Author Archives: jolanta
Gary Stephan in Three Dimensions – Cheryl Donegan
Painter and printmaker Gary Stephan and the filmmaker and painter Cheryl Donegan have known each other for over 20 years, since she was a student at RISD and he was showing at Mary Boone Gallery. They met at Stephan’s studio recently to discuss his new sculptures, the reasonable limits of interpretation, and his continued attempts […]
Art on the Line – Shane McAdams
Currently showing at Galeria Janet Kurnatowski, a new-ish space in Greenpoint, is a modest but extremely compelling show curated by Scott Malbaurn. Art on the Line features five artists each working with aspects of a pedigreed artistic element that, despite its illustrious past, came to last century’s finish line hobbling. Art on the Line Shane […]
Report From Venice: The Arsenale – James Westcott
There’s only a very short curatorial introduction to the exhibition at the Arsenale in Venice for the 51st edition of the Biennale. Rosa Martinez quotes Beckett only to defy him: while he spoke of an art that was "weary of puny exploits, weary of pretending to be able, of being able, of doing a little […]
The Guilin Yuzi-Paradise – Enrico Pedrini
At the Yuzi Paradise Sculpture Park in Guilin, sculpture interacts with a unique mountainous environment: huge granite marble structures project from the plain to create imposing peaks standing straight up like dense, massive sculptures. It’s a fantasy landscape of peculiar peaks. The mountains are partially covered with vegetation that thrives amid the gorges of the […]
Andreja Kuluncic – Ben Rutter
The Croatian conceptualist Andreja Kuluncic wants to help her fellow Eastern Europeans crack the New York art world’s oldest codes. Whom to meet? Where to show? Kuluncic has spent her residence at Art In General, the non-profit gallery, assembling a manua about how to build the art world social capital necessary for success–a how-to guide […]
Naturally Theatrical – Ian Green
Anna VanMatre, whose work was recently displayed at the Berliner Kunst Project in Berlin and the Broadway Gallery in New York, explores the natural, elemental dramas of the world, portending something potent, and undeniable. In great gray graphite swirls and clouds, VanMatre depicts scenes as oppressive and evocative as a rain-weary morning in fall, at […]
In the (Well-Lit) Laboratory of Life, Death, and Dreams: SARCOPHAGUS, Ghanaian Style, or the Funeral
The lights in the two rooms are off. Light filters in from the main gallery and music can be detected in the background, but that doesn?t lessen the feeling that I?ve entered another world?a laboratory of light, video, mechanical objects, and assemblage. In the (Well-Lit) Laboratory of Life, Death, and Dreams: SARCOPHAGUS, Ghanaian Style, or […]
Report From Venice: The Pavilions – James Westcott
The Taiwan pavilion–actually called a Museum–is a few steps from St. Mark’s Place on the waterfront. An enormous sign declares "The Specter of Freedom," and when you slip inside the building and up the cool marble steps into a large dark chamber to see Chung-li Kao’s animations of a saintly man gazing at a crucifix-cum-fighter […]
Next Station: ‘Cartoon’? – Fang Fang
I have always wanted to curate an exhibition that captures the artistic climate of my contemporaries. Since 2002, I have seen a number of new young writers of the so-called ‘post-1980’ generation, such as Han Han, Guo Jingming, Chun Shu and Zhang Yueran, burst onto the Chinese literature scene. Next Station: ‘Cartoon’? Fang Fang I […]
Quarry: Lucy Gunning at Greene Naftali Gallery – By Danielle Augusta Cannon
Picasso once said, "every act of creation is first an act of destruction." Perhaps Lucy Gunning was thinking along these lines when she created Quarry, an installation recently on display at the Greene Naftali Gallery. Quarry: Lucy Gunning at Greene Naftali Gallery By Danielle Augusta Cannon Courtesy of Greene Naftali Gallery. Picasso once said, "every […]


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