Articles

THOUGHTFUL SPECTACLES Made in L.A. 2023: ACTS OF LIVING" at The Hammer

THOUGHTFUL SPECTACLES
Made in L.A. 2023: ACTS OF LIVING" at The Hammer

They say how a person does one thing is how they do everything, and the most recent edition of the Hammer Museum’s biennial, “Made in L.A. 2023: Acts of Living” (its sixth), put the axiom into practice. Curators Diana Nawi and Pablo José Ramírez, along with Luce Curatorial Fellow Ashton Cooper, proceeded from the intriguing perspective of selecting artists whose work deal in some essential way...

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ILLUMINATIONS WITHOUT LIMIT "William Blake: Visionary" At the Getty

ILLUMINATIONS WITHOUT LIMIT
"William Blake: Visionary" At the Getty

William Blake embodies a wild paradox in Western cultural history. The only great poet who was also a gifted painter, Blake was a barely educated autodidact whose ideas anticipated Freud, Marx and Einstein. Never published in his lifetime, The Tyger (1795) is now the most frequently taught lyric poem in American and British high schools and universities. His lifetime (1757–1827) dates him with...

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BEST IN SHOW:  ARTILLERY 2023 TOP TEN

BEST IN SHOW: ARTILLERY 2023 TOP TEN

Breathless is not always an indication of on-coming medical crisis or pathology. Events (including cultural events) can stop us short or knock the wind out of us. And although the experience may be more common at live music events, it happens in galleries and museums, too. But at the close of 2023, the breathlessness we may have experienced intermittently in galleries blurs with a breathlessness...

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Scarlet Cheng’s Top Films of 2023 Fantasy Takes the Lead

Scarlet Cheng’s Top Films of 2023
Fantasy Takes the Lead

What a year for feature films this has been, both rich and strange. Indeed, fantasy seemed to have taken the lead, as we emerge from the fever of the COVID epidemic and try to find the new normal. These were not the usual escapist fantasies, but fantasies that spoke to our current, more conscious and more precarious state of being. Below are my personal choices for the best, in alphabetic...

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Miami Art Week Report: Day 4 New Art Dealers Alliance Fair and a very Miami party

Miami Art Week Report: Day 4
New Art Dealers Alliance Fair and a very Miami party

As Art Week races to a close, yesterday I headed downtown across the dreaded, traffic-filled bridge to the New Art Dealers Alliance (NADA) fair for my final full day here in Miami. While the fair opened on Tuesday, the busy week of competing events prevented me from getting there until Thursday. Really, it was the thought of sitting in gridlock traffic to cross the bridge that kept me away. As...

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Miami Art Week Report: Day 2 Elevate Española highlights the importance of public art, and the fairs begin

Miami Art Week Report: Day 2
Elevate Española highlights the importance of public art, and the fairs begin

After a weekend filled with art and philanthropy in Palm Beach, we’re officially ready for the parties, fairs, and people-watching of Miami Art Week. Yesterday, Untitled Art and the New Art Dealers Alliance fairs opened to VIPs, and the heavy-hitting Art Basel Miami Beach and Design Miami/ open today. To kick off my week, rather than dive straight into the fair tents and convention center, I...

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Miami Art Week Report: Day 1 New Wave Art Wknd Takes Over Palm Beach

Miami Art Week Report: Day 1
New Wave Art Wknd Takes Over Palm Beach

Miami Art Week is back, which means the crowds are on the way to enjoy the beach, the sun, the stunning hotels, and the most coveted art the market has to offer. For those of us visiting from New York, the warm weather couldn’t have come at a better time. Throughout the week, Artillery will be taking you to the major fairs and public events, as well as a few VIP openings and private parties, in...

