Brooklyn Kim Jones was distinguished by his participation in…see the full review in January/February’s magazine.
January/February 2009
Vincenzo Vela: The Politics of the Figure
Every day thousands of people pass by one of the most historically and aesthetically significant monuments of 19th-century sculpture without any knowledge of its existence. Even among art-interested people, few if any have heard of Vincenzo Vela, the artist responsible for Victims of Labor, this curiously invisible monument, which stands at the southern entrance to
Jan Fabre at the Louvre
Context determines meaning. When artworks are placed in unusual situations and combined in unexpected ways, new patterns emerge from the juxtaposition. Contrasts of type, size, shape, material, composition, motif, texture, color, content, and meaning restructure information and introduce new dialogues.
Susan Robb
Seattle Seattle artist Susan Robb recently heated things up…see the full review in Jan/Feb’s magazine.
Sculpture at Evergreen 2008
Baltimore The Evergreen Museum & Library is a cultural…see the full review in January/February’s magazine.
Rune Olsen: Revising Natural and Sculptural History
Rune Olsen’s beautifully composed, often shocking, masking tape-covered sculptures are some of the most visually seductive and physically intriguing figurative works being produced today. His three-dimensional tableaux, representing man and beast in various positions of sexual dominance and compliance, interweave personal narrative with mind-expanding revelations about natural science.
Yong Ho Ji and Hyungkoo Lee
New York Two Korean artists raise questions about the relationship…see the full review in January/February’s magazine.
Anish Kapoor
Boston Some years ago, in a survey of installation…see the full review in January/February’s magazine.