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Illusive Topography – Leah Oates
Monday, 4 June 2007 22:17Leah Oates: When did you know you where an artist? Michael Schall: Well, the first time I received recognition for my creative abilities was in kindergarten. The project was to draw something on a paper plate, which would eventually be sent somewhere to be made into a real laminated plate. I drew a picture of […]
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Queer Subversion – Steven Miller
Friday, 1 June 2007 19:29I’m interested in exploring gay identity in relation to the conservative landscape that exists in the US today. I’ve been inspired by the political activism of the 80s: the art of David Wojnarowicz, “ACT UP” demonstrations and the defiant “fuck you” that angry queers gave mainstream society. So, I make work that hearkens back to […]
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Shock of the Old – E. K. Clark
Friday, 1 June 2007 19:26Michelle Sakhai was born in l983, the heyday of appropriation, and thus her debut solo show at Broadway Gallery, with her exquisite plein-air canvases, presents a curious conundrum to the ironic eye. How are we to decipher these works in the present artistic climate? Following in the footsteps of the Impressionists and the Fauves, Ms. […]
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Role Play: Feminist Art Revisited 1960-1980 at Galerie Lelong – Abigail Solomon-Godeau
Friday, 1 June 2007 19:22No, Virginia, Cindy Sherman’s art did not come to us from outer space; it was yet another art practice formed in and by feminist thought and affiliated, both directly and indirectly, with the work of many women artists active in the 70s. If this is a newsworthy observation, it represents one positive consequence of the […]
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Kristin Lucas
Thursday, 31 May 2007 18:45In my mind, I am in a shopping mall parking lot. I am framing a scene that I will fill with a cast of zombies. People and family vehicles move through the space of my palms. I am psyched. The temperature is ideal. There is no breeze, so it feels like indoors. It will be […]
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Bjorn Copeland
Thursday, 31 May 2007 18:43The way objects and images are perceived upon a first viewing is far different than the way they appear after extended periods of viewing. Eventually, the things we see repeatedly begin to loose their initial meaning, and what we are left with is a kind of raw information. Numbness to the original function sets in […]
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Migration: Ten thousand crags and torrents treated lightly – Chen Mo
Thursday, 31 May 2007 18:41The first time I came across the work of artist Qiu Qijing was in the 798 district in March. While on one of my friends’ computers, I discovered a group of images of landscape settings under the exhibition title “Migration,” which gave me the urge to know this artist better. In terms of the size, […]
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Catching the Star – Karen Azoulay
Wednesday, 30 May 2007 22:10Fleetingness and fluidity are two aspects of nature that lure me to the subject matter in my landscape installations. A winter flurry can suddenly transport me to the interior of a snow globe, but such a moment can never be captured. It melts and disappears. Although sunsets and windy vistas enchant me, I build landscapes […]
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Manfredi Beninati: Flavio and Palermo – Mary Hrbacek
Wednesday, 30 May 2007 22:08In his new paintings, Beninati employs soft, luminous colors to create dreamlike visions of a world suffused with feelings of fantasy and nostalgia. The artist dissolves the boundaries between magical interiors and natural exteriors by filling the interiors with bouquets of flowers and vegetation. Outdoor spaces fairly reek of the beauty created by natural phenomena […]
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Cheekwood and Nashvilleâs Contemporary Art Scene – Adam T. McCoy
Wednesday, 30 May 2007 22:05In the mid-90s, Cheekwood Botanical Garden & Museum of Art broadened its commitment to contemporary art. At the time, only a few galleries and alternative spaces in Nashville offered venues for contemporary artists to exhibit. Artists-run spaces frequently came and went, and commercial galleries such as Zeitgeist and TAG were in their infancy. Against this […]