Tim Ebner
Stuffed and embroidered, sumptuous and loopy, Tim Ebner's fish suspended or mounted atop metal rods call up lush Victorian-era curtains and funky low-brow pillows--with eyes that are slightly creepy and utterly hilarious. More...
William H. Johnson
After two decades spent absorbing international and modernist styles, William Johnson returned to New York to mine his African-American roots. More...
Spring Salons in Seattle
May is Seattle is known as the season of the double rainbows that span maybe ten miles within the city. New sources of artistic life are personified by a promising crop of student shows and some newer galleries that are bringing fresh energy to the region. More...
John Singer Sargent
Initially private works, watercolors became an exceedingly vital part of John Singer Sargent's body of work, which the selections here demonstrate. More...
Sarah Knobel
Sarah Knobel freezes feathers, wigs, toys in gelatin molds, allows them to thaw, and photographs them as they melt, exposing the contents to bizarre and fascinating effect. More...
Chris Engman
Intellectual yet hypnotically beautiful, Chris Engman’s images carry photography into worlds that by turns disorient, please and frustrate. More...
Eleanor Antin
Eleanor Antin makes incursions into modes of historical narrative art to both revive and critique the interpretation of stories we only thought we knew. More...
“The Armory Show”
Santa Fe's Center for Contemporary Art originated as a contemporary alternative to the more commercial offerings of local galleries. The original 1977 took its name from the 1913 New York original, and it continues today as an important showcase. More...
"Nur: Light"
The Arabic word for "light," Nur, lends itself to the title of a gathering of Islamic treasures that mainly reflect the mature skills of a major civilization. More...
Ben Murray
If large scale and grand gesture are typically associated with the heroic and the tragic, Ben Murray manages to turn those traits into something more personal and pensive. More...
Q and A
For James Yood it remains a nettlesome question whether an artist is less consequential because they do not work out of New York. More...