Curtis Talwst Santiago has been creating intimate and performative environments within these small spaces for several years; the artist used to carry them around to show visitors one on one, opening up a scene in the space of his hand. Santiago considers these mobile box enclosures a method of transporting narratives of home and intimacy, diasporic identity, and experiences most often hidden or concealed from view. These Walls is a sculptural piece made from a reclaimed jewelry box, clay, paint, wool, plastic figurines, and human hair.
Adam is an emblematic work within Jean-Charles de Quillacq’s oeuvre. The artist has created a number of pieces entitled Adam , referring to original man, incarnated in multiple objects at once. Materially, Adam is a fluorescent yellow walking rope with an epoxy coating on one side, rendering the structure rigid, demonstrative of his sculptural practice which is both conceptual and sensual.
All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace takes its title from a 1967 poem by American writer Richard Brautigan, which describes a utopian future where computers are in harmony with and protective of mankind and nature, performing all the necessary work while we retreat back towards nature. In Sisto’s work, a computer generated voice recites Brautigan’s poem while a series of digitally rendered 3D objects with a sleek, mirrored finish, float weightlessly across the screen. Sisto’s work also shares its title with the 2011 BBC documentary series by filmmaker Adam Curtis, which has the view that computers have failed in their task of liberating humanity and have instead created a simplified and distorted world around us.
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California. According to Halpern, the series “is grounded in reality, but it occupies an in-between space, between documentary and a certain sense of mystery.” …“I see ZZYZX as part of a continuum but edging a little closer towards fiction.” The series title is borrowed from the village Zzyzx (pronounced zye-zix), formerly Soda Springs, but rechristened by the mineral water pioneer, Curtis Howe Springer, in 1944. The eccentric Springer named it after what he claimed to be the last word in the English language.
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California. According to Halpern, the series “is grounded in reality, but it occupies an in-between space, between documentary and a certain sense of mystery.” …“I see ZZYZX as part of a continuum but edging a little closer towards fiction.” The series title is borrowed from the village Zzyzx (pronounced zye-zix), formerly Soda Springs, but rechristened by the mineral water pioneer, Curtis Howe Springer, in 1944. The eccentric Springer named it after what he claimed to be the last word in the English language.
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California. According to Halpern, the series “is grounded in reality, but it occupies an in-between space, between documentary and a certain sense of mystery.” …“I see ZZYZX as part of a continuum but edging a little closer towards fiction.” The series title is borrowed from the village Zzyzx (pronounced zye-zix), formerly Soda Springs, but rechristened by the mineral water pioneer, Curtis Howe Springer, in 1944. The eccentric Springer named it after what he claimed to be the last word in the English language.
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California. According to Halpern, the series “is grounded in reality, but it occupies an in-between space, between documentary and a certain sense of mystery.” …“I see ZZYZX as part of a continuum but edging a little closer towards fiction.” The series title is borrowed from the village Zzyzx (pronounced zye-zix), formerly Soda Springs, but rechristened by the mineral water pioneer, Curtis Howe Springer, in 1944. The eccentric Springer named it after what he claimed to be the last word in the English language.
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California. According to Halpern, the series “is grounded in reality, but it occupies an in-between space, between documentary and a certain sense of mystery.” …“I see ZZYZX as part of a continuum but edging a little closer towards fiction.” The series title is borrowed from the village Zzyzx (pronounced zye-zix), formerly Soda Springs, but rechristened by the mineral water pioneer, Curtis Howe Springer, in 1944. The eccentric Springer named it after what he claimed to be the last word in the English language.
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California. According to Halpern, the series “is grounded in reality, but it occupies an in-between space, between documentary and a certain sense of mystery.” …“I see ZZYZX as part of a continuum but edging a little closer towards fiction.” The series title is borrowed from the village Zzyzx (pronounced zye-zix), formerly Soda Springs, but rechristened by the mineral water pioneer, Curtis Howe Springer, in 1944. The eccentric Springer named it after what he claimed to be the last word in the English language.
