Paul Carey-Kent curates his choices of London art exhibitions for June 2016. His rolling ten recommended contemporary art shows are all on view now.
Tomma Abts @ Greengrassi, 1a Kempsford Road – Kennington
 Menso 2016 – acrylic & oil on canvas and bronze 48 × 38 cm
Menso 2016 – acrylic & oil on canvas and bronze 48 × 38 cm
 Opke 2015 – acrylic & oil on canvas, 48 × 38 cm
Opke 2015 – acrylic & oil on canvas, 48 × 38 cm
                  
 
Christodoulos Panayiotou; ‘False Form’ @ Rodeo, 123 Charing Cross Road – Tottenham Court 
To 19 June: http://rodeo-gallery.com
 Untitled, pendant. Actinolite pseudomorph after diopside,18ct yellow gold
Untitled, pendant. Actinolite pseudomorph after diopside,18ct yellow gold
* a mineral having the outward appearance of another mineral that it has replaced by chemical action.
 Triumph of the Orthodoxy (c.1400, Marmara Region) in the British Museum                                            _________________________
Triumph of the Orthodoxy (c.1400, Marmara Region) in the British Museum                                            _________________________
  
Three Ball 50/50 Tank (Spalding Dr JK Silver series), 1995
 Clouds (I), 2016 found shop panels, powder-coated shop panels, uprights, pegs, hand-blown glass
Clouds (I), 2016 found shop panels, powder-coated shop panels, uprights, pegs, hand-blown glass 
To 11 June: www.artfirst.co.uk
 Dorothy Bohm: Paris, 1955 Following on from the jamboree of Photo London, there are many photography shows to see, from large and pretty patchy (Barbican, V&A, Parasol Unit, Photographer’s Gallery) to twenty-odd small shows, several of which are rather well-formed; the second instalment of White Rainbow’s survey of Shigeo Anzai’s evocative documentation of artists at work or in performance; Dafydd Jones’ witty account of the upper classes at Art Bermondsey Project Space; Ori Gersht’s beautifully pitched reflections, inversions and layerings of Buddhist gardens at Ben Brown; and ‘Unseen: London, Paris, New York’ at the Ben Uri Gallery, which visits the three cities in the thirties, fifties and sixties respectively through atmospheric outsider views by the little-known but engaging trio of Jewish outsiders to the relevant city: Wolf Suschitzky, Dorothy Bohm and Neil Libbert. This curation by Katy Barron acts as a lower key, more place-oriented take on Martin Parr’s much bigger exploration of related themes at the Barbican.
Dorothy Bohm: Paris, 1955 Following on from the jamboree of Photo London, there are many photography shows to see, from large and pretty patchy (Barbican, V&A, Parasol Unit, Photographer’s Gallery) to twenty-odd small shows, several of which are rather well-formed; the second instalment of White Rainbow’s survey of Shigeo Anzai’s evocative documentation of artists at work or in performance; Dafydd Jones’ witty account of the upper classes at Art Bermondsey Project Space; Ori Gersht’s beautifully pitched reflections, inversions and layerings of Buddhist gardens at Ben Brown; and ‘Unseen: London, Paris, New York’ at the Ben Uri Gallery, which visits the three cities in the thirties, fifties and sixties respectively through atmospheric outsider views by the little-known but engaging trio of Jewish outsiders to the relevant city: Wolf Suschitzky, Dorothy Bohm and Neil Libbert. This curation by Katy Barron acts as a lower key, more place-oriented take on Martin Parr’s much bigger exploration of related themes at the Barbican. See Top Photo
Yet perhaps Rasha Kahil’s is the most unusual. The Beirut-born photographer and art director (of the Evening Standard’s magazine) presented ‘In Your Home’ a series of nude self-portraits taken covertly in friends’ houses which I commended here, in 2011-12. Only two years later did a TV mention lead to a blizzard of publicity ranging from condemnation to messages of support (some, it’s true, somewhat creepy) to offers of work as a pornographic actress. Kahil appropriates the original programme and email streams, and riffs on the now-censored versions of the original series so that one show generates the next to demonstrate, exploit and counter the power of social media.
This is a Voice @ the Wellcome Collection, 183 Euston Road – Euston
 Marcus Coates: stills from ‘Dawn Chorus’
Marcus Coates: stills from ‘Dawn Chorus’
 Kerry Tribe: still from ‘M.B.’, which plays on two screens with a twenty second gap
Kerry Tribe: still from ‘M.B.’, which plays on two screens with a twenty second gap
 Handbag, 2014, mixed media. approx 90 x 100 x 25cm.  (FXP Photography, London)
Handbag, 2014, mixed media. approx 90 x 100 x 25cm.  (FXP Photography, London)
The Lisa Milroy collection of Hand-painted Dresses                                        _________________________
Alberto Giacometti & Yves Klein: In Search of the Absolute @ Gagosian Gallery, 
To 11 June:  www.gagosian.com
 Installation view (photo Mike Bruce)
Installation view (photo Mike Bruce)
 Yves Klein: Peinture de feu sans titre (F 80), 1961
Yves Klein: Peinture de feu sans titre (F 80), 1961
Scorched cardboard on panel, 175 × 90 cm
 

 
 