The Lucore Art, 87 South Euclid Avenue in Montauk, is showing “Moment of Motion,” featuring works by David Slater and Marilyn Church, through December 2.
For more information, visit thelucoreart.com.
Halsey McKay Gallery, 79 Newtown Lane in East Hampton, is showing works by Eleanor Connover, Lauren Luloff and Tessa G. O’Brien in a show curated by Hilary Schaffner, on view through December 31.
For more information, visit halseymckay.com.
The White Room Gallery, 3 Railroad Avenue in East Hampton, is showing “Spin,” with a reception and holiday party planned for Saturday, December 6, from 5 to 7 p.m. Artists featured in “Spin” include Pascal Guetta, Punk Me Tender, Taylor Smith, Artford, Seek One, Brad Beyer, Gregory Goy, Jack Flo, SQRA, Joseph Kraham, Rock Therrien and more.
For more information, visit thewhiteroom.gallery.
LTV Studios, 75 Industrial Road in Wainscott, is showing “Sea Through River,” curated by Haim Mizrahi and featuring artists AnahiDeCanio, Josh Dayton, Michael McDowell, Steve Romm, Lenore Bailey, Zach Minskoff and Mizrahi, through November 30.
For more information, visit ltveh.org.
Tripoli Gallery, 26 Ardsley Road in Wainscott, is showing “Rising Tides,” a group exhibition featuring paintings by Félix Bonilla Gerena, Iván Girona, and Melanie Luna through Monday, November 24.
For more information, visit tripoligallery.com.
Grenning Gallery, 26 Main Street in Sag Harbor, will open “Gems of the Grenning Gallery,” its annual holiday exhibition featuring a varied range of small-scale paintings from artists including Hunt Slonem, Ben Genske, Daniela Astone, Marc Dalessio, Sarah Lamb, and Darius Yektai, as well as brand new paintings by Terry Elkins, Amy Florence, Kristy Gordon, Doug Reina and Nelson H. White. The show will open with a reception on Saturday, November 22, from 5 to 6:30 p.m., and will remain on view through January 11, with price points for every kind of collector, from $500 to $50,000.
For more information, visit grenninggallery.com.
Keyes Art, 45 Main Street in Sag Harbor, is showing “Higher Vision: Four Artists Shaping Form,” featuring works by Walter Bobbie, Judith Henriques-Adams, Dwight Ripley and Summayah Samaha.
For more information, visit keyesart.com.
Romany Kramoris Gallery, 41 Main Street in Sag Harbor, will open its Annual Small Works Holiday Invitational with an open house reception on Saturday, November 22, from 3 to 6 p.m. The show, which will feature artworks that are 20-by-20 inches or smaller, will benefit from open house receptions every Saturday, throughout the holiday season, from 3 to 6 p.m. and will feature artists including Michael Albert, Jude Albert, Jude Amsel, Karen Amster-Young, Adriana Barone, Lois Bender, Joyce Brian, Christine Cadarette, Linda Capello, John Philip Capello, Casey Chalem Anderson, Lucille Colin, Thomas Condon, Quincy Egginton, Christopher Engel, Franklin Engel, Patricia Feiwel, Rick Gold, Mark Golden, Barbara Groot, Peter Gumpel, Muriel Hanson Falborn, Victoria Hartman, Anne Holtermann, Ruby Jackson, Romany Kramoris, Lutha Leahy-Miller, Ghilia Lipman-Wulf, Peter Lipman-Wulf, Lauren Matzen, Joanna McCarthy, Bruce Mermelstein, Veronica Mezzina, Katherine Milliken, Kelly Nelson, Maria Orlova, Paula Raflo, Heidi Rain, Shel de Satnik, Christina Schlesinger, Mara Sfara, Roger Sichel, Gayle Tudisco, Richard Udice and more.
For more information, visit KramorisGallery.com.
Sara Nightingale Gallery, 26 Main Street in Sag Harbor, is showing “Going Through and Not Around,” an exhibition featuring works by Jennifer Cross, through December 15.
For more information, visit saranightingale.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.
Chase Edwards Gallery, 2462 Main Street in Bridgehampton, is showing “It All Began in the Hamptons,” an exhibit by Debranne Cingari, which explores the emotional weight of short phrases when elevated into surreal, open air dreamscapes.
For more information, visit chaseedwardsgallery.com.
The Women’s Art Center of the Hamptons, 2418 Montauk Highway in Bridgehampton, is showing “Understories,” featuring six acclaimed artists whose practices engage with the natural world in diverse ways. Robin du Plessis transforms natural artifacts gathered on her daily walks into layered photographs that reflect on evolution, mutation and our shifting relationship with the natural world. Laurie Lambrecht merges deconstructed painting and landscape photography, transforming both into new abstractions that invite us to reconsider how nature is perceived. Kiki Smith is internationally recognized for her explorations of the human body, animals and nature; Anne Seelbach brings attention to environmental concerns through abstraction and color; Tiffany Shlain, an Emmy-nominated filmmaker and multidisciplinary artist creates works that meld themes of feminism, philosophy, technology and nature; and Marianne Weil works in bronze and glass, evoking geological and archaeological processes.
For more information, visit wachamptons.org
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, presents “Flore et Faune,” a curated collection of rare Man Ray photographs taken during his time in Paris. “Flore et Faune,” French for flora and fauna, encapsulates the exhibition, which includes images of flowers alongside portraits of women, including his iconic muse, Kiki de Montparnasse. The exhibition is on display through January 26. Also on view are original works by Milton Avery, Willem de Kooning, Wolf Kahn, and Pablo Picasso.
For more information, visit slatterygallery.com.
The North Fork Art Collective is showing “Under the Harvest Moon,” in partnership with Aldo Coffee Company, 103 Front Street in Greenport. “Under the Harvest Moon” brings together a curated selection of local artists whose work reflects the abundance, transformation, and introspection of autumn on the East End, and features a diverse mix of mediums.
Featured artists include: Georgia Suter, Diane Alec Smith, Wendy Prellwitz, Arden Scott, Kate Gerstner, Verona Penalba, Patricia Feiler, Josi Friedrich, Sylvia Channing, and more.
For more information, visit northforkartcollective.com.
To submit art or gallery openings and showings, email Co-Publisher Kathryn G. Menu at kmenu@expressnewsgroup.com