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California. According to Halpern, the series “is grounded in reality, but it occupies an in-between space, between documentary and a certain sense of mystery.” …“I see ZZYZX as part of a continuum but edging a little closer towards fiction.” The series title is borrowed from the village Zzyzx (pronounced zye-zix), formerly Soda Springs, but rechristened by the mineral water pioneer, Curtis Howe Springer, in 1944. The eccentric Springer named it after what he claimed to be the last word in the English language.
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California. According to Halpern, the series “is grounded in reality, but it occupies an in-between space, between documentary and a certain sense of mystery.” …“I see ZZYZX as part of a continuum but edging a little closer towards fiction.” The series title is borrowed from the village Zzyzx (pronounced zye-zix), formerly Soda Springs, but rechristened by the mineral water pioneer, Curtis Howe Springer, in 1944. The eccentric Springer named it after what he claimed to be the last word in the English language.
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California. According to Halpern, the series “is grounded in reality, but it occupies an in-between space, between documentary and a certain sense of mystery.” …“I see ZZYZX as part of a continuum but edging a little closer towards fiction.” The series title is borrowed from the village Zzyzx (pronounced zye-zix), formerly Soda Springs, but rechristened by the mineral water pioneer, Curtis Howe Springer, in 1944. The eccentric Springer named it after what he claimed to be the last word in the English language.
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California. According to Halpern, the series “is grounded in reality, but it occupies an in-between space, between documentary and a certain sense of mystery.” …“I see ZZYZX as part of a continuum but edging a little closer towards fiction.” The series title is borrowed from the village Zzyzx (pronounced zye-zix), formerly Soda Springs, but rechristened by the mineral water pioneer, Curtis Howe Springer, in 1944. The eccentric Springer named it after what he claimed to be the last word in the English language.
PANGKIS by Yee I-Lann is a looped video performance. The work is named after the triumphant warrior cry, an animistic guttural call, which punctuates the traditional Dusun Sumazau dance. For this work, the artist collaborated with Tagaps Dance Theatre, a group of young dancers whose practice merges traditional and contemporary styles.
Too Many Names by Troy Chew is a patchwork of contemporary Black culture and resistance, including hand-sewn symbols and patterns found in the coats of arms of the kings of the Dahomey region (now Benin) that ruled from 1600-1900. This painting is part of the series Out the Mud, a longterm project in which the artist explores African American history through the lens of traditional mudcloth techniques found in the West African countries involved in the Transatlantic-slave trade. The title of the series references the technique and materials for making mudcloth.
Observing the sky after 11 September 2001, Dennis Adams photographed elements which had been lifted by drafts and were floating above the city of New York. The artist was only able to identify the objects after developing and enlarging the prints: you can read “He’s no terrorist”. The front page of the newspaper thrusts back to ‘the event’ of the 21st century and is revealed only through the detailed observation of the image; the painful twist of the newspaper could be a rustling wing.
The video Make down is a 34 minute sequence shot that shows the artist removing make-up in front of a mirror. The peculiarity of the scene consists in two symbolic details: first, the make-up itself, covering his face, hair and torso – a thick kaki layer, reminding of military camouflage – and second, the paper used to remove the make-up – black and white prints of stills taken from Gillo Pontecorvo’s 1965 film, “La bataille d’Alger” ( The Battle of Algiers). These still images put together recreate a sequence in which a young Algerian woman takes off her veil and puts on Western make-up.
Gregory Halpern is an acclaimed American photographer whose practice is predicated on wandering...
Since 1998, through site specific works, often in public spaces, or video works, Dennis Adams focuses on ambiguous characters, condemned by our recent history, revealing traumas or collective amnesia phenomena...
Spanning painting, drawing, and sculpture, Troy Chew’s practice reflects on the legacy of the African diaspora through the lens of urban culture...
Curtis Talwst Santiago is a multimedia artist making work centered on the diasporic experience, transculturalism, and memory...
Artist Jean-Charles de Quillacq erects works which have a complicated relationship to remaining upright...
