The Oakes Twins recently held a residency at The Drawing Center that explored portraiture.
Read more here.
The Oakes Twins recently held a residency at The Drawing Center that explored portraiture.
Read more here.
Savor Detroit dinner series is to feature an installation by Tyree Guyton.
Read more here.
Margaret Cogswell as done a collaborative installation with Ellen Driscoll at Kentler Gallery, on view September 12-October 25, 2015.
Read more here.
Wopo Holup has been featured in group exhibition HAIKU: Poetry in Art at Arts Brookfield.
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Dina Kelberman has been included in Knockdown Center's group exhibition First Person View, "an art show for drones."
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Country, Home artist chukwumaa mentioned in The FADER article "The Voices Disrupting White Supremacy Through Sound" for his work in duo SCRAAATCH:
"SCRAAATCH is an art and sound double act, originally from Washington DC and now based in Philadelphia, who often perform live. It consists of artists E. Jane and chukwumaa...and, along with the New Jersey born DJ Haram, they run the monthly Philly 'club-not-club' night ATM."
Read full article here.
In this exhibition, Kira Lynn Harris will create new site specific works examining visual representations of the city in contemporary culture. On view July 11 - August 29, 2015.
Read more here.
Solo exhibition, Drifting Islands, on view April 11- November 8 at the Oakland Museum of California.
More info here.
Fights: Collaborative works by Nolan Simon & Dylan Spaysky, on view August 2 – September 5, 2015 at Night Club.
More info here.
Solo exhibition on view June 14 - July 31 at Mitchell Algus Gallery.
More info here.
Toronto artist Stephen Andrews has been working with paint for 15 years, but has good reason for not calling himself a painter.
Read MoreDrop everything if you've never seen this work of video art from 1983 by Cecelia Condit. Possibly in Michigan is twelve minutes long, and wow, it's really something.
Read MoreKen Gonzales-Day's work is instructive but far from didactic. It's a history lesson taught through the framing of holes in the record and by collapsing the space between different times and places. It disturbs in direct proportion to its importance, and it does disturb.
Read MoreOn an East Harlem sidewalk in the early 1960s, a 15-year-old encounters a globetrotting Magnum photographer. He hands the young man his camera. The young man becomes a photographer.
Read MoreAs a kid, local artist Stephen Andrews knew having your work displayed at the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) was the seal of approval he thought all established artists should have.
Read MoreOn the floor, in a corner at the meeting of two otherwise blank walls, conspicuously trying to not draw attention to itself, is a little chunk of Stephen Andrews’ pottery.
Read MoreBlind artist Carmen Papalia didn't like using a white cane to get around, so he swapped it - for a marching band.
Read MoreIf the images on display in the Torrance Art Museum’s latest photography exhibit cause people to gaze with curiosity or take a second look, that’s OK.
Read MoreJames Cobb thought he would quietly slip in and out of Sala Diaz. As it turns out,“Tooky Jelly,” a solo exhibit of digital works on metal by Cobb currently at the Southtown gallery, has generated considerable buzz, particularly for what the artist describes as “such a little, tiny show.”
Read MoreArtforum's Lara Attalah reviews Ernst Fischer's "18%" exhibition now being held at CUE.
"While Hito Steyerl defends the poor image, Ernst Fischer explores the other end of the spectrum, namely, what happens when you overwhelm a photograph with information?..."
See the full article here.