Art
Different Strokes for Jane, or Ekphrasis on Alexis
Pathetic, just pathetic, to expect Strangers to know your name I guess Such is the price of fame
Art
Pathetic, just pathetic, to expect Strangers to know your name I guess Such is the price of fame
Art
World War II signaled the death of figurative art, or so the High Modernist narrative once contended.
Film
As it might be if Harper Lee or Thomas Pynchon ambled out of seclusion and made appearances at bookstores and literary conferences, the world theatrical premiere of Out 1: Noli me Tangere is not simply a coming-out party.
Books
Smith’s new memoir “records time backwards and forwards” as she skips from moment to moment across the past forty years of her life.
Art
WASHINGTON, DC — Upon entering the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, I made my way through the lobby and down a flight of stairs.
Art
For the commemoration of the 40th anniversary of the fall of Saigon, artist Matt Huynh — the son of Vietnamese boat people — adapted the award-winning story "The Boat" into an interactive comic.
Art
MOUNTAINVILLE, NY — This year, among the di Suveros, the Serras, and other Modernist guardians, the autumn leaves adorn Lynda Benglis’s large works in cast metal and polyurethane.
Art
Buildings, in New York City especially, are so overwhelmingly big that they can sometimes seem to occupy our space and not the other way around.
Art
Robert Morris has comported himself for decades as the least minimal of the original minimalists.
Art
As Cold War politics began to heat up along the peripheries of US and Soviet control, aesthetic preoccupations slowly started to give way to explicit engagement with the prevailing orders of power.
Art
LOS ANGELES — The Mini Show presented stamp-sized paintings and sculptures, offering a unique vantage for experiencing new work.
Art
For November's Digital Distractions, journey through Twitter as a rotund bird on a mission, relive the awkward AIM conversations of the early 2000s, and give a monster a makeover.