Author Archives: jolanta

Wall of Shame

Our backgrounds are in poetry, music, and theater, and we generally think of our work as a kind of opera, whether it’s presented in a theater, gallery, or online. Recently, however, we’ve been thinking a lot about architecture, especially the relationships between physical structures, social institutions, and social power. This recent interest in architecture has […]

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In Plain Sight

David Elshout: I missed the pulsating energy of New York City, coming back again felt familiar. Upon arrival, I found out the guys had prepared a cool basic graphic theme, with a strong industrial 1920s feel. All our social and artistic influences morphed into a giant piece made on site, which gradually evolved to the […]

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Painting Rebellion

After World War II, European and American contemporary art cast off its vanguard gloss as it went through the 1980s. As Achille Bonito Oliva said in Super Art (1988), the bureaucratic art system determined the admission of art’s value. Now, 20 years later, we can clearly tell that the key factor in such art systems […]

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Creating a Natural Death

I went for a stroll with my camera earlier today, which is a usual activity for me. Walking aimlessly and looking for subjects to photograph, I came across an unusual mound of dirt that caught my attention. It was when I took a closer look that I discovered that this mound was in fact a […]

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Defying Dogma

Hector Leonardi is the best-kept painting secret in New York. For 60 years, this student of Josef Albers at Yale has been exploring ways to create gorgeous textures on canvas. In that time, especially in the last decade, he has followed a relentlessly experimental path that has never surrendered the knowledge he has gained of […]

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The Voice of America

Sometimes all a fledgling program needs is a little word-of-mouth. When the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards first started in 1923, the competition received just seven entries. 85 years later, over 100,000 entries were received, and the program had blossomed into the country’s most prestigious initiative for recognizing the talent of creative high school students. […]

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Mellowed Judgment

Soft Logic represents my curatorial debut. As an artist and writer, putting together curatorial projects seemed like the logical next step. I seized the opportunity to employ a small project room at Broadway Gallery NYC as the site for a project I had been playing around with for a while. My idea was simple: I […]

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The Full Stop

If there is one question which John M Armleder cannot and does not want to answer, it’s the question: “what do you want people to see in your work?” Critics have lauded his masterful use of different media and the sophisticated abstraction that informs his artistic process, but Armleder himself seems to be more concerned […]

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Live Streaming

Flow, Broadway Gallery’s mid-summer group show organized by independent curator, Christine Kennedy, was a delightful example of the successful translation of a simple concept into a sumptuous and multilayered statement. Boasting a roster of remarkable international artists, including Cynthia Lawson Jarmillo, Ronda Johanessen, Beate Landen, Annie Leist, and Kirt Markle, Flow documents alternative interpretations of […]

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Audrey Meyer–Munz

Audrey Meyer–Munz is a Belgian-born Mosaic artist living in Tel Aviv, Israel. Audrey creates picto-mosaics that are conceived through Audrey Meyer–Munz   Audrey Meyer–Munz is a Belgian-born Mosaic artist living in Tel Aviv, Israel. Audrey creates picto-mosaics that are conceived through a deconstructive process that develops into a meticulously built-up undertaking. The execution occurs in […]

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