Franco Mondini-Ruiz

New York El Museo del Barrio The name Tenochtitlan usually conjures up notions of ancient Mexico City rising out of watery lowlands in 14th-century Mesoamerica… for the full review see the print version of January/February 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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Pipilotti Rist

New York Luhring Augustine Gallery A deft touch in art-light yet to the point-is rare, the knack for which is probably something you have to be born with and which is essential in that new genre of art based on the paradigm of entertainment… for the full review see the print edition of January/February 2001’s

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Carol Ross

New York Janos Gat Carol Hoss makes aluminum laminate sculptures that reference both the recent past (the Minimalism of Donald Judd and Richard Serra) and an older past (the classic geometric Modernism of Malevich and Mondrian)… for the full review see the print version of January/February 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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Do-Ho Suh

New York Lehmann Maupin Do-Ho Suh created a brilliant anti-monument a couple of years ago for the “Beyond the Monument” exhibition sponsored by the Public Art Fund… for the full review see the print edition of January/February 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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“Vanitas”

Richmond Virginia Museum of Fine Arts A sense of the brevity of life, its occasional sweetness and seemingly intractable absurdity may be peculiar… for the full review see the print edition of January/February 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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Sheila Klein

Seattle Consolidated Works The shocking thing about Sheila Klein’s recent large-scale sculptures is her shift from maximal “aesthetics of excess” to a stripped-down version of Minimalism… for the full review see the print edition of January/February 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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Corban Walker

Dublin Green on Red Gallery Corban Walker’s first solo show in three years provides further evidence that he is developing into a talent of substance… for the full review see the print edition of January/February 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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“Art—Herald of the New Millennium”

Budapest Heroes Square, near Budapest’s large city park, contains monuments to past leaders and large equestrian sculptures commemorating the seven tribes that settled the land along the Danube in what would later become Hungary… for the full review see the print edition of January/February 2001’s Sculpture magazine.

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