2014 Sculpture Symposium

Lincoln, Montana Blackfoot Pathways: Sculpture in the Wild International Sculpture Park For its inaugural symposium, Black­foot Pathways: Sculpture in the Wild International Sculpture Park brought an impressive roster of sculptors from Ireland, Denmark, Finland, and the U.S.

Read More


Alma Allen

Los Angeles Blum & Poe Alma Allen’s sculptures are handsome, poetic, and uncomplicated. A tribute to the aesthetics of 20th-century abstraction, they hew closely to its classic values, as represented by several generations of artists, including Moore, Hepworth, Noguchi, and Bourgeois.

Read More


Ben Jackel

Los Angeles L.A. Louver Gallery Ben Jackel’s works are splinters off the American culture of violence—hyper-real portraits of instruments of power and aggression. Although the objects originate in a concrete world of specific function, they are re-envisioned as luxury objects borrowed from their industrial and martial origins, and repurposed and valorized as sculpture.

Read More


The Space In Between: A Conversation with Charles Ray

Over the past 40 years, Charles Ray has produced a majestic array of artistic touchstones within the contemporary sculptural vernacular. His orchestrated relationships between space and objects tempt the senses and baffle perceptual longings. Ray’s sculptures are the result of deeply considered compositions often requiring extraordinary amounts of labor, sometimes years in the making.

Read More


Army of One: A Conversation with Richard Jackson

One of the most radical American artists of the last 40 years, Los Angeles-based Richard Jackson has expanded the definition and practice of painting into almost unimaginable dimensions. His wildly inventive, exuberant, and irreverent takes on “action” painting have dramatically extended its performative and spatial reach, merged it with sculpture, and repositioned it as an

Read More


Dread Scott: Radical Conscience

On the Impossibility of Freedom in a Country Founded on Slavery and Genocide, 2014 Dread Scott’s edict is make “revolutionary art—to propel history forward.” Since the early 1990s, after graduating from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and completing the Whitney Museum of American Art’s Independent Study Program, Scott has joined the ranks

Read More


Nan Smith: Symbols of Devastation

Nan Smith is an ambitious artist. Over the years, she has increased her command of the ceramic medium, extended her range of techniques and media, and set herself more demanding goals. A full professor in the ceramics program at the University of Florida’s School of Art and Art History, she has also served as head

Read More


Geny Dignac: Playing With Fire

Geny Dignac says that she has “a love affair with fire.” The Argentina-born, Arizona-based sculptor began incorporating living flames into her work during the late 1960s. As she explains the relationship: “I respect fire; I’m bewitched and obsessed by it, but I’m not intimidated by it, and I always feel in control.”

Read More


Mark Bradford

Waltham, Massachusetts The Rose Art Museum Big and scaly. That’s how most people imagine “Sea Monsters,” which is also the title of Mark Bradford’s recent exhibition. Though these sculptures and paintings lack menacing teeth and constricting coils, which would only make them literal and banal, the title properly warns against hidden danger.

Read More