Robert Rauschenberg: A New Sculptural Idiom

Robert Rauschenberg’s Combines, created between 1954 and 1964, were revolutionary in the history of art. Leo Steinberg called them a “shift from nature to culture,” and his characterization is still the most successful critical description. Others have discussed the works as collages, grids, “definitive incongruity,” and “relaxed symmetry.”

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David Eckard: The Object as Diary

Just before leaving his studio in Portland, Oregon, for a four-month residency in France at the Pont Aven School of Art last year, David Eckard worked feverishly to finish the sculptures—or “objects,” as he calls them—for his fall exhibition at the Manuel Izquierdo Gallery at the Pacific Northwest College of Art.

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Elizabeth Turk: The Collars

With The Armory Show and its cousin once-removed, the Whitney Biennial, now in the recent past, what remains standing in the memory? For this viewer, several works about town, most especially Elizabeth Turk’s exhibition at Hirschl & Adler Modern, palliated an acute case of Stendhal syndrome and restored faith in art’s ability to be meaningful

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Alan Rath: Meta Mechanics

We’ve all had about enough of machines. Computers break down; ATMs swallow bank cards; cell phones, MP3s and DVD players inconveniently die in the midst of declarations of undying love. Galleries and museums often seem like the last vestiges of unmechanized culture, packed with objects made, as we like to say, by hand—never mind that

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Katy Stone: Embodiments

2005 was a signal year for Seattle artist Katy Stone: her first solo museum exhibition, including a site-specific installation on view for 10 months at the Boise Art Museum (BAM); her inaugural solo appearance in New York, plus one-woman gallery shows in Seattle and Manhattan Beach, California; and a handsome, full-color catalogue of recent work

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