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WOVEN VISIONS Diedrick Brackens Explores Identity with Innovative Technique and Unusual Tenderness

WOVEN VISIONS
Diedrick Brackens Explores Identity with Innovative Technique and Unusual Tenderness

Even with the growing inclusion of textile art in textbooks, surveys and biennials, one doesn’t normally think of weaving as a cutting-edge contemporary art medium. Diedrick Brackens is out to change that. A breakout star of the 2018 Hammer “Made in L.A.” biennial, Brackens uses his works to foreground Black and queer bodies—and the occasional catfish—through lyrical, at times haunting,...

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EDGES AND PLURALITIES Melissa Joseph Brings Craft Into the Future

EDGES AND PLURALITIES
Melissa Joseph Brings Craft Into the Future

For Melissa Joseph, all things relate to edges. Her practice exists on several of them: painting, felting, craft, utility, art … the list continues. She works in a unique dry-felting medium to create imagery based on her own photography and that of her family. While channeling “ancestral stories,” as she explains, she also addresses broader social issues, including gendered labor and identity....

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Reviews

Cai Guo-Qiang and cAI™ at the Los Angeles Coliseum

Cai Guo-Qiang and cAI™
at the Los Angeles Coliseum

At dusk on September fifteenth, nearly 5,000 spectators gathered on the field of the Los Angeles Coliseum to view WE ARE: EXPLOSION EVENT FOR PST ART, a monumental daytime fireworks display by Cai Guo-Qiang* and his custom artificial intelligence model cAI™....

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Nate Lowman at David Zwirner

Nate Lowman
at David Zwirner

I’ll admit that before attending a press walkthrough for Nate Lowman’s “Parking” at David Zwirner a few weeks ago, I wasn’t familiar with Lowman’s oeuvre. The paintings first appeared to me thumbnail-size, attached to my iPhone invitation. I noted glowing, riparian...

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Lotus L. Kang at Commonwealth and Council

Lotus L. Kang
at Commonwealth and Council

To experience lack is to be reminded of the boundaries of the self, of others. Lacking realizes the unassailable distance between you and everything you don’t and won’t ever have. Therein to lack enlivens desire, or does desire require a lack of something? Kang’s...

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Eugenia P. Butler at The Box

Eugenia P. Butler
at The Box

Butler’s threadbare saffron works-on-silk line the perimeter of the back gallery, floating forward and back, filling and falling as if breathing. Suspended by invisible supports and backlit, the delicate veils with their enigmatic marks and hand-drawn symbols...

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Shirazeh Houshiary at Lisson Gallery

Shirazeh Houshiary
at Lisson Gallery

Houshiary's mesmeric abstract canvases depose our human perception of scope and scale, engaging the macro and microscopic; they connect a single breath to the breadth of the sea, carbon's molecular structure to the structural integrity of a star. The intricate pencil...

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Plugged In: Art and Electric Light at Norton Simon Museum

Plugged In: Art and Electric Light
at Norton Simon Museum

Grouping art by medium is always too obvious, even when the medium in question has the pizzazz of electric light. This exhibition focuses on the years 1964-1970 but does not, otherwise, establish a clear throughline. Experiments with electric light were, indeed,...

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Kevin Brisco Jr. at albertz benda

Kevin Brisco Jr.
at albertz benda

Most figurative painting is terrible but these are surprisingly good. Brisco’s restrained brushwork produces a flat clarity that recalls Alex Katz but with harsh moody colors and lonesome figures which echo Edward Hopper’s sadsacks. Suburban homes appear as...

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Meg Lipke at SHRINE

Meg Lipke
at SHRINE

These paintings have a slight hamfistedness, which suggests distance from their alternately whimsical, mystical, Modernist, and Premodern sources. The allusions and references here—like Lipke’s interpolation of Neolithic-era petroglyphs into Kandinsky-esque painting –...

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Larry Madrigal at Nicodim

Larry Madrigal
at Nicodim

With scraped knees, tangled sheets, and yesterday’s discarded clothes strewn across the floor, Larry Madrigal’s new evocative paintings at Nicodim showcase the artist at his strongest. In moments where his fluid and textured style strives to move beyond the sexual...

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