Editorial Archive


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Sonya Clark
Sonia Clark presents works based on a flag in the archives of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C. More...


Samella Lewis’ Outsized Footprint
Dr. Samella S. Lewis left a legacy that bridged artistic creativity, art historical scholarship, institutional leadership and curatorial savvy. More...


Niki de Saint Phalle
Niki de Saint Phalle's artworks from the 60s conjoin aesthetic expertise with primitive energy, all infused with vitality and sensuality. More...


Clark V. Fox: Subversion and Spectacle
Part Native American of Cherokee and Powhatan descent, Clark V. Fox views American culture effectively as an outsider. More...


Barbara Kruger, “Thinking of You. I Mean Me. I Mean You.”
The power of her use of language, and more specifically text, has given Berbara Kruger’s work a nearly unsurpassable omnipresence in the art world and beyond. Thus current survey drives the point, and demand a lot of processing on our part. More...


From Dawn to Dusk
"From Dawn to Dusk" is a superb cross section of late 19- early 20th-century Nordic landscape and portrait painting. More...


Robert Colescott: Humor is the Bait
“If you decide to laugh, don’t forget the humor is the bait, and once you’ve bitten, you may have to do some serious chewing. The tears may come later.” — Robert Colescott More...


2020: Three Artists
Carrie Zeller, Jorge Dubin and Tom Lamb display their distinct creative and healing responses to the travails of life during the Covid pandemic. More...


Ray Johnson
Ray Johnson is said to be the father of mail art. Over 100 collages and archival material are absorbing yet frustrating because the element of surprise is missing. A work would unexpectedly appear in the recipient's mailbox, an integral part of Johnson's aesthetic process. More...


I Was Here
Th small-town sprawl of the Los Angeles that Bill Lasarow grew up in was very different from the diverse urban metropolis familiar today. Children always take their home neighborhood to be emblematic of the world. It is only later that they are able to note, more of less, its actual place in the larger world. More...


Digital Combines, Group Exhibition
Robert Rauschenberg's invention of the combine 70 years ago informs and is updated by these "Digital Combines." Each work is paired with a digital counterpoint and QR code mounted alongside the image, allow us to access text, video, audio, or commentary expanding on the art that appears in the gallery. More...


Beverly McIver
A survey of Beverly McIver's lively figurative painting displays her ability to move from the intensely personal to the profoundly universal. More...


Lothar Schmitz and Ephraim Puusemp
Lothar Schmitz's new installation, "Artificia," treats the gallery as a discovery museum, connecting nature and technology through the use of video monitors and projections in a variety of formats and scales. Complementing this, Ephraim Puusemp presents images of galaxies and nebulae that are not exactly what they appear to be. More...


Ling Chun
Ling Chun attacks the fine art identity of ceramics through her treatment of scale and media add-ons. More...


Henk Pander, “Artist as Eyewitness”
Henk Pander’s paintings never shy from the enduring theme of man’s inhumanity to man. This small grouping of four paintings tell the story of Portland’s 2020 street confrontation between far right Proud Boys and Antifa activists. More...


Carrie Ann Plank, “Superposition”
Empirical and intuitive methods inform Carrie Ann Plank’s exhibition “Superposition.” Her images are summations of previous iterations, state succeeding state; but also references indeterminate living systems that include all possible states simultaneously. More...


Cowboy X Lightbound X Cowboy
Frances Lightbound pairs a single installation piece with photographs of assemblages by Cowboy. More...


The Aesthetic Case Against Escalation
Welcome to the baby boomer generation's anxiety-saturated world. Please do not retreat beneath your desks. More...


Shahzia Sikander
Shahzia Sikander combines Hindu, Muslim, and Western imagery, injecting her fusion with humor, ambiguity, and eroticism. More...


“Networked Nature"
“Networked Nature” presents a group of digital works interpreting “nature" bound up and integrated with artificial intelligence. More...

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