Artist and filmmaker Pascual Sisto is known for creating works that reimagine the mundane as captivating alternate realities...
The Queer Intimacy of Paul Mpagi Sepuya’s Self-Portraits | AnOther January 26, 2024 Text Adam Murray Lead Image Courtesy the artist and Galerie Peter Kilchmann, Zurich, Paris...
Talent agency A3 to shut down on Monday - Los Angeles Times Copyright © 2024, Los Angeles Times | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | CA Notice of Collection | Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information Advertisement Company Town Talent agency A3 to shut down on Monday From left, Brian Cho, Robert Attermann and Adam Bold attend the Catalyst Content Awards Gala in 2019 in Duluth, Minn...
Documentation of Going Our Way at George Adams Gallery, New York is featured on Contemporary Art Daily....
Between Risk and Control: How Mark Rothko Discovered His Signature Style ‹ Literary Hub Craft and Criticism Fiction and Poetry News and Culture Lit Hub Radio Reading Lists Book Marks CrimeReads About Log In Literary Hub Craft and Criticism Literary Criticism Craft and Advice In Conversation On Translation Fiction and Poetry Short Story From the Novel Poem News and Culture History Science Politics Biography Memoir Food Technology Bookstores and Libraries Film and TV Travel Music Art and Photography The Hub Style Design Sports Freeman’s The Virtual Book Channel Lit Hub Radio Behind the Mic Beyond the Page The Cosmic Library The Critic and Her Publics Emergence Magazine Fiction/Non/Fiction First Draft: A Dialogue on Writing Future Fables The History of Literature I’m a Writer But Just the Right Book Keen On The Literary Life with Mitchell Kaplan New Books Network Read Smart Talk Easy Tor Presents: Voyage Into Genre Windham-Campbell Prizes Podcast Write-minded Reading Lists The Best of the Decade Book Marks Best Reviewed Books BookMarks Daily Giveaway CrimeReads True Crime The Daily Thrill CrimeReads Daily Giveaway Log In Between Risk and Control: How Mark Rothko Discovered His Signature Style Adam Greenhalgh on the American Abstract Painter's Early Years Via Yale University Press By Adam Greenhalgh February 7, 2024 Featured image: Allie Caulfield via Creative Commons In the summer of 1933, Mark Rothko, who was then still known as Markus Rothkowitz, hitchhiked nearly three thousand miles from New York City to his hometown of Portland, Oregon...
United States Artists announces its 2024 fellows, including six for visual arts...
Photos of BSA #1: Being Tricked into Hate | Brooklyn Street Art BROOKLYN STREET ART LOVES YOU MORE EVERY DAY We’re celebrating the end of one year and the beginning of the next by thanking BSA Readers, Friends, and Family for your support in 2023...
10 cult indie stores worth dropping your hard-earned cash on | Dazed â¬…ï¸ Left Arrow *ï¸âƒ£ Asterisk â Star Option Sliders âœ‰ï¸ Mail Exit Fashion Feature The holiday gifting season might be upon us, but the likes of Café Forgot, Distal Phalanx, and APOC offer something far more fulfilling than lining Jeff Bezos’ already bulging pockets 18 December 2023 Text Dino Bonacic This article was originally published in November 2020...
5 Standout Shows to See at Small Galleries This December | Artsy Skip to Main Content Advertisement Art 5 Standout Shows to See at Small Galleries This December Maxwell Rabb Dec 15, 2023 2:00PM Andrea Respino Infastidite Acque #5 , 2023 Rolando Anselmi Price on request Adam Baker Sea snail , 2023 Schlomer Haus Gallery Sold In this monthly roundup, we shine the spotlight on five stellar exhibitions taking place at small and rising galleries worldwide...
"(Up)Rooted" by Artist Dominique Fung Submit New York-based artist Dominique Fung (previously featured here ) embarks on her first solo exhibition in Europe with “(Up)Rooted,” an allegorical journey featuring a mixture of paintings and sculpture...
