"Revolution in the Making ..."
"... Abstract Sculpture by Women, 1947-2016" makes the case for their key contributions to the best art of the contemporary era. More...
Nick Brandt
Nature photographer Nick Brandt drops his stunning images of threatened wildlife into sites of third world poverty and unregulated urban development. The results are both beautiful and shocking. More...
Susan York
Susan York's dense graphite sculptures and drawings display a surprising visual affinity with Georgia O'Keeffe's work. More...
Artist Designed Sanctuaries III: Alex Grey
Alex Grey produced his "Chapel of Sacred Mirrors" over the decade of the 1980s, and moving next year to its permanent home in Wappinger, New York. It is one of the pinnacles of visionary art of the late 20th century. More...
Ann Gale
Ann Gale's figures are objectively older, often heavy-set, not at all glamorous. But her brushwork's staccato energy makes it all work. More...
Emma Sulkowicz
The self-portrait of Emma Sulkowicz is actually three portraits in one: The artist herself on a platform; a life-size sculpture; and a miniature 3D-printed replica. It adds up to a distinctive form of interaction with an artist. More...
"Revolution in the Making ..."
"... Abstract Sculpture by Women, 1947-2016" makes the case for their key contributions to the best art of the contemporary era. More...
Ryan McCann
Ryan McCann paints photo realistically with a blowtorch. But, rest assured, his aesthetic reach extends beyond this process. More...
Civics 101
What does the current, wild political season have to do with visual art? Historically art has usually served the wealthy and powerful; even in the present day environment of aesthetic independence, patronage is not limited only to the most elite. Artists are as free as they have ever been to use their art to make a difference. More...
Eva Isaksen
Eva Isaksen builds images that complicate the picture plane by layering and overlapping collaged elements of her own paintings on paper, which she cuts up and reassembles on canvas. More...
Leonard Suryajaya
Leonard Suryajaya’s “Don't Hold On to Your Bones” is a visually and aurally overwhelming installation. From ceiling to floor, the artist has wallpapered the back gallery with brightly patterned, abstracted paper squares. And that's just the beginning. More...
Thomas Kinkade, Huckster of Light
The late Thomas Kinkade was the Rodney Dangerfield of the art world. He got no respect — and with good reason. But two very different Kinkade-centric exhibitions have recently revisited the question of whether the self-branded “painter of light” deserved his déclassé reputation. More...
Gordon Parks
Selections from Gordon Parks' photo essays on the 1963 march on Washington and the Black Power movement depict the turbulent sixties. More...
Dianna Frid and Richard Rezac
This pairing pits Dianna Frid's expressive fabric works against Richard Rezac's cool, high-gloss sculptures. More...
MANUAL (Ed Hill and Suzanne Bloom)
In "Raising Nature," the collaborative team MANUAL presents two series of dazzling images of trees, "Yellow Birch Cycle" and "Trees Flower." The first is a birch’s canopy shot from below, while the other is of flowering branches magically floating in mid-air. More...
Ryan McCann
Ryan McCann paints photo realistically with a blowtorch. But, rest assured, his aesthetic reach extends beyond this process. More...