Anne Siems, “Inner Wild”
Inscriptions of tattoos on the necks, bodies, and shaved heads of teenage girls lend them the feel of punk centerfolds, and marks a departure for Anne Siems. More...
Dion Johnson
The contemporary take on hard-edge painting by Dion Johnson is vibrant and oscillating, as the show's title promises. More...
No Body: ​Mike Rea and Casey Whittier
In “No Body,” Kansas City artist Casey Whittier and Chicagoan Mike Rea realize an unlikely pairing of absurdity and serious craft. Whittier's cast glass represents things worn on or close to the body. Rea's mosaic-like images look abstract at first before resolving into gear like bodice harnesses. More...
Jeff Wall
Jeff Wall puts our powers of observation to the test in this group of large-scale digital prints. They initially are believable, but the performers' actions are both open ended and illogical so as to thwart interpretation. More...
“were-: Nenetech Forms”
Colonizer narratives crumble amid the weight of collective mythologies, where collaborative labor has given rise to “were-: Nenetech Forms,” an exhibition exploring migration, transformation, and survival in the Sonoran Desert. More...
The Visual Adventures of Robert Williams
Robert Williams' darkly narrative paintings are steeped in the car and counter cultures of the 1960s and came to play a central role in the now well established lowbrow culture. Conventional life collides with apocalyptic, surreal scenes. More...
Jennifer Ling Datchuk, “Later, Longer, Fewer”
The title of Jennifer Ling Datchuk's exhibition, “Later, Longer, Fewer,” refers to China’s controversial one-child policy. The works reflect how well attuned she is to inequities that impede women and reflect diverse subject matter that lends the show emotional resonance. More...
Robin Kandel
Robin Kandel's pencil drawings both pare down to parallel stripe structures and allow her to work spontaneously against those stripes to produce a host of varied results. The titles she comes up with favor the poetic impulse over analytic control. More...
Kim Dingle, “Pudgey Pomona”
Among Kim Dingle’s aliases’ is Pudgey Pomona, a faux curator that frees up the artist to mix and match impulses. The group show approach she strives to achieve, however, is eclipsed by the consistency of her sensibility. More...
Joel-Peter Witkin, “Journeys of the Soul”
Joel-Peter Witkin’s meticulously crafted tableaux combine the human form, still life objects, and nature to reveal his own fondness for traversing unfamiliar paths. Subjects' physical manifestations prompt complex reactions typically reduced to expressions of fear or loathing. More...
Tristan Eaton, “All At Once”
Tristan Eaton may be best known to the public for toy designs, but also for his many murals with a message. The very volume of work here makes it clear that he is not to be pigeonholed. More...
Max Cole, “The Bounding Circle”
Covering around 50 years, Max Cole's rigorous abstract paintings and prints must eventually focus the eye on her minuscule and repetitive linework. More...
Gabriella Sanchez, “Partial Pictures”
“Partial Pictures” explores family issues of class, race, addiction and serial imprisonment, while the sweep of the exhibition demonstrates Gabriella Sanchez’s profound aesthetic sensibilities. More...
Anna Mavromatis
Anna Mavromatis' suspended three-dimensional dresses constructed from folded and printed paper bear social and political messaging. More...
Jeffrey Cortland Jones
In his paintings Jeffrey Cortland Jones explores urban spaces and rural landscapes via abstraction. He exploits the way color seeps and refracts, its interaction with light, from within to the exterior of each work. More...
Karen Reimer
A repurposed fabric construction from an 2016 installation now becomes "Sea Change," essentially cool quilts end up anything but. More...
Mel Prest
Mel Prest’s “Color Unfolding” paintings of overlaid stripes initially look like precionist Op Art, but it's all hand done. It makes all the difference. More...
David Wilson
In an art world advanced by technology and virtual reality, in “Sittings” David Wilson taps into the real world and immerses us in it. More...
Jacques Garnier
Jacques Garnier has a passion for architecture, art history and poetry that shapes a series of striking black and white photographs. More...
Wade Guyton
Wade Guyton makes his paintings on the computer, culling newspaper images, textures, his own images ... and glitches. More...