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Kate Burke, "Digital Storage 101: Scrollin’ past dreams, schemes, and memes trying to find myself in everything" on view at Swan Coach House Gallery. (Courtesy)

Credit: Photo courtesy of Swan Coach House Gallery

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Credit: Photo courtesy of Swan Coach House Gallery

Through Saturday

“Kate Burke: The Song I Sang as You Swam Away” at Swan Coach House Gallery. Burke’s labor-intensive craft intertwines childhood memories with reflections on the internet.

Through Sunday

“OftenSeenRarelySpoken: Resurgence” at ABV Gallery. Original works in the East and West annexes of the gallery by this five-person collective reinterpret still life and landscape with a pop sensibility.

Through Feb. 23

“Yan Wen Chang: Jillian” at Hawkins HQ. Paintings as intense meditations on the American dream inflected through the artist’s immigration to Canada at age 17.

Through March 1

Craig Dongoski, "CASTOR & POLLUX" (detail), 2024, at Whitespace Gallery. (Courtesy)

Credit: Photo courtesy of Whitespace Gallery.

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Credit: Photo courtesy of Whitespace Gallery.

“Craig Dongoski: Land of Heroes/Hand of Zeroes” at Whitespace Gallery. New forms of mark making from the Georgia State University professor who has endlessly explored methods of making marks, graphically and sonically.

“Don Pollack: South of the Yellowstone” at Marcia Wood Gallery. A collection of paintings and drawings in which the artist explores the heritage of his family, who migrated to the frontier West in the early 20th century.

Through March 2

“Splinter/ed” at eyedrum. Produced by a team of curators, this group exhibition checks out the spaces where realities collide with artists such as Shanequa Gay, Jessica Blinkhorn and Jessica Caldas.

Through March 5

Charly Palmer, Chris Aluka Berry and John Wissler at Mason Fine Art. Three varied artists show work in painting, drawing and photography. Includes Berry’s work in “Affrilachia,” or African Americans living in Appalachia.

Heather Bird Harris, "How To Begin Again," 2025, at Spalding Nix Gallery. (Courtesy)

Credit: Photo courtesy of Spalding Nix Gallery

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Credit: Photo courtesy of Spalding Nix Gallery

Through March 7

“Forging Ahead” at Spalding Nix Gallery. Four artists embody the concept of moving ahead quickly and resolutely: Heather Bird Harris, Andrew Herzog, Robert Hightower and Jamie Bourgeois.

“Renewal: Featuring Will Day & Alberto Murillo” at Maune Contemporary. Two artists making large-scale, ambitious, abstract works.

“The New South 6″ at Kai Lin Art. This sprawling group exhibition of works on paper includes Sabre Esler, Hail Holtzclaw, Susan Ker-Seymer and George Galbreath. Also included are some especially juicy, baroque-flavored still-life photographs by Brooke Reid.

Brenda Rehrig at Ger-Art Gallery. (Courtesy)

Credit: Photo courtesy of Ger-Art Gallery.

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Credit: Photo courtesy of Ger-Art Gallery.

Through March 13

Brenda Rehrig at Ger-Art Gallery. Rehrig, an encaustic and ceramics artist who died in 2023, began each of her works with a color concept, building up abstract form from that foundation.

Through March 29

“Sally Mann: At Twelve” at Jackson Fine Art. No stranger to controversy, this lyrical photographer exhibits previously unreleased images of children on the verge of adulthood.

Sally Mann, "Untitled, At Twelve Series (Nicole with Cat)," 1983-1985, at Jackson Fine Art. (Courtesy)

Credit: Photo courtesy of Jackson Fine Art

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Credit: Photo courtesy of Jackson Fine Art

Saturday-March 15

“David Ivie and Mario Petrirena: Remember, in Memory” at Sandler Hudson Gallery. This two-person show explores memory in sculpture and painting.

Feb. 20-March 15

“Abby Gregg and Hayley Krichels: Camera obscura creature” at Day & Night Projects. Painter and Oglethorpe professor Abby Gregg and multimedia artist Hayley Krichels are both 2024 Open Call finalists.

Opens Feb. 28

City of Ink 18 Year Anniversary Show. Eighteen artists curate 10 artists each for this massive group extravaganza. Talents include Tracy Murrell, Quintavius Oliver, Artemus Jenkins, Nyala Yvonne and CRLZ.

Trey Dowell, Charity Hamidullah and Chaice Garner at Echo Contemporary. Three artists show in this space for emerging talent.

Aineki Traverso, "to touch the sky with two arms," 2024, at Wolfgang Gallery. (Courtesy)

Credit: Photo courtesy of Wolfgang Gallery

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Credit: Photo courtesy of Wolfgang Gallery

Opens March 14

“Aineki Traverso: Narcissus’ Pagoda” at Wolfgang Gallery. The recent Artadia and SEEN Award winner shows large-scale paintings, incorporating installation work as well.

March 29-May 3

Ignacio Michaud at Sandler Hudson. The Chile-born Michaud’s paintings capture a raw psychological primitivism based on intuition and naive mark making.

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Credit: ArtsATL

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Credit: ArtsATL

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Don Pollack, "Galien River Nocturne," 2025, oil on canvas. (Courtesy of Marcia Wood Gallery)

Credit: Photo courtesy of Marcia Wood Gallery

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The Forsyth County Schools administration building is shown on Monday, Aug. 15, 2022, in Cumming, Ga. (Jason Getz/AJC)

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