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57 Exhibition Highlights

Leandro Erlich: Liminal

Through September 4

REFRAMED: The Future of Cities in Wood

Through October

Argentine artist Leandro Erlich’s body of work toes the line between the exactitude of architectural modelmaking and the symbolism of sculpture. His site-specific works play on viewers’ most banal, quotidian architectural experiences. They can even be slightly voyeuristic at times, as when an installation offers a glimpse through the drawn blinds of an apartment window. Each piece ends in surprise.

Bruce Nauman: His Mark

The scale and depth of his works make the experience of encounter almost uncanny, largely due to his spatial sensibility: Called an “architect of the uncertain” by gallerist Sean Kelly, his architectural inclinations are on full display in his detail-obsessed oeuvre, which is always bending the rules. How could the everyday be so unsettling? All it takes is detachment and perhaps the rapt attention demanded of a visitor canvassing a museum. EC

Mass timber carries a lot of weight: namely, the weight of architects’ expectations that the building material can be used to design ourselves out of the climate crisis. Though one of the oldest known architectural materials, and one that has been in near-constant use for millennia, timber (through its improved “massive” format) has taken on the mythic proportions previously reserved only for steel and concrete. This show at the Chicago Architecture Center showcases these changes and potentials by highlighting the buzzy material. Exploring specifically its connections to emergent concepts of biophilic design, the exhibition’s curators cite the integral human connection to natural forms and reasons for seeking these connections. Additional benefits and hopes for the architecture industry to embrace themes like well-being, mental health, and adaptive reuse are on display in the Drake Family Skyscraper Gallery. EC

enFOLD Collective: Black – Still

Through September 11

Through September 10

Few artists practice what they preach when it comes to denouncing a favored medium. But Bruce Nauman, active since the early 1960s, has worked in almost every possible format. Instead, he is known for his subject: his own body, with which he uplifts the messiness of creativity. For his first solo exhibition in New Mexico, His Mark shows a mature artist doing his thing. (The superlative matters as it’s nearly a hometown show: Nauman lives nearby, outside of Galisteo.) New video works in a familiar single-channel format engage history and politics, while work in a fresher vein utilizes 3D scanning techniques on Nauman’s own form to create immersive video installations. Even at 81, Nauman admits that there is never an easy answer to the question of what an artist is, or how best to be one. EC

Since 2021, Material & Application has hosted summer installations in its courtyard, which it shares with Craft Contemporary. It offers spatial immersion and activation for Angelenos. This year’s iteration takes this mission further: a multisensory installation by enFOLD Collective centers wellness, accessibility, and cultural expression by prioritizing the stories and perspectives of marginalized communities. The installation is made with simple, familiar materials: Plywood and plaster-andlath walls are painted black, and the mortar oozes out from between the planks, referencing the nearby La Brea Tar Pits, underground oil seeps, and, even, Blackness itself. The texture adds a human feel to the outdoor room, which confounds modernist architectural ideals— predicated on presumed whiteness—to make connections between bodies, the environment, and Los Angeles at large. EC