Biggers, Layo Bright, Michael A. Butler, Alisa Sikelianos-Carter, Renée Cox, Damien Davis, Ellon Gibbs, Ashanté Kindle, Audrey Lyall, Eilen Itzel Mena, Ludovic Nkoth, Tariku Shiferaw, and Khari Turner. With a multitude of celebratory moments, a total of eight works included in the exhibition will also be donated to the institution on behalf of The Hamptons Black Arts Council founded by Storm Ascher to initiate the newly established “Hamptons Black Arts Council Contemporary Art Collection.”
The exhibition will be on view through November 30.
For more information, visit superpositiongallery.com.
Grenning Gallery, 26 Main Street in Sag Harbor, is showing its Summer Group Show, showcasing works by Anthony Mastromatteo, Steven Levin, Doug Reina and Gene Johnson, through August 24.
While these artists have diverse interests and ways of expressing themselves, we find similarities in their use of color, form, and content. The Grenning Gallery’s “Summer Group Show” this year has a retro, mid century aesthetic that calls attention to angularity, symmetry, balance, while also highlighting the subtle impact of color in paintings.
For more information, call 631-725-8469 or visit grenninggallery.com.
Keyes Art, 45 Main Street in Sag Harbor, is showing “Rozeal | Nathan Slate Joseph,” featuring works by the well-known and collected modern artists, through August 23.
For more information, visit juliekeyesart.com.
Romany Kramoris Gallery, 41 Main Street in Sag Harbor, will open a new show, featuring works by Casey Chalem Anderson, Thomas Condon, Quincy Egginton, Katherine Milliken and Gayle Tudisco, with a reception planned for Saturday, August 16, from 5 to 6:30 p.m. The group show will remain on view through September 4.
For more information, call 631-725-2499 or visit kramorisgallery.com.
Sara Nightingale Gallery, 26 Main Street in Sag Harbor, is showing “Montauk Road Trip,” featuring Peter Buchman, with additional works by Adriana Barone, Stephanie Brody-Lederman, Jeffrey Fitzgeralnd, Linda Gottesfeld, Melora Griffis, Elena Lyakir, Kim Romero, Barbara Thomas and Gus Yero, through August 18.
For more information, visit saranightingale.com.
JHB Gallery at Jetsam Studio, 58 Jobs Lane in Southampton Village, is showing “Water Glasses” and photographic abstracts by Amanda Means, Scott Morgan’s shimmering light-etched “Surygrams,” Mia Pearlman’s intricate wall works in cut paper, Ellen Carey’s color-saturated experimental darkroom photography, classic gestural abstract painting by Mark Saltz, as well as contemporary jacquard tapestry works by Annette Cords. The artwork will be on view alongside contemporary furniture and design classics by the likes of Pierre Jeanneret, René Gabriel and Charlotte Perriand.
For more information, visit jhbgallery.com.
Slattery Gallery, 30a Jobs Lane in Southampton Village, is showing“Jeff Muhs: Atlas Obscura,” through August 25.
For more information, visit slatterygallery.com.
East End Arts, 1333 East Main Street in Riverhead, is showing “Detour VI,” its annual summer group exhibition, through August 24.
For more information, visit eastendarts.org.
Buoys for the Bays Exhibit: The Back to the Bays initiative out of the Cornell Cooperative Extension Marine Program, has partnered with Borghese Vineyard for its Buoys for the Bays exhibit and auction, on view through September 10. For more information, or to bid on a buoy, visit backtothebays.org/buoys-for-the-bays.
To submit art or gallery openings and showings, email Co-Publisher Kathryn G. Menu at kmenu@expressnewsgroup.com