Artists as Curators
In conjunction with its current exhibition, "Artists Choose Parrish, Part II," the Parrish Art Museum in Water Mill will host a conversation with two of the exhibiting artists, Ned Smyth and John Torreano, Friday at 6 p.m. Corinne Erni, the museum's chief curator, will moderate.
For his presentation, Mr. Smyth chose from the museum's collection Louise Nevelson's untitled painted wood sculpture from the late 1970s to be paired with his two cast-concrete works from 1973, "Post Annunciation" and "Renaissance Plan."
Mr. Torreano selected Dennis Oppenheim's "Splash Building" (2009) to show alongside his works, "4 x 4" (1989) and "Paint in Some Holes" (1995).
Tickets are $16, $12 for senior citizens, $5 for members, free for students and children.
Advanced Printmaking
An Open Studio: Advanced Monotype Printmaking workshop will take place Thursday from 2 to 6 p.m. at The Church in Sag Harbor. The class is open only for those who have attended at least two previous Monotype Printmaking sessions.
A monotype is defined as a one-of-a-kind impression made when ink or paint has been manipulated on a plate, often plexiglass, and then run through a press with paper. Each participant will leave with their own unique prints.
The cost of the workshop, led by Samuel Havens and Susan Bachemin, is $200, which includes all materials. Space is limited.
Glass and Oil
"The Glass Show," featuring 25 contemporary artists working in glass, and "Took a Walk," an exhibition of oil paintings on panel by Aubrey Saget, can be seen at Halsey McKay Gallery in East Hampton through Dec. 31.
All of the artists in the former exhibit use glass as part of a larger array of materials, according to David Kennedy Cutler, the show's curator. One of his objectives was "to focus on an industrial material loaded with symbolic and alchemical properties."
Ms. Saget's process begins with taking snapshots with her camera phone while on her daily rounds. These transient images are studied and sketched in her Brooklyn studio before being transformed into painted scenes marked by directional and glossy brush work.
Twenty-One at Ashawagh
"Open Season," a group show organized by Haim Mizrahi, will open Thursday at Ashawagh Hall in Springs and continue through Sunday. A reception is set for Saturday from 4 to 8 p.m., and a reading by local poets will happen on Sunday afternoon at 3.
Participating artists are Chris Lucore, Dalton Portella, Steve Romm, Michael McDowell, Carl Scorza, John Pomianofski, Donna Corvi, Josephine Wojtusiak, Nick Weber, Joyce Raimondo, Renee Dahl, Jody Gambino, Stephen Loschen, Bob Sullivan, Mica Marder, Roseline Koener, Fanyu Lin, Lore Campbell, Andrew Bailey, Aurelio Torres, and Mr. Mizrahi.
Billy Sullivan's Studio
"Studio Visit," an exhibition of work by Billy Sullivan, who divides his time between Manhattan and East Hampton, is at the Kaufmann Repetto Gallery in TriBeCa through Jan. 6.
Mr. Sullivan has been accumulating a visual diary of artworks and images for decades, capturing friends and art world habitues. The diaristic thread runs through his career, forming a coherent body of paintings and photographs while reflecting the evolution of his palette and a shift from 35mm slides to digital imagery.
In the most recent works, completed over the last five years, the artist evokes encounters and dialogues with other artists, designers, and writers, living or dead, well-known or emerging, old friends and new.
Art After Grief
"After Great Pain," an exhibition of paintings, drawings, and mixed-media works by Joyce Raimondo, an artist and the education coordinator for the Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center, can be seen at the NorthShore Library in Shoreham through Jan. 2.
Ms. Raimondo's work expresses her movement through grief following the loss of her brother as a young adult, to a celebration of life and hope in her later colorful abstract paintings.
Six Locals in Noyac
"Migration," an exhibition of work by Adriana Barone, Rory Conway, Liz Engelhardt, John Haubrich, Christa Maiwald, and Mimi Saltzman, will open on Saturday at 15 Munchogue Drive, Noyac, with a reception from 4 to 7 p.m.
The title refers to both the seasonal migration of birds and to the tragic displacement of humans as a result of war and environmental chaos, say the show's organizers. The exhibition includes paintings, mixed-media work, photographs, and driftwood.
Open hours are Saturdays and Sundays from 4 to 6 p.m. through Dec. 10.
Elsewhere
"Mutability," a three-artist exhibition at John Molloy Gallery in Manhattan, includes work by Drew Shiflett, an East Hampton artist. It is opening today, with a reception from 6 to 8 p.m., and will continue through Dec. 16.
Work by Arlene Slavin, who has a house in Wainscott, can be seen at the Equity Gallery in SoHo in "Process and Delight: The New P&D" through Dec. 2.
Jennifer Bartlett, Kathryn Lynch, and Adrian Nivola are represented in "Small Paintings," a show at Victoria Munroe Fine Art in Manhattan through Dec. 23.