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Fortunate Objects: Selections from the Ella Fontanals-Cisneros Collection: The show features 59 works in a mind-boggling hodgepodge of media by artists ranging from Damien Hirst to Olafur Eliasson and José Antonio Hernández-Diez. It "proposes a playful, imaginative, curious, and unexpected approach to objects used in daily life," curator Cecilia Fajardo-Hill says. Eyeball whackers include Ai Weiwei's Forever Bicycle, a soaring sculpture concocted from 74 bicycles screwed together and arranged in a merry-go-roundlike circle. — Carlos Suarez De Jesus Through February 24. CiFo Art Space, 1018 N. Miami Ave., Miami; 305-455-3380, www.cifo.org.
French Kissin' in the USA: Named for the title of a hit 1986 Blondie tune, this show lassoes a posse of 19 contemporary French artists pegged "Generation Sampling," for hijacking images, forms, and signs from the virtual and visual dumping grounds, and marks the first U.S. foray by the bumper crop of emerging French talent. — Carlos Suarez De Jesus Through March 8. The Moore Space, 4040 NE Second Ave., Miami; 305-438-1163, www.themoorespace.org.
Violent Toys: Cuban-born Esteban Blanco focuses the crosshairs on American pop culture with a sniper's skills in this message-freighted series of mixed media and sculptures delving into America's obsession with military might. His exhibit also tackles broader issues of how religion and science and fact and fiction are represented in the media. But it is his fierce mutant toys — Toy Zeppelin, Toy Tank, Toy Airplane — that steal the show. — Carlos Suarez De Jesus Through January 29. Contemporánea Fine Art, 1550 SW Eighth St., Miami; 305-642-3080.
CEM: Richard Höglund's solo debut, based on appropriated concepts from French polymath Paul Valéry, is dense and probing. There's much to chew on, and the layout is precise and well structured, featuring an abstract video screening, a chalkboard installation surrounded by pillars in the center of the space, and two stacks of 5000 Xerox drawings. Höglund's impressive collection reflects an intensely complex thought process and underlying accidental beauty. — Steph Hurst Through February 2. Gallery Diet, 174 NW 23rd St., Miami; 305-571-2288, www.gallerydiet.com.
Put You on a Pedestal: This group exhibition features new sculpture by Andrew Binder, Robin Griffiths, Dominique Labauvie, Bethany Pelle, and Ralph Provisero. Pelle steals the show with handmade ceramic vessels in the form of fetishized Fifties household appliances, each displayed on a pedestal above retro-inspired pastel patterns. Pelle's handiwork is impeccable, and the miniature appliances have functional uses; for instance, one can pull out the shelves of the tiny refrigerator. — Steph Hurst Through February 2. Dorsch Gallery, 151 NW 24th St., Miami; 305-576-1278, www.dorschgallery.com.
This May Be the Last Time, I Don't Know: Christina Pettersson's solo debut features a series of graphite drawings on paper. The vast sheets of white paper contain blank negative space surrounding detailed renderings of lone concrete bricks, to scale and centered on the sheet. Both the renderings and their presentation are minimalist; the works are attached to the walls by clear pushpins. The empty space serves to isolate the subject, but the size seems a superfluous attempt to cover wall space. — Steph Hurst Through February 2. Spinello Gallery, 2294 NW Second Ave., Miami; 786-271-4223, www.spinellogallery.com.