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Curator

Design’s Maximilist Prince Heads South

The ecstatic designs of Chris Wolston come to Texas, Juergen Teller's most honest show yet opens in Athens, a forgotten Cuban Modernist is revived in New York, and more.

November 12, 2025 By VASILISA IOUKHNOVETS
A sculpture by Chris Wolston made out of aluminum, wicker, and steel. Photo: Joe Kramm

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Dallas, “Chris Wolston: Profile in Ecstasy” (Until Feb. 1)
The 29-year-old Brooklyn based designer Chris Wolston is inspired by delicious excess, handmade objects, mother nature, and absolutely not being boring. He’s made, for example, tiled chandeliers, an aluminum sofa, and human-shaped wicker chairs—all on show here. Much of his technique is influenced by his relationship with Colombia’s traditional practices, where he did a Fulbright fellowship and keeps a second studio in Medellín. This presentation of over 40 objects revels in joyful design. dallascontemporary.org

Leg, snails and peaches No.26 shot in London in 2018. Photo: Copyright Juergen Teller

Athens, “Juergen Teller: You are Invited” (Until Dec. 30)
In the last few years, some of Juergen Teller’s candid photographs have become quieter. The German photographer became a father, for one, and began making portraits with his wife, and documenting heavier subjects like Auschwitz. This mid-career survey, in a refurbished factory in Athens, feels especially intimate, even for a quite honest artist. “Everyone else seems so serious, so contrived. I want to bring everything together, from the funny to the tragic, because that’s life,” Teller explains. Here, family, love, politics, faith, and fashion come together in a lively show. onassis.org

Eamon Ore-Giron’s 2025 painting Talking Shit with Huaca Prieta Twined Composition. Photo: Charles White / JW Pictures, copyright Eamon Ore-Giron 2025, courtesy James Cohan

New York, “Eamon Ore-Giron: Conversations with Snakes, Birds, and Stars” (Until Dec. 20)
In his paintings and glass mosaics, Eamon Ore-Giron refracts the symbols of early Latin American civilizations into flat geometric compositions. These pleasantly colored works are deceptively simple. On a closer look, one can see international influences like Brazilian Neo-Concretism and Italian Futurism crossing with ancient motifs. The pieces on view here are the latest in the series Talking Shit, a candid name for the cross-cultural dialogue Ore-Giron is hoping to create. jamescohan.com

A 2025 photo from Guanyu Xu’s Resident Aliens series. Photo: Copyright the artist, courtesy Yancey Richardson

New York, “Guanyu Xu: Resident Aliens” (Until Dec. 20)
In the photo series Resident Aliens on view here, Guanyu Xu examines the political realities of immigrants living in the U.S. and China. He plasters meaningful photos from their albums in their homes before photographing them. The layered final image distorts its participant’s private lives, reflecting the sometimes intrusive nature of the state by making their most intimate moments public. They also reveal all the intricacies of life which don’t always neatly meet bureaucracy. yanceyrichardson.com

Wifredo Lam with La Jungla (The Jungle, 1942–43) in his Havana studio in 1943. Photo: Copyright Archives SDO Wifredo Lam, courtesy MoMA

New York, “Wifredo Lam: When I Don’t Sleep, I Dream” (Until April 11, 2026)
In 1942, after 18 years in Europe absorbing modernist theory, Wifredo Lam returned home to Cuba where he painted La Jungla. The large oil work—featuring masked, long-legged figures dissolving into a Caribbean landscape of sugarcane and tropical fruit—reflected Picasso’s influence and Afro-Caribbean culture. “My painting is an act of decolonization not in a physical sense, but in a mental one,” Lam had said. MoMA acquired the painting in 1944. Eighty years later, it resurfaces in the first U.S. retrospective covering Lam’s remarkable career. moma.org

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