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Exhibitions

Picture This

BY ANDREA DINOTO

Chris Antemann: Battle of the Britches
Jason Walker: Human Made Wild
Ferrin Gallery
Pittsfield, Massachusetts
August 1 – September 12, 2009

Both of these concurrent shows of surface-decorated ceramic sculpture present startling, witty and subversive works by a second-generation artist of the genre.

Words and Work

Craft in Unexpected Places

From opposite directions, two Los Angeles museums—The Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens and the Museum of Contemporary Art—succumb to the collaborative charms of craft.

Question: What's the most exciting show you've seen lately?

Paul Chan’s exhibition “My laws are my whores,” at the Renaissance Society, University of Chicago, perhaps because it countered my expectations. I’d seen Chan’s work a few times, and I was expecting an incredibly visual, somewhat poetic exhibition. Portraits of Supreme Court justices greeted viewers at the Ren, high on the entrance wall, and on the other side of the wall was a projection of vibrating naked bodies in sexual and tortuous postures.
It was a tough show, formally commanding and disturbing in a thought-provoking way.

Kaleidoscopic Quilts: Paula Nadelstern

Kaleidoscopic Quilts: The Art of Paula Nadelstern
American Folk Art Museum
New York, New York
April 21-September 13, 2009

Remember your own childlike wonder when you held a kaleidoscope in your hands and quietly marveled at the shifting, dissolving color patterns created by a gentle turn? The quilt artist Paula Nadelstern takes a viewer back to that wonder, the pure visual pleasure first seen in a small tube.

Letter from the Editor: Threads

When I used to visit New York galleries with an artist friend, we were often amused to notice a “theme of the day”—an inexplicable recurrence of some feature or device in various shows. Once, I remember, we saw peepholes everywhere. In my recent perambulations, it was fiber I saw again and again, much of it from the hands of artists who never studied the material or its traditional techniques and who would not consider themselves craftspeople. But they have obviously yielded to fiber’s tactile appeal, visual strengths or social implications.

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