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The late artist Carole Caroompas was once asked why rock and roll provided such generative source material for her paintings ...
I sat in the last row of the bus, watching the scenery dissolve into dusk, each passing moment echoing the temporal ...
Qing Sheng. Qing Sheng is a writer, artist, and researcher based in Vancouver. She has a background in environmental design ...
Paula Mejía is a Colombian American writer and editor from Houston, Texas. Her writing on arts and culture has appeared in the New Yorker, GQ, the Atlantic, Texas Monthly, the New York Times Magazine, ...
Pablo Picasso is so famous and so ubiquitous and so dead that he is easy not to think about at all. It’s as though his most renowned artworks are in the next gallery along with his clownish public ...
No one likes being called an amateur, a dilettante, a dabbler. “Unprofessional” is an easy insult. The professional always makes the right moves, knows the right thing to say, the right name to check.
As New York galleries reopened after the first wave of lockdowns, I noticed a trend across a handful of exhibitions that channeled the alienation and heartbreak of our moment. Their artists were each ...
Not very long ago I read Toni Morrison’s Home. This, her tenth novel, chronicles the wayward journey of a young war veteran, Frank Money, making his way back home to Georgia. The novel reroutes the ...
Pizandawatc / The One Who Listens / Celui qui écoute, a recent exhibition at the Art Museum at the University of Toronto (AMUT), draws its title from the traditional name of artist Caroline Monnet’s ...