Articles

KANSAS CITY, MO: Linda Lighton PSYCHO CERAMICS

KANSAS CITY, MO: Linda Lighton
PSYCHO CERAMICS

With their blend of surreal retro glamor, sociopolitical and personal commentary, Linda Lighton’s ceramic sculptures command a double take. This veteran artist can make clay do just about anything, and her art has unabashed palpable appeal. But Lighton is also fearless when combining the sensuousness of her materials with controversial subject matter, whether she’s taking aim at environmental...

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RICHMOND, VA: Diego Sanchez VISUAL INFORMATION

RICHMOND, VA: Diego Sanchez
VISUAL INFORMATION

“One of the things I teach my kids is to be playful in their approach,” says painter and teacher Diego Sanchez. This freedom to experiment takes the pressure off and opens up the work in unexpected directions. It’s an attitude that has served Sanchez well in his own practice. Sanchez lives and works around Richmond, Virginia, a city with a vibrant art scene. His story is not just about becoming...

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LINCOLN, NE: Santiago Cal POLITICS ON PAPER

LINCOLN, NE: Santiago Cal
POLITICS ON PAPER

Santiago Cal is a humble man with a demeanor that challenges traditional Western conceptions of artistic genius. His subtlety and humility are visible in his works, which are usually small or medium-sized carvings of fragile children. His visual narratives don’t hit you over the head. Cal lives in Lincoln, Nebraska, a long way—culturally and geographically—from his country of origin, Belize....

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From Mortar To Metaverse CONTEMPORARY COMMERCE

From Mortar To Metaverse
CONTEMPORARY COMMERCE

Eth, bit, sol, meta, block chain, bored apes, crypto punks, kitty litter squad, non-fungible, minting, mining, tokenizing, gas fee, hot wallet, cold wallet, generative NFT, destructive NFT, candy machines, early adopters—yes this is English—just not the English of our youth or even the English of a few years ago. This is the contemporary language of commerce and the new verbiage for the art...

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Pioneering Petra Cortright NFTs Are a No-Brainer

Pioneering Petra Cortright
NFTs Are a No-Brainer

Petra Cortright’s URL, www.petracortright.com, could be considered a work of net art. Practitioners of net art (beginning in the mid-1990s) often used the internet as their medium, sometimes populating their pages with images and data from other websites. Cortright’s home page is a montage of appropriated animated gifs that include twirling roses, dragons, smiley faces, twinkling and spinning...

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Nancy Baker Cahill Challenges the Limits of Perception Seeing the World Anew

Nancy Baker Cahill Challenges the Limits of Perception
Seeing the World Anew

In 2017, my friend—artist/curator Nancy Baker Cahill—invited me to see the art she was creating using virtual reality technology. Until that point, I knew Nancy to make ambitious drawings and otherworldly videos depicting abject, flesh-like topologies; works articulating her long-standing interests in questions of physical embodiment. She made real drawings with real materials—like carbon,...

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A Conversation with Casey Kauffmann Hot Girl Sh*t

A Conversation with Casey Kauffmann
Hot Girl Sh*t

Casey Kauffmann is a hoarder of cyber content. Her image archive is a black hole of digital debris, infinitely consuming, tearing apart, and spitting out images—a spaghettification of visual culture. Kauffmann is known for her digital collages that populate her Instagram page, @uncannysfvalley. These assemblages are strange, fragmented manipulations of a visual language that Kauffmann...

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Tabita Rezaire and the Materiality of The Digital COMPLEX INTERACTION

Tabita Rezaire and the Materiality of The Digital
COMPLEX INTERACTION

The digital is an arbitrary category. In everyday speech, it is sometimes used as an opposition to the material: a digital copy, artwork or exhibition versus a material one. The digital is presented as something existing outside of the material realm and the history and politics thereof; an apolitical utopia that does not hold the same accountability as the “real world.” However, the line...

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It’s All About Meme

It’s All About Meme

A meme is unit of cultural information, such as an idea or belief, transmitted from one person to another. The word is an alteration of the Greek mimeme, meaning something that is imitated, not duplicated. The difference is important, as each iteration of a meme reflects the biases of its creator and subsequent co-creator. Memes in their analog form were first identified in 1976 by the...

