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Blood, paint, and hairs
SAT 1/8
Alpha Jaws
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Scary sea creature letters
SAT 1/8
Back in the day, teaching children the alphabet was … well, as easy as A, B, C. “A is for apple, B is for boy,” mothers cooed in gentle voices. That may have worked when you were little, but for today’s youth, a generation raised on Nickelodeon and video games, a more action-packed version might be in order. Enter “Sharkabet: A Sea of Sharks from A to Z,” a collection of Ray Troll’s colorful illustrations of these undersea beasts. This Alaskan marine artist makes paleontology and ichthyology visually stunning and comprehensible to the science-deficient. Troll researched more than 400 varieties of sharks, some still surviving in today’s polluted oceans, and others dating back to prehistoric times. From the angel to the zebra shark, see them all at the Miami Museum of Science and Planetarium, 3280 S. Miami Ave. through May 5. Call 305-646-4289 or visit www.miamisci.org. — Patrice Elizabeth Grell Yursik
Nothing’s Shocking
FRI 1/7
The Persian-born artist Howtan doesn’t aim to please the eye. His goal is to scandalize and provoke a reaction. His works are most often striking, illuminated photographs of nudes. Howtan depicts women in vulnerable positions: pregnant, bleeding, cutting themselves in dark, delicate places; painted women sprawled across rumpled beds. His most famous piece, “Scream of War,” depicts a naked, kneeling woman, teeth bared in either a snarl or a shriek, her face and body drenched in candy-red blood. His latest exhibition, “Light on Hell & Paradise,” is sure to stir controversy amongst sedate art-lovers with its graphic, adults-only interpretations of women’s suffering. See Howtan’s large-scale transparencies at ARTSPACE/Virginia Miller Galleries, 169 Madeira Ave., Coral Gables, through February 28. Call 305-444-4493 or visit www.virginiamiller.com. — Patrice Elizabeth Grell Yursik