Honor the Wanderjahre
James Yood's real New Year is the start of the school year, and he serves a reminder of the special calling and challenge of choosing art. More...
Larry Kornegay and Bill Timmerman
Larry Kornegay and Bill Timmerman share an aesthetic of “do more with less” — Kornegay through found-object and cast concrete sculptures; Timmerman through modestly scaled, atmospheric black-and-white photographs. More...
Heirlooms from the F. Scott Hess Family Foundation
What may have started as a simple task to check his ancestry, painter F. Scott Hess evolved into a gigantic, multifaceted departure presented to the public as "The Paternal Suit: Heirlooms from the F. Scott Hess Family Foundation." More...
Houghton Hall
Houghton Hall, located in Norfolk, England shares selections from Sir Robert Walpole's collection of Old Master paintings and decorative arts. More...
Klingbiel and Somers
Karl Klingbiel presents seemingly windblown abstract paintings; together with Marti Somers' collaged imagery immersed in encaustic. More...
Lucy + Jorge Orta
Lucy and Jorge Orta's collaborative projects encompass design, architecture, couture and a research organization. More...
"Made in L.A."
"Made in L.A." is the Hammer Museum's biennial nod to what is hot, new, trendy and not to be missed in Los Angeles. Strong threads of personal vulnerability inform the often obsessive work here. More...
Jeremy Thomas
Jeremy Thomas’ new sculpture is for the proletariat: the collection of works make for an upbeat collection of industry meets art. More...
Ilona Pachler
Two major events, both floods of historic proportions, anchor Ilona Pachler's look at memory's fleeting nature. More...
Bill Braun
What looks like cute little paper cut-out folk collages by Bill Braun are in fact meticulously rendered paintings that creates palpable tension between the physical and the conceptual. More...
James Ensor
James Ensor had two brilliant careers, first as an avant-garde Realist and then as a forerunner of modern Expressionism. More...
For Whom I Write
In his continuing commentary of Irving Sandler's 14 questions, DeWitt Cheng suggests who writers write for is less important than what should fairly be expected of the reader. More...
Alan Sekula
"Ship of Fools," Alan Sekula's last series, are maritime images of docked ships and dockworkers that reflect themes of labor, transport and globalization. More...
Ross Palmer Beecher
Ross Palmer Beecher's cut-and-woven recycled metal quilts are an utterly unique amalgam of folk art, Pop Art and social-political art. More...
Abigail McLaurin
Family scenes based on period snapshots from the immediate post-WW II era provide ample source material for Abigail McLaurin's energetic canvas that combine rawness and precise detail. More...
Christopher Benson
Paintings quiet interiors and desolate street scenes by Christopher Benson squeeze out narrative and expression in favor of crisp, clear formalism. More...
Auguste Rodin
When Auguste Rodin drew on paper his powerful hands carved form in space as if manipulating pliant clay or obdurate stone. More...
Yoshitomo Saito
Yoshitomo Saito uses mimesis creatively and magically, a key to which is his full embrace of the Italian investment method of bronze casting--which he does himself. And each bronze is unique. More...
The New Interactivity
Influenced by rapidly evolving digital technologies, many artists have become attracted to new interactive possibilities. More...
"Measurable Inconsistencies"
In the hands of Richard Blackwell, Cole Pierce, and Zin Helena Song the practice of geometric abstraction is shown to retain a capacity for deviation and playfulness. More...