Index Search Results

Author: John Kissick

10 results

Title: Of Prayer Wheels & Day-Glo
Some Thoughts on Painting, Writing, and Intention
Author: John Kissick
Date: September 2019
Issue: Volume 38, Number 3: Painting (#151)
Section: Articles
Subject: Of Prayer Wheels & Day-Glo: Some Thoughts on Painting, Writing, and Intention
Title: Life Like
Colouring the Body of Sculpture
Author: John Kissick
Date: August 2018
Issue: Volume 37, Number 3: Painting (#147)
Page: 56-63
Section: Articles   Tags: sculpture
Subject: Life Like : Colouring the Body of Sculpture
Date: August 2018
Issue: Volume 37, Number 3: Painting (#147)
Page: 136-137
Subject: ‘Oscar Cahén’ edited by Rosemary Shipton and Marianne Gerlinger
Title: Looking in Your Eyes and Seeing Nothing
A Sideways Look at Two Portrait Exhibitions
Author: John Kissick
Date: September 2017
Issue: Volume 36, Number 3: Painting (#143)
Page: 56-61
Section: Articles   Tags: sascha braunigvelázquez
Subject: Velazquez
Title: Utterly Undone
Some incomplete thoughts on three unfinished paintings
Author: John Kissick
Date: August 2016
Issue: Volume 35, Number 3: Painting (#139)
Page: 74
Subject: Velázquez; Anton Raphael Mengs; JMW Turner
Title: What’s so funny ‘bout peace, love and Ab Ex
Or on the peculiar problem of feeling almost nothin in front of masterpieces
Author: John Kissick
Date: December 2011
Issue: Volume 30, Number 4: John Currin (#120)
Page: 54-57
Section: Essays
Subject: Abstract Expressionism
Title: From Disco to Death Switch: Tales from Contemporary Abstraction
Author: John Kissick
Date: May 2010
Issue: Volume 29, Number 2: Marcel x 3 (#114)
Page: 74-78
Section: Essays
Subject: contemporary abstract painting
Date: August 2009
Issue: Volume 28, Number 3: Paint (#111)
Page: 68-71
Section: Essays
Subject: “Pictures Generation, 1974-1984” at the Metropolitan Museum in New York
Title: Sympatico for the Devils Art and Music Do Their Thing
Author: John Kissick
Date: May 2008
Issue: Volume 27, Number 2: Ed Ruscha (#106)
Page: 70-77
Section: Articles, Reviews
Subject: “Sympathy for the Devil: Art and Rock and Roll since 1967” at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago