Art for the Sag Cinema
“Wild and Tame,” an exhibition organized by April Gornik to benefit the Sag Harbor Cinema Arts Center, will open in a newly renovated loft space at Lululemon, 35 Main Street in East Hampton, with a reception tomorrow from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
“All of the work in this show shifts the way we think of the world outside ourselves in inventive, sometimes humorous, and surprising ways,” said Ms. Gornik.
The show includes work by Alice
Light at Drawing Room
The Drawing Room in East Hampton will present “Michael Light: Gardiner’s Island and Amagansett” from tomorrow through Dec. 22. The exhibition features selections from two series of aerial photographs taken by Mr. Light in 2016 that explore the personal and ecological significance of the East End’s farmland and coast.
The show will also include two limited-edition artist books of large-format archival pigment prints from the same series. Each volume incorporates photographs printed in deeply saturated inks on matte paper. Turning the pages, the viewer experiences the vantage points captured by the artist from his own light aircraft.
Ross Faculty Art Show
“Artists Within: A Ross Faculty and Staff Art Show” will open at the Ross Gallery at 18 Goodfriend Drive in East Hampton with a reception today from 4 to 5:30 p.m.
The exhibition, which will remain on view through Dec. 2, includes work in a variety of mediums by Alexis Martino, Jennifer Cross, Paul Gansky, Jon Mulhern, Daniel Donovan, Ned Smyth, Sherry Williams, Christopher Engel, Dan Roe, Lutha Leahy-Miller, Connie Judson, and Liss Larsen.
Fifty percent of proceeds will benefit a scholarship for this year’s Field Academy, an intensive three-week course that sends students and faculty abroad for field work.
Mizrahi at Ashawagh
“Seen,” an exhibition of paintings by the East Hampton artist Haim Mizrahi, will be on view at Ashawagh Hall in Springs on Saturday and Sunday. A reception will be held Saturday from 4 to 8 p.m.
Mr. Mizrahi’s paintings and collages “stretch across many styles,” according to the artist, whose sometimes graphic, sometimes free-form style brings to mind such artists as Frank Stella and Jackson Pollock.
Cardenas’s ‘Antarctica’
“Antarctica,” a show of paintings by Alejandro Cardenas, will open Wednesday with a reception from 6 to 8 p.m. at Harper’s Apartment, the Manhattan outpost of Harper’s Books in East Hampton.
The nine paintings in the exhibition portray surreal scenes of modernist interiors and architectural settings inhabited by otherworldly biomorphic figures in odd looking attitudes of repose. Created with the gallery space in mind, one of the paintings includes the apartment’s fireplace.
Harper’s Apartment, at 51 East 74th Street, is open Thursdays through Saturdays from noon to 6. The show will continue through Dec. 7.
Icons at White Room
“I-Conz,” a show of work by Ceravola, Candice CMC, and Steve Joester, will be on view at the White Room Gallery in Bridgehampton from tomorrow through Dec. 1. A reception is set for Saturday from 5 to 7 p.m.
Ceravalo’s paintings combine portraits of vintage Pop icons with textured
A group show of work by Reisig and Taylor, Stephanie Jaffe, John Quigley, Phillip Le Closier, and Jason Poremba will also be on view.
Artist’s Scarecrows
Thirty-three artist-made scarecrows will be on view in the field at the Green Thumb organic farm in Water Mill from Saturday through Nov. 16. “The Scarecrow Show” has been organized by Abby Lloyd, Dennis Witkin, and Hadley Vogel, the founder of East Hampton Shed. A reception will be held at the farm on Saturday afternoon from 2 to 4.
Art of the 1960s
As part of the Parrish Art Museum’s open house on Sunday, when admission will be free from noon until 3, the museum will present “American Art in the 1960s,” a film by Michael Blackwood that follows the leading artists of that decade’s various movements.
The film, which is narrated by the critic Barbara Rose, will be screened at 3 and followed by a conversation between Terrie Sultan, the museum’s director, and Alicia Longwell, its chief curator. Advance registration is required.
Bartley in Chelsea
“Reading in Color,” an exhibition of photographs by Mary Ellen Bartley, will open this evening at Yancey Richardson Gallery in Chelsea with a reception from 6 to 8 and continue through Dec. 7. Ms. Bartley is known for her exploration of the tactile and formal qualities of printed books. The photographs in the exhibition feature colorful arrangements made from the dyed page-edges of mass market “pulp” paperbacks.