Editorial Archive


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Fighting: Ukrainian War Photographers 
“Fighting: Ukrainian War Photographers” confronts the breadth of conflict through the lens of 16 Ukrainian artists and photojournalists. The eyes of the subjects tell the story, revealing fear, resolve, pain, and confusion. More...


Albert Contreras, “Albert”
Albert Contreras failed to break through in New York during the 1970s and 80s, so he worked as a garbage truck driver until returning as a successful artist 25 years later. Psychotherapy freed him to paint, and his optically tricky work continued for another 30 years. More...


Christopher Badger
Christopher Badger presents artworks that stem from assignments he has given to his students. On view are his own responses to prompts such as "Chemical Painting," "Computational Choreography," or "Psychological Color Theory." More...


Ambreen Butt
Ambreen Butt's “Lay Bare My Arms,” was three years in the making, and the expenditure of creative labor teems with visual incident. More...


Tim Roda, “Vantage Points” 
Tim Roda's constructed-set black-and-white photographs featuring family members use jerry-rigged lumber, unfired ceramic props, kitsch elements such as plastic flamingos and snow shovels, and father, sons, and wife to activate awkward situations. More...


Josephine Taylor
How do images come into existence? Josephine Taylor provides some answers in three series of new paintings. More...


Ed Moses, "Emptiness is Form"
Ed Moses applied painterly gesture and manipulation in endlessly surprising ways. The tools he used to apply the paint — including squeegees, mops, squeeze bottles, house painters’ implements and hoses -- were simple but effective vehicles by which he achieved his effects. More...


A Generational Change in Los Angeles
A generational transition has occurred among Los Angeles galleries with an influx of start-ups and outposts recently opened by established galleries in New York and elsewhere. More...


David Schell, "Casual Plans"
David Schell's shapes are biomorphic but not figurative, geometric but not hard-edged, kinda squishy, like a grilled cheese sandwich left too long in a hot car. More...


Trees, Fox & Friends
”Trees, Fox & Friends” assembles an impressive survey featuring the centrality of trees in a time of severe climate change. More...


Tony Feher
Tony Feher’s creative inspiration began when he was momentarily mesmerized by light interacting with marbles seen through a window. More...


Jenny Holzer
Jenny Holzer examines the unsettling language associated with Trumpism, QAnon, and artificial intelligence. More...


Ruhee Maknojia
The elaborately patterned paintings of Ruhee Maknojia are based on fables that engender civil discourse and discussion. More...


American Art: The Stories We Carry
The re-installation of the American art collection at Seattle Art Museum reflects significant shifts in art history, curatorial perspectives, and what is and is not a “masterpiece.” More...


Chris Johanson, "Untitled Tryiptych"
Chris Johanson's untitled triptych, a key work by one of the key artists of San Francisco's "Mission School," its fusion of street art, Funk assemblage and Japanese underground comic illustration still registers the spirit of that time and place. More...


Richard T. Walker, “Never Here / Always There”
Richard T. Walker interrogates nature and the solitary observer through multimedia works. The playfully ironic title, “Never Here /Always There,” conveys the flavor of Walker’s inquiries and investigations. More...


Annetta Kapon
Proxy Gallery is a 12-inch cube used by Annetta Kapon since 2013. This is exhibition #85. surveying the many collaborating artists. More...


Darren Orange
Darren Orange has maintained a long inquiry into the landscape of the Pacific Northwest, currently via pure abstract painting. More...


Jeffrey Frisch, "Extreme Moderation"
Jeffrey Frisch turns art styles, genres, movements, and even painting techniques inside out and upside down. Titled “Extreme Moderation,” these up cycled constructions engage in intellectual and aesthetic play. More...


“Hell: Arts of Asian Underworlds”
"Hell: Arts of Asian Underworlds" ranges across ten centuries and almost as many cultural traditions. Given this breadth the show challenges and expands upon everything that we thought we knew about Asian art and the cosmological paradigms that it draws on. More...

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