Articles
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Moyra Davey Index Cards
Everyone I know pretty much loves the photographer, filmmaker and writer Moyra Davey. She’s singular in her coupling of erudition and vulnerability; also in her erasure of the gap between art, writing and life. This collection of her essays— from Fitzcarraldo Editions and New Directions Publishing—will only strengthen the consensus.
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“Relations: Diaspora and Painting”
“RELATIONS: Diaspora and Painting,” more specifically, examines painting, identity and how the medium can become informed and revitalized through cultural memory.
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“Agnes Pelton: Desert Transcendentalist”
The American painter Agnes Pelton’s quasi-abstract symbolic landscapes enchant utterly.
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Jon Pylypchuk
Jon Pylypchuk’s “Waiting for the Next Nirvana” at the Petzel Gallery in Chelsea, Manhattan, debuted a significant new body of work in painting and sculpture. It was titled after the Generation X article of faith that the last great rock band was Seattle’s Nirvana.
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“Radical Figures: Painting in the New Millenium”
Ten painters, ranging in date of birth from Daniel Richter in 1962 to Tschabalala Self in 1990, make up the Whitechapel Gallery’s survey.
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“A Handful of Dust: From the Cosmic to the Domestic”
Of the duelling ideological strands running through modernism—proclamations of utopian progress twined with on-the-ground disaster—British curator David Campany attends to the latter, focusing on the 20th century’s repressed underside— decay, debris and death.
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Tau Lewis
Toronto-based but currently peripatetic artist Tau Lewis has recently been attracting international attention, notably at large American institutions such as MoMA PS1, the Hammer Museum, LA, and the New Museum in New York.
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Michael Lin and Federico Herrero
Michael Lin’s temporary commission for the private art foundation Museo Jumex is a hand-painted floor that occupies 1,300 square metres across the museum’s plaza and through the building’s main level. The work is based on a traditional tablecloth design, one found in inexpensive restaurants in Mexico and one that echoes textile designs from Lin’s native Taiwan.
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“John Eisler: Lantern,” and “Janine Miedzik: Tie-Dye for Germans”
Angell Gallery’s parallel exhibitions of Janine Miedzik’s “Tie-Dye for Germans” and John Eisler’s “Lantern” bring together two artists for whom play is serious business.
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“Yearning for Comfort, Not Cure”
I have spent the greater part of my life entangled in a search for a cure to my madness. From a young age I was made to believe that there was something wrong with the chemicals in my body, that I had a defect that ought to be fixed.
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“The Impossible Museum”
The Thomas McCulloch Museum is tucked away in one of the many brutalist buildings from the late 1960s and early 1970s that make up the stolid core of Dalhousie University.
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Chen Zhe
Beijing-based multimedia artist Chen Zhe gained international recognition with her deeply personal project “The Bearable & Bees,” 2007–2012, comprised of two related series of photographs and texts.
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