Recent exhibitions of Latin American and Caribbean contemporary art have fostered new interest in Cuban art. While the island nation may be isolated politically and economically, its art scene has kept the door open to international influences and exchange.
(Un)Holy Grounds: The Floor Sculptures of Carl Andre and Wolfgang Laib
At first sight, the works of Carl Andre and Wolfgang Laib seem worlds apart—and not just geographically or in terms of the artists’ ages (Andre was born in 1935 in Quincy, Massachusetts; Laib in Metzingen, Germany, in 1950).
Katrín Sigurdardóttir
New York Icelandic artist Katrín Sigurdardóttir uses inexpensive, banaI…see the full review in March’s magazine.
Anna-Maria Bauer: Geometric Poetry from the Turtle Shell
In 1979 Swiss artist Anna-Maria Bauer found the weathered shell of a turtle on the shore of the Walensee (Lake of Walenstadt). Fascinated by the beauty of the shell’s structure, she decided to follow the example of its natural order in her sculptural works.
“Art, Anti-Art, Non-Art”
Los Angeles The international Fluxus movement, which…see the full review in March’s magazine.
Tomás Rivas
Washington, DC Classical architecture received a contemporary…see the full review in March’s magazine.
Donald Lipski
Houston Donald Lipski is an encyclopedist of sorts…see the full review in March’s magazine.
Janet Echelman
Tampa, Florida Janet Echelman’s Line Drawing, composed of…see the full review in March’s magazine.
Time-Existence-Space: A Conversation with Wolfgang Laib
It is a hot day in southern Germany. The floor of Wolfgang Laib’s studio is covered with recent works soon to be shipped to New York for what will be his first exhibition at the Sean Kelly Gallery.
Dialogues in Diversity
This book gathers John K. Grande’s interviews with 16 artists from…see the full review in January/February’s magazine.