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Travels in the Midwest Musing on Art and Architecture

Travels in the Midwest
Musing on Art and Architecture

A couple of months ago I took short trips to Phoenix and Denver for a change of scenery, to indulge in culture, and to see the rebranding of Sheraton hotels.  Denver is a surprisingly interesting city, and we stayed in the Sheraton Denver Downtown Hotel, which is very well located near the main street of Denver, 16th Street, with its free streetcar, and near the Capitol with its famous...

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Reviews

Zizipho Poswa Southern Guild

Zizipho Poswa
Southern Guild

Zizipho Poswa’s monumental ceramic and bronze sculptures hold court like an enclave of demigods. While not figurative per se, they are anthropomorphic in the way all ceramic vessels are: All are additionally crowned with towering, ornate objects that radiate...

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Marianne Wex Tanya Leighton

Marianne Wex
Tanya Leighton

Long before it was called out as a public nuisance, the phenomenon of manspreading was exhaustively, perhaps definitively, documented by the German feminist artist Marianne Wex (1937–2020) in a wide-ranging collection of images titled “Let’s Take Back Our Space”...

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Paul McCarthy and Benjamin Weissman The Pit

Paul McCarthy and Benjamin Weissman
The Pit

Don’t be fooled by the name: The Pit in Atwater Village is a snake-free, gleaming, new 13,000 square-foot space, zippy with colorful work. After the first two galleries, there was a huge room devoted to “Cognitive Surge: Coach Stage,” a striking, memorable show of...

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Marc Camille Chaimowicz Gaga & Reena Spaulings LA

Marc Camille Chaimowicz
Gaga & Reena Spaulings LA

An escapist, fantasizing indulgence reverberated throughout Marc Camille Chaimowicz’s solo exhibition “Emma Dreaming of California.” Just as Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary—from which Chaimowicz extracted his protagonist, recontextualizing Emma Bovary within...

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Judithe Hernández Cheech Marin Center

Judithe Hernández
Cheech Marin Center

At the retrospective “Judithe Hernández: Beyond Myself, Somewhere, I Wait for My Arrival,” mounted by The Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture of the Riverside Art Museum, the full spectrum of an artistic career of more than 50 years was on view. Beyond...

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GALLERY ROUND: Pat Steir Hauser & Wirth

GALLERY ROUND: Pat Steir
Hauser & Wirth

The point of departure for Pat Steir's exhibition “Painted Rain” at Hauser & Wirth is an exploration of blue, a color omnipresent in Los Angeles. When first visiting the city over fifty years ago to teach at CalArts, Steir was struck by the quality of light and...

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Stephen Seemayer: Dark Side of Paradise Bermudez Projects

Stephen Seemayer: Dark Side of Paradise
Bermudez Projects

The precarious balance of society and nature, and man’s place within the magnetism of both is the central theme of Stephen Seemayer’s “Dark Side of Paradise” at Bermudez Projects. The collection of 26 paintings and nine studies are an ode to the shadow self and the...

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Editor’s Pick: Margaret Lazzari USC Fisher Museum of Art

Editor’s Pick: Margaret Lazzari
USC Fisher Museum of Art

The New York Times recently ran an article with the headline “Art Isn’t Supposed to Make You Comfortable”—Margaret Lazzari’s series of works devoted to her traumatic struggle with breast cancer, “The Cancer Series,” fits right into that category. More than 30 works of...

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GALLERY ROUNDS: Marilyn Nance Roberts Projects

GALLERY ROUNDS: Marilyn Nance
Roberts Projects

The Marilyn Nance exhibition at Roberts Projects beautifully demonstrates the phenomenon known as six degrees of separation—the idea that all people are six or fewer connections away from each other. Nance was 21 when she was chosen to be the United States’ official...

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PICK OF THE WEEK: Janet Olivia Henry Stars

PICK OF THE WEEK: Janet Olivia Henry
Stars

Absorbing and jocular, Stars’ current exhibition, “Janet Olivia Henry’s Recent Academic Abstractions,” is where tableaux dioramas become the central force and unique vantage point from which deliberate performance emerges from assemblage and sculpture. In Wrought:...

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