Robin Bernat

Atlanta Solomon Projects What if your living room floor dissolved into moss and your walls faded to a folding paper screen?… for the full review see the print edition of March 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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“The Truth About Beauty”

Atlanta The Dalton Galleries, Agnes Scott College The space of the Dalton Galleries at Agnes Scott College engaged the work of Richard Beckman and Kay Hwang in the exhibition “The Truth About Beauty,”… for the full review see the print edition of March 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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“Elements 2000”

New York Consisting mostly of sculptural installations, “Elements 2000” was mounted at seven participating sites in conjunction with the Women’s Caucus for Art and the 88th Annual College Art Association Conference… for the full review see the print edition of March 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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“An Acre of Art”

Minneapolis Minneapolis Institute of Arts “An Acre of Art” was a smart, wide-ranging exhibition whose three distinct but related components proved to be a conceptual challenge for some viewers… for the full review see the print edition of March 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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Luca Buvoli

Cambridge, MA MIT List Visual Arts Center Step nr29: “You experience emptiness, yet you are not empty. Every time you think you are achieving something, you must cast it away.”… for the full review see the print edition of March 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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Frances Whitehead

Chicago Northern Illinois University Gallery Frances Whitehead’s newest body of work draws us in at so many levels of discourse and condenses so much information that apprehending it puts one on an unsteady, circuitous path… for the full review see the print edition of March 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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Anne Wilson

Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art From a distance, Anne Wilson’s pristine wall pieces and sculptures appear pale, chaste, and Minimalist… for the full review see the print edition of March 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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Andy Goldsworthy

New York Storm King Art CenterGalerie Lelong Andy Goldsworthy is famous for his elemental, ecologically sensitive sculptures created from natural materials: leaves, twigs, stones, ice, sand, and mud… for the full review see the print edition of March 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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