Mark Flood: Another Painting @ CAMSTL

The first solo museum exhibition of Houston-based artist Mark Flood, Another Painting features key examples of the artist’s recent text, lace, and corporate logo paintings. With a deadpan and confrontational tone, Flood’s work interrogates the verbal, visual, and written language of institutions—such as government, Wall Street, and the art market—that influence everyday life. Appropriating the vernacular of these establishments, Flood seeks to reveal what he believes to be their inherent absurdity and desire to control. Another Painting will be on view until January 3, 2015 at the Contemporary Art Museum of St. Louis, 3750 Washington Blvd St. Louis, MO

Last Chance to See Pentti Monkkonen's Wind Parade @ High Art

Wind Parade is Los Angeles-based artist Pentti Monkkonen's artistic interpretation of today's cultural and literal climate. The artist asks, "What will happen to all the art in the event of a global weather or economic disaster? I have a friend whose gallery bubble wrapped his paintings so well that they floated on the surface of a flooded basement during hurricane Sandy and remained unharmed." Pentti Monkkonen's Wind Parade will be on view until November 29, at High Art, 17, rue des Panoyaux 75020 Paris 

Quentin Jones The Fractured & The Feline @ The Vinyl Factor

The Vinyl Factory presents a survey of works by London-based multi-media artist Quentin Jones in collaboration with innovative spatial designer Robert Storey. Quentin Jones is a photographer, animator, painter and filmmaker whose distinctive illustrative style has led to high-profile commissions in the fashion and publishing worlds. This exhibition is the first to feature the full range of Jones’ oeuvre, resulting in her most comprehensive and varied show to date. Working on paper, in sculpture, film, photography, Jones takes masks and surreal portraiture as a grounding for her works. Quentin Jones The Fractured & The Felinewill be on view until December 13, 2014 at The Vinyl Factory Space at Brewer Street Car Park. 

Maurizio Cattelan Cosa Nostra @ Sotheby's S/2 Gallery

Venus Over Manhattan and Sotheby’s S|2 will present Cosa Nostra, the first major exhibition of Maurizio Cattelan’s work since his retrospective at the Guggenheim, and the artist’s subsequent retirement. Curated by Adam Lindemann, this exhibition will showcase a range of works from Cattelan’s career, including many of the artist’s most recognizable iconography that has made him one of the most idiosyncratic and unique of his generation. Cosa Nostra will be on view until November 26 at Sotheby's S/2 Gallery, 1334 York Avenue, New York.

Early Man @ The Hole Gallery

The Hole presents a group exhibition entitled Early Man. Taking early art making (as in Upper Paleolithic) as a jumping off point, artists in this show use various strategies to create meaning, from the barely rudimentary to the highly sophisticated. Some of the artists include Aurel Schmidt, David Shrigley, Bruce High Quality Foundation, and more. Early Man will be on view until December 28 at The Hole Gallery, 312 Bowery, New York. 

Ahmed Alsoudani @ Gladstone Gallery

Ahmed Alsoudani Gladstone Gallery

Gladstone Gallery presents an exhibition of new paintings by Ahmed Alsoudani. This will be the artist’s first exhibition with the gallery. The vibrant, large-scale paintings that will be featured draw on Alsoudani’s distinct painterly vocabulary and introduce new subject matter that marks a transition in his work. Ahmed Alsoudani's exhibition will be on view until December 20, 2014 at Gladstone Gallery, 515 West 24th Street, New York.

Keith Haring The Political Line at the De Young

The Political Line features more than 130 works of art including large scale paintings (on tarpaulins and canvases), sculptures and a number of the artist’s subway drawings, among other works. The exhibition will create a narrative that explores the artist’s responses to nuclear disarmament, racial inequality, the excesses of capitalism, environmental degradation and others issues of deep personal concern to the artist. Keith Haring: The Political Line will be on view at until February 16, 2015 at the De Young Museum in San Francisco. 

David Shrigley Gets His First Major Exhibition in Australia

David Shrigley- Life and Life Drawing _ national gallery of victoria

National Gallery Victoria presents David Shrigley: Life and Life Drawing, a comprehensive exhibition – his first major survey in Australia – of new and recent work by the internationally renowned Glasgow-based artist. Shrigley has developed a cult following for his stripped back, darkly humourous and deliberately crude drawings that explore existential dramas, human dysfunction and anxiety. David Shrigley: Life and Life Drawing will be on view until March 1, 2015, at National Gallery Victoria, 180 St Kilda Road Melbourne, Australia

Barry McGee and Clare Rojas @ Alessandra Bonomo Gallery

barry-mcgee-and-clare-rojas-exhibition-alessandra-bonomo-gallery-in-rome

Barry McGee and Clare Rojas debut a joint exhibition at Alessandra Bonomo Gallery in Rome, Italy. Showcasing the couple’s visual harmony inside the gallery space, the exhibition features sharp geometrical forms inspired by Eastern European, Amish, and Native American tradition. The exhibition will be on view until the end of the year at Alessandra Bonomo GalleryVia Del Gesu 62 00186 Rome

Amazing Outside Artist Susan Te Kahurangi King @ Andrew Edlin

Susan_Te_Kahurangi_King

Andrew Edlin Gallery presents debut solo gallery exhibition in the United States of the drawings of Susan Te Kahurangi King, a self-taught artist from New Zealand. Around the age of four, for no apparent reason, Susan stopped speaking, but continued to express herself through prolific drawings and sketchbooks. In King’s compositions, viewers will find peculiar perspectives, a collage-like, breaking-up of pictorial space and the subject matter she depicts in it, and a rollicking sense of the artist’s powerful and expressive art-making line. Susan Te Kahurangi King's exhibiton – Drawings from Many Worlds– will be on view at the Andrew Edlin Gallery until December 20, 2014, 34 Tenth Avenue New York.