Edward Tufte

Ridgefield, Connecticut The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum The pivot point of Edward Tufte’s recent array of large-scale, outdoor sculpture was a battered-looking, Brobdingnagian-scaled aluminum fish (Magritte’s Smile). Suspended quietly over a small exterior courtyard, this wry personage twisted freely from its overhead wire, peering with one fishy eye or the other…see the full review in

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Aaron Heino

Helsinki Galleria Sculptor Aaron Heino’s recent sculptures convey an intense and unsettling presence. They not only embody movement and the expression of psychological states, but also speak of chemical constituents, immiscibility, and the propagation, release, and containment of energy.

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Orgy in the Sky: Rebecca Ripple

Los Angeles-based Rebecca Ripple first intrigued me with word works that seemed to hollow out a place for the human body in banal furnishings. thigh/blind (2001), for instance, spells out “thigh” by cutting the word, letter by letter, into aluminum blinds; in another piece, “elbo” is sewn into a Home Depot rug.

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Transcending the Object: Anish Kapoor

Anish Kapoor is widely known for works that enter into a deep spiritual engagement with the viewer. He revels in the spectacular, creating visually overwhelming, attention-commanding sculpture. During his recent retrospective at London’s Royal Academy of Art, viewers entering the courtyard confronted a towering column of highly reflective spheres that prompted immediate surprise.

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