Nancy Monk
Nancy Monk spins a whimsical take on the wonders of nature using terse visual means and a deceptively complex working process. More...
Noah Purifoy
A desire for change fueled the assemblage of Noah Purifoy, who first came to attention with a series in response to the Watt Riots of 1964, and much later retired to Joshua Tree to create the most ambitious works of his career. More...
Sherry Karver
Sherry Karver enhanced photography-based images with both paint and text, using the latter to take us within figures in a crowd. More...
“Straight from Cuba”
"Straight from Cuba" offers three artists who represent the aesthetic diversity and dynamism newly accessible to the American audience. More...
Edward Burtynsky
Edward Burtynsky addresses a dichotomy between abundance and loss in a selection of vivid aerial photography. More...
Christine Frerichs
The layers of scarred and molded paint Christine Frerichs are expressive, but rejects predecessors' anxiety. More...
Katherine Rohrbacher
Katherine Rohrbacher’s recent quirky but delicate self-portraits hold a metaphorical mirror to her personal, physical and emotional struggles. More...
Sharon Feder
Sharon Feder has the ability to transform the ordinary into something extra-ordinary, a telephone pole is more than just that. More...
Kim MacConnel
Kim MacConnel's "Avenida Revolucion" paintings place you in the middle of a technicolor spectacle of a parade down the streets of a Mexican town, while a "Black and White" series manage to keep the energy level high. More...
Robert Ginder
Robert Ginder's gold leaf embellished portraits of post-war Los Angeles suburban bungalows treat our own recent history as though it were centuries old. The point is to rethink the ordinary and the role of art itself. More...
Carol Es
Carol Es' "The Exodus Project" displays her penchant for bright color and rough form. Here is also documented the creative stimulation that came with her stay in Joshua Tree National Park. More...
Ruth Pastine
Color and system is the name of the game for Ruth Pastine. Her rhythmic layerings are full of harmony even as the volume of hues are turned up to a full blast. These paintings are both thoughtful and visceral. More...
David Kapp
The urgency of urban life is the real subject of David Kapp's paintings of architecture and crowds thickly painted and full of kinetic energy. More...
Yu Ji
Yu Ji's figurative works display a mastery of obsessive detail that isolate individuals within their own worlds. More...
Dani Tull
This romp of an exhibition by Dani Tull connects up all kinds of unrelated metaphors for developing consciousness. More...
Robert Williams
Recent paintings and sculpture by Robert Williams feature the rich, convoluted psychedelia and outside the box thought process we are all familiar with. Highlights from Juxtapoz, the mag he co-founded twenty years ago, enrich the mix. More...
Ben Jackel
Sculptural replicas of masculine accouterments of aggression and protection reflect Ben Jackel's equivocal and poignant referencing of male heroics. More...
Fred Tomaselli
Fred Tomaselli records his personal and aesthetic response to daily reality of the twenty-first century as it arrives daily upon his Brooklyn doorstep with the delivery of his copy of The New York Times. More...
Jessica Rath
Using sculpture, light, and sound to illustrate the methods used by bumblebees to find "A Better Nectar," Jessica Rath's multi-sensory installation is both aesthetically vigorous and highly informative. More...