BSA Images Of The Week: 11.19.23 | Brooklyn Street Art BROOKLYN STREET ART LOVES YOU MORE EVERY DAY Welcome to BSA Images of the Week! It’s a new collection of works found on the street here in New York as we head into Thanksgiving week...
Review: A Landmark Show of Native American Art at the National Gallery – ARTnews.com Skip to main content By Alex Greenberger Plus Icon Alex Greenberger Senior Editor, ARTnews View All November 17, 2023 8:34am Steven Yazzie, Orchestrating a Blooming Desert , 2003...
Open Call 2023 Group Exhibition at The Shed November 4, 2023 – January 21, 2024 545 W 30th St, New York, NY 10001 Images are courtesy of the artist and The Shed How often do we find ourselves in waves...
Shifting Landscapes At Oxo Tower Wharf | Londonist A Free Exhibition Featuring Virtual Rainforests Is Coming To Oxo Tower Wharf By Hannah Newlon-Trujillo Hannah Newlon-Trujillo A Free Exhibition Featuring Virtual Rainforests Is Coming To Oxo Tower Wharf Sanctuaries of Silence, a virtual reality experience by Adam Loften and Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee...
Prominent Collector and Dealer Adam Lindemann Arrested After Alleged Altercation at His Montauk Neighborâs Art âRanchâ - via artnet news...
BOMB Magazine | Sheena Patel Interviewed Necessary (Required) Cookies that the site cannot function properly without...
Christieâs Sale of Items From Art Collector Adam Lindemann Makes $31.5 M...
The U2 bassist describes how his search for a new version of bohemia inspired a passion for the work of Marlene Dumas, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Louise Bourgeois and Robert Mapplethorpe...
The owner of Venus over Manhattan gallery is withholding rent and demanding his $365,000 security deposit back due to coronavirus lockdowns that have shuttered the space...
He devoted his career to promoting the photography of Edward Curtis, who extensively documented Native American life in the early 20th century....
The roughly 7,500-square-foot cottage was built for husband-and-wife art dealers Adam Lindemann and Amalia Dayan by architect Sir David Adjaye in 2004....
The Family Business: Illustrious Art-World Fathers and Sons on How Art Has Transformed Their Relationships - via artnet news...
Collectors Cindy Chua-Tay, Adam Lindemann, and Alain Servais share their experiences of discovering and collecting amid the pandemic....
Creative Time Receives $100,000 Multi-Year Award from The Andy Warhol Foundation - Creative Time Creative Time Receives $100,000 Multi-Year Award from The Andy Warhol Foundation January 13th, 2022 Tweet Email Creative Time is honored to receive a $100,000, Multi-Year Award from The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts...
Commentators | The Independent Commentators Andrew Grice Andrew Grice All eyes are on Rishi Sunak for some good news Voices John Rentoul One week into Brexit Britain and how things have changed for Cameron Voices Rupert Cornwell Benghazi report is nothing more than political warfare Voices Rupert Cornwell Benghazi report is nothing more than political warfare Voices John Rentoul Let’s hear it for a man who told the truth about the EU UK Politics Don’t worry, little people: Iain Duncan Smith has got your back UK Politics Sketch: State school experiment won’t help Goldsmith's mayoral bid Voices Rosie Millard Prince was dangerous, artistically original - and outrageously erotic Voices Patrick Cockburn How Isis shocked the world by advancing on Baghdad Voices Adam Lusher Sketch: On the streets of Windsor, gratitude for the Queen overflowed Hamish McRae Higher oil prices could be just what we need to help tackle deflation Voices Matthew Turner The Panama Papers could put Bernie Sanders in the White House Voices Tom Peck Grassroots Out’s bid not official until Simon the cabbie arrives Voices Emma Daly Radovan Karadzic verdict: ‘I hope future warlords are taking note’ Voices Mary Dejevsky Kerry’s sojourn in Moscow is about shared mutual interests Voices Armando Valladares ‘Sunshine and photo-ops hide the truth of Cuba’s totalitarian regime’ Voices Novak Djokovic was unwise to get involved in the tennis pay debate Voices Andrew Grice Duncan Smith's resignation shows Tory unity eroding before referendum Voices Simmy Richman David Schneider's guide to anti-semitism hits nail on the head Voices Jane Merrick Extended school day must be for extra-curricular activities Hamish McRae Why Remain will win by a mile, and why, on balance, it should Voices Katy