Editorial Archive


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Frohawk Two Feathers
Frengland is a fictional colonial empire, and it serves as the aesthetic foundation for the art of Umar Rashid, aka Frohawk Two Features. More...


Edward Burtynsky
Edward Burtynsky's large scale aerial photographs are spectacular. Viewing the painterly pattens of landscape seen from afar is pure eye candy, but the effects of human development that often abuses that same landscape has a powerful effect on our moral conscience. More...


Matthew Mullins
The patterns and textures of New Mexico's landscape serve as the taking off point for Matthew Mullins, who is constantly looking for connections. More...


Jenny Heishman
Jenny Heishman does not exhibit a large number of works, but the "rugs" here are surprisingly composed from pulped paper, one corner curled up. They may strike us as unprepossessing at first, but reward staying with them. More...


Frank Sampson
Now in his 90s, Frank Sampson remains a vital force. His recent allegorical paintings are emotionally and formally complex. More...


“Group Therapy”
Outlandish pseudoscience of the 19th century informs the artists included in "Group Therapy', who use it to make more serious points. More...


Michael Viglietta
Text is prevalent in Michael Miglietta's imagery, but it serves to have us consider our own mental and emotional landscapes. More...


Pascal Pierme
Pascal Pierme explains the unusual title of his exhibition "Hylê Forever“ -- "What will happen if I mix this with that…?” More...


Belltown Blues (Part 2)
Concluding his account of the brief period of Belltown's key impact on Seattle's art culture, several of the most important talents are recalled. More...


Belltown Blues (Part 2)
Concluding his account of the brief period of Belltown's key impact on Seattle's art culture, several of the most important talents are recalled. More...


Tonika Lewis Johnson
Tonika Lewis Johnson interviews Chicago residents on opposite north and south ends of longitudinal running streets. Not surprisingly the neighborhoods they reflect are utterly different. The point, though, is that Johnson brings these "Map Twins" together. More...


Jo Ann Callis
Jo Ann Callis' photography, sculptures and paintings are witty, sensual and unexpected, even after more than 40 years of practice. It is the photography she is best known for, images that offer suggestions but not clear answers. More...


When Artists Play with Fire
Certain of the exhibitions in San Francisco that Richard Speer recently visited refreshed memories of the recent wildfires the consumed so much acreage in Northern California. Coincidental these shows may have been, but that renders the symbolism that much more felt. More...


Sharon Ellis
Sharon Ellis interprets nature by observing with care and internalizing its forces. It is her rich use of pattern set dramatically against fields of color that produces dreamlike visions that are mesmerizing to look at. More...


“Living with Clay”
"Living with Clay" provides some answers to the question why some people amass large collections of ceramic art. More...

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