This week, the world’s largest watercolor painting, the bedcover Rauschenberg stole, the language of autocrats, Crapumenta, Apple’s new HQ, and more.
May 21, 2017
Weekend Words: Delay
“We will never be an advanced civilization as long as rain showers can delay the launching of a space rocket.”
The Intentional Fallacy Is Evil: Festival Anthems, Fifty Shades Darker, Workout Motivation, 35 Hits from the ‘70s & ‘80s
With any number of noncanonical, shelf-filling compilations released on the market every day, the failure to review them makes sense, as they’re rarely any good — but rarely doesn’t mean never.
Crosscutting Tales: Donald Breckenridge’s Novel And Then
Satisfying both on the level of story and style, And Then is a thoughtful meditation on the residue that remains: the ghosts that people our lives, the dead we cannot forget.
Sylvia Plimack Mangold’s Spring and All
I cannot think of another artist devoted to nature who chooses such unlikely, decidedly plain, almost unsightly views, but never makes that act the point of the painting.
Don Voisine Makes Geometry Sexy
Every color in a Voisine painting has its own material identity. Even the narrow bands edging or running through the panel’s border colors convey a distinctive feel to their physicality.