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Current Art Shows

i am the resurrection: Works by Daniel Arsham, Ian Cooper, Jay Heikes, and Rachel Howe circle cautiously around Goth culture and the spate of recent school shootings by teenagers. The works suggest the saturation of violence permeating contemporary life, and explore the twin afflictions of victimization and vengeance plaguing youth...
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i am the resurrection: Works by Daniel Arsham, Ian Cooper, Jay Heikes, and Rachel Howe circle cautiously around Goth culture and the spate of recent school shootings by teenagers. The works suggest the saturation of violence permeating contemporary life, and explore the twin afflictions of victimization and vengeance plaguing youth in the United States. Also examined here is the fact that some teens have turned to Satanism to redress their suffering or expand their fashion horizons. Rachel Howe's drawings on paper are penetrating. Daniel Arsham's renderings of pristine modernist high-rises are overwhelmed by inky, dreamy, cavelike settings. A snarky, hipsterish sensibility floats over the entire show, a perfect milieu for discourse on the banality of evil. -- Michelle Weinberg Through June 11. Locust Projects, 105 NW 23rd St. 305-576-8570.

Love & Slavery in Miami: Willie Keddell is an artist who tills the fields of perception. The urban furrows of marginality are his seedbed of imagination. His work's soulful aesthetic is abundant with concrete decay, the graffiti of untrod spaces, and the plaintive lament of the dispossessed. With assistance from a crew of "at risk" teenage apprentices from the Troy Community Academy, Keddell has brought an artist's sensibility to the tangled history of two Miami landmarks -- the William English plantation slave house/Fort Dallas, and the Wagner homestead, now located in Lummus Park by the Miami River. "Love & Slavery in Miami" is a project exhibiting historical documentation and photography of the landmarks' pasts, as well as a performance piece based on the lives of the Wagner family. -- Carlos Suarez de Jesus Ongoing. Tours every Thursday between 9:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m.; Saturdays by appointment. Lummus Park, 404 NW Second St. 305-638-7008 (Keddell at Troy Community Academy).

Mariano Rodriguez: An Homage: Rodriguez, a Cuban painter whose works can be found in America's best museums, was a rebel and an autodidact. This retrospective (collected in America) provides a context in which to study how Latin America appropriated and morphed European aesthetics during the first half of the Twentieth Century. There's plenty of the early Picasso in Rodriguez, but who in America at the time didn't borrow from Picasso? The work is luscious in color and themes, reflective of an epoch before political discourses destroyed our innocence. The book Mariano 1912-1990 (available at the gallery) is an indispensable document. -- Alfredo Triff Through June 19. Cernuda Arte, 3155 Ponce de Leon Blvd., Coral Gables. 305-461-1050.

New Works: Kenneth Cohen, Eddy Lopez, Erika Morales, Jeroen Nelemans, and Thomas Nolan, recent Florida International University grads, sink their teeth into the multivalent role played by images harnessed to science, technology, and genetic and social engineering. Their collective fervor is contagious. Cohen's use of the boring talk show in his video Celebrating the Celebrity is an acute burlesque of bohemian self-criticism. Lopez's wallpaper made of teeny composite portraits of Iraqi war dead vibrates with intimacy and monumentality. Morales co-opts the dazed affirmations of infomercial spokespeople to launch Grow Your Own Vine, a charming project to market watermelon seeds to lost souls wishing to bind their intestinal tracts to greater Nature. -- Michelle Weinberg Through June 18. Leonard Tachmes Gallery, 817 NE 125th St., North Miami. 305-895-1030.

Rick Newton: Cul-De-Sac Utopia: An irksome perkiness radiates from Rick Newton's works, composed of sprinkler attachments, map pins, AstroTurf, sand, soil, oil paint, Plexiglas, and plastic. They apply a relentless formal theme and variating approach to the accouterments and artificiality of suburban lawn culture. Inventive and precision-crafted, these contraptions exude a benign energy, which provides much surface delight and entertainment, but doesn't inspire an ironic consideration of Utopia, as the curator's statement suggests. Isolating a few standout works, such as HOA and Sedative, would have concentrated the power of these pieces. This is the last presentation by Ingalls & Associates at its current location; look for the gallery at 125 NW 23rd St. in September. -- Michelle Weinberg Through June 26. Ingalls & Associates, 771 NE 125th St., North Miami. 305-981-7900.

Scream: 10 Artists x 10 Writers x 10 Scary Movies: Curated by Fernanda Arruda and Michael Clifton, "Scream" addresses a variety of horrors influencing contemporary art. In addition to the work in the exhibit, which traveled here from New York, the curators invited ten writers to contribute essays on the participating artists, published in a catalogue that also lists a horror film chosen by each artist. (The films are available for viewing.) David Altmejd's mangled-werewolf sculpture has grisly sex appeal enhanced by a glam coating of rhinestones, rotting stardust, and garish jewelry. Amy Sarkisian's Toy Skull Reconstructions, squalid busts with bad skin, bad teeth, and ridiculous hair pieces, are gruesome, repulsive, and despicable. -- Carlos Suarez de Jesus Through July 3. Moore Space, second floor, 4040 NE Second Ave. 305-438-1163.

We Could've Been Friends: This is, as Box's organizers put it, an attempt "to close the gap between young artists in other cities and Miami's own cultural renaissance." The show contains works by Sam Davis from Las Vegas, Lex Thompson from San Francisco, Rony Cinco from Berlin, Sara Padgett (a Miami newcomer) from Savannah, Perrine Wettstein and Stefan Lauper from Geneva, and Daniel Blochwitz from New York. According to Manny Prieres and José Reyes, these connections create a ripple effect where "you end up knowing people who know other people who otherwise would never know you." -- Alfredo Triff Through June 19. Box, 70 NE Seventeenth St. 305-607-5527.

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