Criticism
Tuesday, April 21st, 2020
The American artist Kara Walker poses questions about slavery’s history and legacy with a major UK commission. ...
Wednesday, April 8th, 2020
The work of earlier artists can be found in scenes from this expat Russian painter’s adolescence. ...
Thursday, January 23rd, 2020
An exhibition that follows a fashion designer as she channels the spirit of her times ...

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

Janet Malcolm: “Burdock” at Lori Bookstein Fine Art

Janet Malcolm at Lori Bookstein Fine Art

Monday, September 29th, 2008

Rirkrit Tiravanija: Demonstration Drawings at the Drawing Center

There is a limited range of drawing styles, which tends to be competent enough but generally stilted, illustrative, and a bit nerdish. One wonders whether the difference in treatment that does come across is purely a matter of the individual draftsman’s hand or whether different speeds of movement in the scenes depicted — orderly placid drudging through dreary East European streets versus violent clashes with riot-geared police in some steamy tropical town — account for these differences.

Monday, September 29th, 2008

Diana Al-Hadid: Reverse Collider at Perry Rubenstein Gallery

Al-Hadid has been hooked on towers for several years now, involved in what can be taken as a reverse Watts Towers syndrome — instead of transforming found, non-art materials to create an aspirational edifice, she deploys considerable artistry to depict with a literalist intensity state of the art, fabricated structures in a frozen instant of failure.

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

Geo/Metric: Prints and Drawings from the Collection at The Museum of Modern Art, New York

After being run through the pressure chamber of Conceptual Art, geometric forms for many artists working today are not indicative of a strict allegiance to any kind of school of non-objective thought or practice. From the storied history laid out in the rooms of “Geo/Metric” it seems that geometry in art has indeed reached its highest accomplishment: the freedom of eternal fresh starts.

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

First Annual Governor’s Island Art Fair, Organized by 4heads Collective

The art fair is billed as “organized entirely by artists, for artists—and the public’s enjoyment.” What a pleasant change of pace from most of our big art fairs, especially the various Armory Shows, which are organized by dealers and have nothing but booths named for dealers.

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

Robert Bordo: it’s always raining at Alexander and Bonin

His new exhibition, Three Point Turn, is on view through April 27

Sunday, September 14th, 2008

Su Xinping: Toasting

One does not want to exaggerate Su’s gloom, but an unspoken anguish works its way into most of his art. His paintings beckon toward an isolation that is as moral as it is esthetic, so completely existential is its underpinnings.

Sunday, September 14th, 2008

John Ashbery: Collages at Tibor de Nagy Gallery, Mario Naves: Postcards from Florida at Elizabeth Harris Gallery and Trevor Winkfield at Tibor de Nagy Gallery

Is there something intrinsic to the appeal of collage to writers — to moving bits of paper around in startling, revelatory juxtapositions? The coincidence of two shows of collages by writers of markedly different ilk – a sometime poet laureate and a member of the third estate – begs the question.

Sunday, September 14th, 2008

If Love Could Have Saved You, You Would Have Lived Forever: Curated by Becky Smith

Like the bastard twin of metaphysics, we want art to tell us the meaning of it all.

Monday, September 8th, 2008

Nature Interrupted: Curated by Elga Wimmer

Artists, like everyone else in the world, are worried about the consequences of global warming in the natural world; moreover, they realize that the damage is psychic and imaginative as well as terribly real.