Fred Stonehouse
Fred Stonehouse's human-animal chimeras act out surreal and enigmatic folkloric narratives that consistently fascinate. More...
Lawren Harris
Well recognized in Canada, Lawren Harris' early modern depictions of the northern landscape are something of a revelation for their clarity of abstract interpretation without straying from confident evocations of nature and the environment. More...
Not Vanishing / (Re)Presenting
These two museum exhibitions examine how Native Americans have been depicted and how they address contemporary issues. More...
Jay Kvapil
Tightly formed and beautifully pure, Jay Kvapil's current series of ceramic vessels are titled "Control and Chaos" for their glazed surfaces, which are exceptionally deep and luminous. More...
New Art Meets Historic Monuments
Site-specific art is being brought to each of San Antonio's five historic missions in the rural terrain of Mission Reach district. The first two completed projects, by Stacy Levy and Arne Quinze successfully wed contemporary art to key historical structures. More...
Bill Dambrova
Bill Dambrova's take on human anatomy is at once anarchically psychedelic yet harmoniously composed. More...
Leslie Kenneth Price
The abstract works of Leslie Kenneth Price are the product of a strong lineage, attentive observation and a vigorous approach to painting. More...
Peat Duggins
The sheer power of blind, amoral nature is expressed with power and elegance by Peat Duggins. Animals and animal parts are depicted with a realism that makes you wonder if these are, perhaps, hunting trophies. Don't be fooled. More...
Kelley Devine
In her close-ups of faces--both her own and friends'--are combined with collaged texts that suggest the subjects' inner life. More...
Todd Christensen
Books discarded by libraries and obtained at rummage sales are torn, written on and otherwise repurposed into Todd Christensen's neurotic reflections and a flowing installation of numerous volumes attached to the walls. More...
“One Cannot Look: Graphic Wars”
Pairing the graphic depictions of war and violence by Spanish artists Francisco de Goya and Rafael Canogar offers contrasting ways of making us look closely from what we normally prefer to avert our gaze. More...
Barry McGee
The impression of chaos is by design. Barry McGee's manic energy sharpens into a joyful but socially engaged installation. More...
Thomas Gardiner
How Americans and Canadiens are viewed in other parts of the world is a question and engages photographer Thomas Gardiner, a Canadian whose images convey the perspective of an outsider who is both dazzled and troubled by what he sees. More...
Lipogram Vanity
Do art critics love to play word games? James Yood reminds us that they are, after all, WRITERS; it's OK to have fun with the raw material. More...
Lynn Aldrich
The latter day ready-mades of Lynn Aldrich come from hardware and office supply stores but are imbued with spiritual qualities. More...
“The Many Faces of Modernism”
This is one among a series of shows on the subject of Modernism in New Mexico, and is the best outside of the larger museum shows. More...
“Ten: Modern Abstract”
Spotlighting how ten Arizona artists get to their own place within the broad genre of abstraction allows for some sifting. Some of the work here doesn't rise above blandness and design, but enough does to convince us its continual power to take us where we have not been. More...
“MOMMY”
From the reassuring to the not-so warm and fuzzy, a range of recent works on motherhood is hardly unmined territory, but this group still provokes. More...
Virginia Katz
Virginia Katz definitely makes landscape paintings, but piles on the paint until they become sculptural. But it is her feel for environmental issues that makes them resonant. More...