Two Rorschach blobs as tall as men—one dark, the other a bright copper and blue—cast lassos at each other. They send out waves of black paint ripples, like motion made visible between them. Because those ripples are mechanically produced, it doesn’t seem quite right to call this work, by the young American artist Emily Kraus, a painting. A production, maybe, or a result? Each in the other what each has to give (2026) is one of six busy and rhythmic abstractions on view in Kraus’s solo debut at Luhring Augustine. She has perfected her mechanical process: she begins by sewing two ends of a large canvas together, creating a cylinder that is then fitted tightly around the four steel struts of a cage-like apparatus, which she enters through a gangway. She paints the inner walls of the cylinder, and then pulls the edges of the canvas so that fresh fabric scrolls through the struts, and then she paints some more.…