Hakone Open-Air Museum, established in 1969, was the first sculpture park in Japan and the second outdoor collection of sculpture in the world (the first being the Middleheim Museum of Sculpture at Arnheim, Belgium, founded in 1950).
Rhonda Weppler and Trevor Mahovsky
Vancouver The dozens of sculptures included in Rhonda Weppler…see the full review in June’s magazine.
Justin Lowe
New York ln art, by definition, things are not what…see the full review in June’s magazine.
Kathleen Mulcahy and Ron Desmett
Pittsburgh Once unassailable, the terms “truth” and “beauty”…see the full review in June’s magazine.
Cris Bruch
Portland, Oregon Cris Bruch’s recent exhibition offered a culmination…see the full review in June’s magazine.
Paul Wallach
Baltimore The works in “(N)everything,” Paul Wallach’s recent show…see the full review in June’s magazine.
Diana Al-Hadid
New York Composed of diverse iconographic references…see the full review in June’s magazine.
Christian Maychack
New York Varying in scale and material…see the full review in June’s magazine.
In the Open Air: The NMAC Foundation
The discovery of open-air contemporary art in a region as magnificent as Spain’s Costa de la Luz is indeed a unique experience. For five years, the Fondación Montenmedio Arte Contemporáneo (NMAC) has opened its doors to the general public, offering a chance to view in-situ works from its collection all year round.
Modern Sublime: A Conversation with Anish Kapoor
Anish Kapoor’s extraordinary projects have captured the imagination of the world. The sculptures that brought him to international attention in the 1980s were geometric and biomorphic configurations, covered with intensely colored powdered pigment. Since then he has developed a distinctive body of work using a wide range of materials, from natural substances to products of