-
Out of the Closet and into the Box – Firehouse Studios
Saturday, 14 July 2007 14:19In the last 100 years, the male figure has been put into a closet, seen as too potent, homoerotic or even gay. Since long before the time of Michelangelo, the male form was seen as ideal. As Biblically described in Genesis 1:26, “Man was perfect, made in the image of God,” and E. Gibbons is […]
-
Musing Aloud – Barbara Cole
Saturday, 14 July 2007 14:13A friend of mine once remarked that, “honesty lives in the water.” I expect that what he meant by this was that when we are immersed in water we are more concerned with the preservation of the self than with the presentation of the self; water is not home to the ego. My “Underworld” works, […]
-
Butt Johnsonâs Meticulous Ballpoint Hybrids – Alex Dodge
Friday, 13 July 2007 18:28Butt Johnson’s work is obsessive to a degree that could overcome even our most severe expectations of an artist confined solely to his work. His elaborately detailed ballpoint pen drawings, some of which have taken as many as two years to complete, combine complex ornamentation from a range of historical repositories with various cultural iconographies; […]
-
The Evolution of Brian Kirhagis – Lauren Gunsel
Friday, 13 July 2007 18:24“I’m no Britney Spears,” said Brian Kirhagis as he walked me into his show at the Brooklyn Artist’s Gym. Given the recent state of the pop star, I was not sure how to take this. He sensed my confusion and laughed. “I mean I can do everything you see here right in front of you, […]
-
Cosmic Earth Oasis Series – D. Dominick Lombardi
Friday, 13 July 2007 18:06Sheila Isham is a real throwback—a pre-war, early German Expressionist kind of gal whose heart lies in a peaceful, mystical place. Her recent show at Walter Wickiser Gallery opened with #420 Cosmic Earth—Oasis Series 41, Nature’s Eve, a highly textured painting that reads as a collage with its somewhat abrupt and technically out of context […]
-
Almost Safe – E.K. Clark
Thursday, 12 July 2007 17:52“Almost Safe,” an exhibition by Anthony Giocolea, examines a post-apocalyptic world redolent with anxiety, nostalgia and a futuristic science fiction quality. The exhibition consists of six large format black and white digital photographs, drawings alluding to 19th century portraiture, a painting and a 75-second, 16-millimeter film. The artist, Photoshop whiz and master choreographer, travels the […]
-
Orchestrated Surfaces – Kóan Jeff Baysa
Thursday, 12 July 2007 17:50Mark Sharp leaves his remarkable acrylic paintings and works on paper untitled intentionally to give free rein to each viewer’s imagination and reading of his pieces. He doesn’t object to the audience finding figurative references in his abstract works. In fact, his studio practice oscillates between moving forward and moving backward, stylistically and within his […]
-
Pushing the Envelope – Louis & Aida
Wednesday, 11 July 2007 18:14The somewhat lukewarm nuances and peculiar qualities in life are what we enjoy most. While beauty definitely plays an important role in the rag trade, and while our pictures play into this, there is also a certain vulnerability to each of them. Appealing to the senses, we embark on the idea of misplacement and discomfort. […]
-
Dishonest Beauty – Jay Parkinson
Wednesday, 11 July 2007 16:44Dishonesty exists in every photograph I publish. Behind my work lies a very personal struggle with what others see and what actually exists in my relationships with places and significant people in my life. In the past few years, my photographs have consisted almost exclusively of images of my significant others. If they do not, […]
-
TV Dinners – Louky Keijsers
Wednesday, 11 July 2007 16:40About ten years ago, I was strolling through Soho when my eye caught a glimpse of an exhibition at the Guggenheim SoHo. Once inside, I was immediately compelled by this show—everywhere I looked I saw monitors and colorful, comfortable seating. I thus spent hours in the space, lounging and enjoying the videos. To this day, […]