San Francisco In his first solo survey exhrbition in the U S., Paris-based Chinese artist Wang Du literally bombarded the gallery space with an aestheticized take on the impact of an incessant and ever-more-politicized global media culture.
Archive
Sunil Gawde: Minimal Approach, Maximum Impact
“Blind Bulb etc.”: the title of the show is intriguing, perplexing. Perhaps, just as the artist intended. It makes one contemplate the strange juxtaposition of words, wondering what it denotes. Perhaps, just as the artist wished.
Eva Kwong: Love Between the Atoms
At first impression, “Love Between the Atoms,” the retrospective of Eva Kwong’s ceramics at the Schein-Joseph International Museum of Ceramic Art at Alfred University, is far from the atomic. Other qualities strike me—playfulness, organic formalism, and color.
Transmogrifications: A Conversation with Bryan Crockett
Bryan Crockett was born in Santa Barbara, California, in 1970 and grew up in a home attached to the family business; his father was the local mortician. He dropped out of high school in his junior year to attend Santa Barbara City College and graduated with a BA from Cooper Union in New York City
Christopher Braddock
Auckland, New Zealand Christopher Braddock’s 10-work exhibition “Fleshty Worn” made for compellinq viewing….see the full review in March’s magazine.
Domenico de Clairo
Melbourne, Australia The image of Uluru, the massive monolith rising out of the desert in centraI Australia, is known worldwide….see the full review in March’s magazine.
Christian Bernard Singer
Waterloo, Canada Toronto-based Christian Bernard Singer recently used the architecturally aggressive exhibition space of the Canadian Clay and Glass Gallery as the setting for two works that employ both clay and glass elements while having nothing to do with the traditional craft associations of such materials….
Kazuo Kadonaga
Seattle Kazuo Kadonaga is a 59-year-old sculptor who has exhibited in the U.S. since 1981 and has studios in Los Angeles and Tsurugimachi, Japan….see the full review in March’s magazine.