Rachel Hellmann
Rachel Hellmann presents two distinct bodies of "Sculptural Paintings" and "Paintings on Paper", both emphasizing pattern and hard edge. More...
Sarah Charlesworth
Seductive and intriguing, Sarah Charlesworth's photographic appropriation of existing imagery possess a magetism far exceeding their origin. More...
Sam Messenger
Sam Messenger's networks of veils float like fishing nets or polyhedral domes, forming white membranes against dark grounds Structure and set procedures collaborate with chance and irregularity. More...
Nancy O’Connor
Nancy O'Connor met Milam Thompson more than 30 years ago, and the ranch hand's story and spirit has infused her art ever since. More...
Candida Höfer
Candida Höfer is a former student of Bernd and Hilla Becher, and these color photographs of empty architectural spaces certify that pedigree. The grand institutional spaces we see exult in their own grandiosity while questioning the limits of their cultural relevance. More...
Sheila Pepe: Hot Mess Formalism
The boundary-pushing fiber to chainmaille installations of Sheila Pepe take over gallery spaces like vines take over a jungle. More...
Jason Siegel and Keith D'Angelo
Jason Siegel and Keith D’Angelo recognize the polarzing reality of America's gun culture, so they unflinchingly confront the imagery associated it. Their photographs and sculptures portray near exact replicas of guns and other tools of warfare. More...
Frank Romero
Frank Romero's fascination with L.A. car culture and master of bold color and dramatic lighting hallmark this small but well selected survey. The show also marks the conclusion of Tobey C. Moss Gallery's distinguished four decade run with the owner's retirement. More...
Deborah Handler
Curved ceramic sculptures are stacked vertically and glazed gesturally. Deborah Handler imbues it all with instability and nuance. More...
Jinie Park
Color Field painting meets up with a fetishistic approach to the picture plane reminiscent of Arte Povera in Jinie Park's hand-stitched, paint-stained works. More...
Alejandro Diaz
Following an ambitious show, Alejandro Diaz fell into a depression that ground his work to a halt. This show is what he did to get going again. More...
Maurice Burns
Maurice Burns bright, kinetic painting style lends itself to the musical characters he depicts with flair and delight. You just might want to put on some jazz and turn the gallery into a dance hall. More...
Martin Ramirez
Mexican immigrant Martin Ramirez arrived in the U.S. only to be institutionalized with schizophrenia, where he began to draw. And draw. More...
The Greatest Rediscovery?
The rediscovered da Vinci portrait of Jesus goes up for auction, and a new biography's film rights promise a big 21st century moment. More...
“Future Shock”
SITE Santa Fe itself is part of the story, reopening after more than a year of new construction with "Future Shock," whose ten artists present installations that offer mostly unsettling visions of why we should be anxious about the near future. More...
Manuel Álvarez Bravo
This relatively small selection still manages to include much of what made Manuel Alvarez Bravo one of the 20th century's great photographers. More...
“Video Art in Latin America”
The timeline of "Video Art in Latin America" dates from the 1970s, and an installation of hanging bunches of bananas draws the primary attention - both visually and aromatically. It's all arranged according to six themes. More...
Ato Ribeiro
The quilts that Ato Ribeiro makes are not with cloth and stitches but with discarded wood imbued with layers of meaning. More...
Francisco Toldeo
A series of self-portraits that comprise the entirety of Francisco Toledo's current show take us to a profound and honest view of the man. More...
Ray Mack
Newcomer Ray Mack makes zany narrative tableaux that are hilariously warped quotations of images familiar from art history. More...