Guest Sexism claims boring you? Then stop being sexist Voices Dj Taylor Anita Brookner showed how to create literature out of loneliness Voices Dom Joly How do you get a newspaper column? Wine helped for me Voices Joan Smith The world has darkened, but feminism shines a light Voices Rupert Cornwell Trump might not be good for America, but he's great for TV networks Voices Michael Graydon Syria needs real vision, not sticking plaster solutions Voices Cole Moreton I am angry that we still live in such an unjust society Voices Kim Sengupta Al-Shishani’s ‘death’ will leave a big hole in Isis’s high command Voices Bill Law Yemen's war is becoming as messy as the conflict in Syria Voices Andrew Grice Osborne offers little relief for young generation despite the slogan Voices Steve Richards Osborne is keeping his fingers crossed, hoping something will turn up Voices Rupert Cornwell Trump card could secure victory over Clinton in game of demographics Voices Alexander Yakovenko Russian strikes on Syria drove out terrorists and helped start talks Voices Geoffrey Lean We must not miss the boat on using nature to reduce peak flooding Voices John Rentoul John McDonnell – the new voice of fiscal responsibility Voices Dom Joly Poolside with the Pulitzer crowd at the Dubai Literary Festival Voices Rupert Cornwell Trump and Trudeaumania are changing American views of Canada Voices Alison Shepherd Enjoying sex in middle-age?...
Looking at Pictures: Chip Lord in Conversation with Theadora Walsh : Open Space November 12, 2021 Looking at Pictures: Chip Lord in Conversation with Theadora Walsh by Theadora Walsh + Chip Lord Chip Lord, 1974, in front of Ant Farm’s Studio at Pier 40 with a Cadillac Ranch reject...
The Coming Out Party: Breakout Sales for New Talent at Frieze Flora Yukhnovih, I’ll Have What She’s Having (£60-90k) £2.3m An art advisor summed up the mood of the Frieze sales in London last week in a comment on Instagram ...
_T0701_ by Zeugma: How power mutates | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Courtesy of Arts House Limited June 7, 2021 Nabilah Said speaks to Safuan Johari, Rizman Putra and Brandon Tay of Zeugma on their current show _T0701 _ (say “toyol”, it’s much more fun), currently available via video-on-demand at the Singapore International Festival of Arts...
Podcast 58: Research and Practice in Performance-Making | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Performance (Podcast) May 6, 2019 Duration: 29 min As emerging art-makers having recently graduated from B...
Weekly Picks: Malaysia (27 Aug – 2 Sept 2018) | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Weekly To Do August 27, 2018 Teh Tarik With The Flag , at Balai Seni Negara, 23 July–17 September...
Observing the sky after 11 September 2001, Dennis Adams photographed elements which had been lifted by drafts and were floating above the city of New York...
The video Make down is a 34 minute sequence shot that shows the artist removing make-up in front of a mirror...
Adam is an emblematic work within Jean-Charles de Quillacq’s oeuvre...
All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace takes its title from a 1967 poem by American writer Richard Brautigan, which describes a utopian future where computers are in harmony with and protective of mankind and nature, performing all the necessary work while we retreat back towards nature...
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California...
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California...
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California...
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California...
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California...
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California...
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California...
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California...
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California...
Gregory Halpern spent five years shooting ZZYZX , and another year editing the results, from an estimated thousand rolls of film, about half of which were shot in the final year after his Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to live in California...
Curtis Talwst Santiago has been creating intimate and performative environments within these small spaces for several years; the artist used to carry them around to show visitors one on one, opening up a scene in the space of his hand...