GIVE ME TWO
Anton Kern Gallery
January 14–February 21, 2026
New York

I know it’ll take a little more than art and words to heal our national fabric, but here’s a January group show for folks in need of a shot of collective optimism. GIVE ME TWO, curated by Marcus Jahmal and Giorgia Alliata, takes on the group show itself as its thematic conceit, placing twelve living artists across three generations in space together. The intended effect is musical, like a streaming playlist that leapfrogs from Chuck Berry to Nettspend and back again. The result is closer to the productive radical chaos of a one-day festival, where rhythm and melody ultimately foreground communal action and splendor, making way for new modes of free association that couldn’t have existed if not for the pairings at hand. The press release, written by Jahmal and Alliata, calls it “deliberate adjacency.” With respect to both, the word on my mind is “solidarity.”

GIVE ME TWO opens mere feet away from Anton Kern’s doors with a steel Donation Box (2025) from Isaiah Davis, fresh off a stunning solo show at King’s Leap. Mounted on the wall behind it are two sculptures from Alix Vernet, both crafted from scrap copper and aluminum AC condensers, each inscribed in gothic font with warnings: “HIGH VOLTAGE” and “UNDER THE.” Across from both lies In June Park’s Overloaded (2025), the back end of a Cybertruck on the verge of causing a serious accident, depicted in woozy, sun-lit acrylic. In front-loading these statements from young talent, Jahmal and Alliata’s generation-spanning ambitions are immediately realized. Where this block transcends is in the deft introduction of GIVE ME TWO’s broader visual language of appropriation (interpolation) and found materials (sampling), connecting an emergent thread in Zoomer-Millennial style with the uniquely American compulsion to endlessly re-create and re-contextualize in search of new meaning.

The end of the gallery’s first floor underscores this, with an uproarious, five-foot Katherine Bernhardt monotype from 2023 featuring Animal from The Muppets, placed in conversation with Dana Schutz’s warbly bronze gremlin Juggler (2019). I spent a long time with the latter—just a silly little guy, a kind of sideshow character to regale us between musical sets. Of the sets, two stand out: Eric N. Mack’s two delicate hanging forms of satin polyester, silk, and acrylic fabric that cast thin shadows on the walls, and Elzie Williams’s three acrylic-and-ink Popeye sendups, on grids of restaurant napkins. Williams’s works feel like direct attacks on the practitioners and dealers of “red-chip” cartoon art, using their luxury branding and—in the case of Monk by the Sea (2025)—Hulu promotional event scraps to convey a uniquely helpless feeling.

Kayode Ojo’s Comfort (2023) dominates the second floor: a colossal dangling New Orleans chandelier that sheaths its smaller, shiftier cousin Overdressed (Emerald in the Sky) (2026). Overdressed is an assemblage that’s so of its time, it may well be beyond its time, with a material description that includes a chromed-out music stand, a faux-fur coat, and a “Civil War Era M1851 Engraved Nonfiring Silver Revolver w. Faux Pearl Grips” attached to a set of toy handcuffs. Together, and against a wall of reflective glass windows, the effect is hypnotic, almost seductive. Tucked into a corner beside the two, and positioned in such a way that one must turn their back to the rest of the room, is Kenny Rivero’s For Melissa Joseph (Huxley) (2024), an 8-by-8 oil-on-linen of a cat at rest. It’s a testament to Jahmal and Alliata that these statements, at incredibly disparate volumes, are both perfectly legible.