Author Archives: jolanta

Keith Morant

I was born in England in 1944. I worked and exhibited in London and Southern England until moving to New Zealand in 1973. Since my arrival, I have lived and worked as a full-time painter in Christchurch. I moved to New York in 1989, where I worked fro a year and exhibited in Manhattan and […]

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Celebritentropy

“You have to have the ability to bullshit yourself,” sculptor Daniel Edwards explained in a recent telephone interview, regarding his work. The work itself is violent, ironic, and highly invested in the conflict and inherent drama of celebrity culture: he has recently sculpted Britney Spears giving birth, the first excrement of Suri Cruise, and a […]

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Body Shots

Aaron Holz’s recent work uses images drawn from popular culture to create small-scale paintings on panel. Scavenging through and selecting out disposable images, he appropriates online video and still images using word searches such as injured or fight. The work includes everything from drunkenness to Ultimate Fighting. “Images of drunkenness, injury, and public exposure posted […]

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Andrea Goldsmith

In this series, Promises, the imagery of Venice is used to explore the transient nature of life and relationships. Andrea Goldsmith In this series, Promises, the imagery of Venice is used to explore the transient nature of life and relationships.  The layered work in oil is abstract yet retains the essence of the images which […]

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Carlos Urroz

Why are people who live in different cities or different neighborhoods, who have different occupations and interests, attracted by the same works and to the same artists? Why do we have the same taste for certain themes or ways of dealing with them in exhibitions or biennials? Is the tradition of the new so strong […]

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Diana Al-Hadid

Spun of the Limits of my Lonely Waltz is an upside-down gothic cathedral whose blueprint is based on the footprints of my dancing the waltz with bare, painted feet. I chose the waltz because of its romantic spinning vertigo, which was once considered vulgar by aristocrats. The lead and the female positions were each danced […]

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A Portrait of the Artist as an Artist

As Roland Barthes once noted: “The portrait-photograph is a closed field of forces. Four image-repertoires intersect here, oppose and distort each other. In front of the lens, I am at the same time: the one I think I am, the one the photographer thinks I am, and the one he makes use of to exhibit […]

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= Metrics of Space and Self

Argentinian native Graciela Cassel’s latest work dramatizes interior dialogues on the intersections of space, place, time, memory, culture, and history. This new mixed media series consists of objects in acrylic, wood, and plexiglass that emphasize the leitmotif of a spiritual journey at once embedded in history and intensely intimate and personal. Appropriately, the series recently […]

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Piecing It Together

Chung paints shapes and pieces them together as if he were working with mosaics, referencing historical cloth-making techniques and wrapping cloths to protect objects while traveling of his native Korea. Chung’s mother was known for skillfully hand-sewing these precious fabrics together to create patchwork. Similarly, Chung’s atmospheres present carefully painted patchwork patterns and reflect a […]

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Alice Lang

Alice Lang’s practice explores the possibilities for sculpture to complicate the relationships between concepts of the decorative and the grotesque… Alice Lang   Alice Lang’s practice explores the possibilities for sculpture to complicate the relationships between concepts of the decorative  and the grotesque, particularly their association with depictions of femininity. Her work creates a tension […]

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