Art
It’s Time for Chryssa’s Neon Art to Shine
Chryssa, it turns out, did everything that the famous Pop and New Media artists did, simultaneously or, in some instances, first.
Art
Chryssa, it turns out, did everything that the famous Pop and New Media artists did, simultaneously or, in some instances, first.
Art
The artist’s latest show belongs in the toilet — and that’s exactly where he put it.
Art
Just two paintings are in The Last Caravaggio, both in perplexed mourning over their subject matter, and both emerging from dark places.
Art
A show of Japanese art at The Met suggests that things might not work out for us in our own end times, but it’s worth trying.
Art
Artists at the Irish, Hãhãwpuá, Portuguese, and Dutch pavilions are exploring notions of land and rematriation — often by bringing soil itself into the gallery space.
Art
Michaël Borremans’s paintings seem to display a pitiless, if not forbidding, irony, almost studiedly cruel in their level of dispassion.
Film
Two films make US viewers reckon with the extent to which American ignorance — and indifference — to the conflict is a side effect of “winning” the Cold War.
Art
I can think of no other painter who can so effectively pull the viewer into a space where clarity and puzzlement cannot be separated.
Books
Revising Reality argues that the world as we know it is our creative output so our memories cannot help but be continually edited.
Art
Though the show is a response to a period of intense personal mourning in the artist’s life, it’s also achingly universal.
Art
What Dix conveys so deftly is that terror and trauma are felt, not thought, and art about these experiences fails when it tries to make sense of things.
Books
Half a century after the Warhol film star’s death, writer and critic Cynthia Carr brings Darling’s life to light in an empathetic, well-researched new book.