Art
How to Keep Drawing After the Death of Painting
Dan Douke conveys the possibility that painting, even after its death, remains inexhaustible.
Art
Dan Douke conveys the possibility that painting, even after its death, remains inexhaustible.
Film
The Wolf House is thick with layered references to Chile's repression under Pinochet, but it's not necessary to understand any of them to get the full brunt of its terrifying, intricately animated imagery.
Film
The new miniseries offers an informative overview of history through personal, often deeply emotional testimony.
Art
Public Update, a new series from POV Spark, presents its first slate of unconventional nonfiction works.
Books
Reading between the lines of contact information for friends, graphologists, psychoanalysts, and plumbers, Brigitte Benkemoun’s Finding Dora Maar reveals a map of a bygone France.
Books
As exterior life shuts temporarily down, Funny Weather: Art in an Emergency is a useful reminder that connection can be intellectual as well as physical.
Books
Throughout her work and in her latest volume, Concordance, Howe confronts the plight of the female writer in a masculine literary culture.
Books
Madeline Gins uses the form to dislodge our notion of individual subjectivity, the narrator commonly known as “I.”
Books
Two new books focusing on journalism and news, and on how they are delivered, offer expansive visions of what “the media” have become.
Art
Few artists have reinvented themselves in their prime the way Jo Smail has; few have had to.
Books
Wright’s darkly comic novel burrows into our hollow cravings, and finds more hollowness.
Art
Norman Bluhm transformed the vocabulary we associate with the gestural branch of Abstract Expressionism into something that others of the so-called Second Generation did not pursue, much less attain.