Author Archives: jolanta
Subversive figures – Matthias Harder
Cooperative galleries are experiencing a boom right now in Berlin, just as they did in the late 1970s. Today these collectives exist usually for no more than one or two years before they are incorporated into the programs of their larger counterparts. This is what happened recently with Liga, a testing ground for young Leipzig […]
It’s pronounced nu-cle-ar – Ben Rutter
An age, we tend to think, is animated by a spirit: a common aspiration, a pattern of belief. And yet the most familiar of them?Stone, Bronze, Iron?are named for elements, not ideals. The move to class human cultures according to their weaponry and implements was first made by archaeologists, and the convention appears to have […]
Architecture is Illuminated – Vladimir Belogolovsky
New York has been witnessing the rise of a new star–51 year old architect Thomas Phifer. In the near future a whole sea of electrical stars will shoot up into the sky to light Avenues and Streets of New York City in a new and imaginative way. Phifer’s proposed street lamp design has won the […]
Not Just Flying Toasters – Aaron Yassin
Tom Moody began his career painting (with brushes on canvas) and has worked with techniques from photo-realistic to something that would fall under the heading of "bad painting." He still paints, but for most of the past decade, he has done it with digital tools to create an ever-expanding body of work that also includes […]
The Creature from Cardiff – Robert Fisk
In the pitch dark basement?so dark there?s no way of telling the difference between the floor, walls, and ceiling?you hear the strange rustling of some kind of nest, and the cold hard clanking of a chain. Then, for a split-second, a stark white light from a flashgun illuminates the room, revealing a naked, slobbering creature […]
Big-head Sur: sculpture v. architecture at P.S.1 – James Westcott
Apprehending this summer?s architecture installation in P.S.1?s courtyard is very difficult: it?s a plasticy, skeletal, undulating, and strangely sci-fi sculpture that snakes off into other sections of the compound, and it refuses to resolve into a legible pattern along the way. It?s both an alien landing and an archeological dig. Big-head Sur: sculpture v. architecture […]
Totemic Abstraction – Christine Cavallomagno
When I first moved to New York, a friend took me to the Odessa Caf� on Avenue A in the East Village. At the time, I saw the rundown caf� through the lens of sardonic hipsterdom?as a self-consciously authentically grubby hangout to wet the palates of bobos searching for a genuine experience. I assumed that […]
The Flood – Adriaan Geuz
The Flood is a metaphor. It is the metaphor for the Netherlands as phenomenon: for the culture, for the landscape and for the architectural and planning traditions. The Flood Adriaan Geuz J. Ouburg & S. Schoemaker, IMAGE Building, Het Strand 85.000m2. The Flood is a metaphor. It is the metaphor for the Netherlands as phenomenon: […]
Big-head Sur: sculpture v. architecture at P.S.1 – James Westcott
Apprehending this summer’s architecture installation in P.S.1’s courtyard is very difficult: it’s a plasticy, skeletal, undulating, and strangely sci-fi sculpture that snakes off into other sections of the compound, and it refuses to resolve into a legible pattern along the way. It’s both an alien landing and an archeological dig. Big-head Sur: sculpture v. architecture […]
Whose City? Looking Elsewhere for Urban Renewal – Eva Rouleau
Division Ave. in Grand Rapids Michigan is not an area that one would categorize as conducive to creative production. For one thing, the material conditions simply do not exist; outside of Morningstar 75, a coffee shop in what is known as the heartside district is a sandwich board that reads "Coffee, Its What?s for Dinner," […]


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