Aeqai has returned with its combined January/February, 2018, issue, which has just posted. What’s particularly engaging about this issue is the range of exhibitions covered (and people profiled), as we’re living in a transitional world in the visual arts, and are witnessing a time where the internet’s presence and importance, particularly to younger artists, is […]
Archive for February, 2018
January/February Issue of Aeqai Online
February 19th, 2018 | by Daniel Brown | published in Announcements
(Im)material Culture, Alienation Affect, and the Jeffrey Cortland Jones’ Curious Social Experiment
February 19th, 2018 | by Ekin Erkan | published in *, January/February 2018
Traversing the Art Academy of Cincinnati’s galleries via the looming, metallic stairwell, Covergys Gallery is perhaps the easiest to miss between the larger Pearlman and Childlaw Galleries. A sweeping horizontal pocket within a wall, the second floor gallery is at once invitational and necessarily participatory – it simply can not be ignored, as it effectively […]
Kit-Bashing and Assembling Political Art: Glenn Kaino: A Shout within a Storm at The Contemporary Arts Center, November 17, 2017-April 22, 2018
February 19th, 2018 | by Jonathan Kamholtz | published in *
One of the least sculptural of the wondrous works at the mid-career retrospective of sculptor Glenn Kaino’s work at the Contemporary Arts Center is a two-dimensional graphic that looks like an ancient map that has been housed in an archive with a leaky roof. Shapes and outlines are beautiful but discontinuous; areas that might represent […]
Review of Jens Jensen at Cincinnati Art Galleries
February 19th, 2018 | by Daniel Brown | published in *, January/February 2018
Cincinnati Art Galleries has managed to represent the estate of the late modernist painter Jens Jensen, and an exhibition of this artist’s work is currently on view at Cincinnati Art Galleries downtown. It’s difficult to describe the delight and joy at looking at an excellent modernist in today’s highly politicized and digitalized postmodern world: Jensen’s […]
Bridging Inter-Spaces and Navigating Contemporary Feminist Art
February 19th, 2018 | by Ekin Erkan | published in *, January/February 2018
Planned prior to Trump’s presidency, the 21C Museum Hotel’s The Future is Female displays a myriad of international female artists – ranging in their modalities and sociopolitical concerns – whose works bridge third and fourth-wave feminist concerns. Built on the foreground of second-wave feminism’s civil rights advances, the third-wave occupies subjectivity and inclusive diversity, […]
Profile, Linda Schwartz
February 19th, 2018 | by Jane Durrell | published in *
“I like artists and scientists,” Linda Schwartz told me. We were seated at the dining table in her art-filled house, with tea and a barely touched plate of cookies, talking about her career in art. The other two occupants of the house, a pair of small but stocky, very vocal black dogs, had been shushed […]
Interview with Eric Avner of The Haile Foundation
February 19th, 2018 | by Daniel Brown | published in January/February 2018
“Interwoven/Contemporary Textiles,” Marta Hewett Gallery, through March 9, 2018
February 19th, 2018 | by Karen Chambers | published in January/February 2018
The aim of “Interwoven/Contemporary Textiles” at the Marta Hewett Gallery is to explore “traditional and alternative textile materials.” Despite the diversity of what’s on view, the exhibition can be divided into artists who use traditional techniques and materials, and others who use alternative materials but still work with basically traditional techniques. In the first category, […]
Rethinking Cincinnati’s Fountain Place
February 19th, 2018 | by Stewart Maxwell | published in January/February 2018
One of America’s most important potential development properties is the current Downtown Macy’s Department Store’s and Tiffany & Co.’s site called Fountain Place {formerly Fountain Square West}, situated from Race to Vine Streets along Fifth Street. Located on the western edge of Fountain Square, it is in the heart of our city and across the […]
Review of Jim Condron and Timothy Horjus at Goucher University
February 19th, 2018 | by Bret McCabe | published in January/February 2018
A broken-down 1940s tractor sits in Goucher University’s Silber Gallery in Baltimore, Md., like an escaped relic from a history museum. Its large knobby tires are cracked with age, the plow hitched to it is rusted beyond use, and there’s a large chest wound in the engine block where a motor used to cough this […]
First Nations Art Preserved and Celebrated at the Audain Museum Whistler, B.C., Canada
February 19th, 2018 | by Cynthia Kukla | published in January/February 2018
The masks of the Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast are powerful objects that assist us in defining our place in the cosmos. In a world of endless change and complexity, masks offer a continuum for Native people to acknowledge our connection to the universe. -Chief Robert Joseph (Down from the Shimmering Sky, 1998) […]
Fitton Center for Creative Arts: An Emphasis on Community
February 19th, 2018 | by Laura Hobson | published in January/February 2018
Fitton Center for Creative Arts in Hamilton, Ohio focuses on community engagement. It has served as part of the community as a nonprofit arts organization for over twenty years. The center offers four rotating exhibits annually; live performances in a black box theater; a luncheon series; a wide variety of visual and performing arts classes, […]
Nick Cave: FEAT. // The Frist Center for Visual Art // Nashville, Tennesse
February 19th, 2018 | by Megan Bickel | published in January/February 2018
My visit to Nashville in December brought me to the Frist Center for the Visual Arts for the first time since its opening in April of 2001. If you’re unfamiliar, the Frist Center inhabits one of Nashville’s historic landmarks, the former main post office built in the early 1930’s. The building is a quite striking […]
Elysium
February 19th, 2018 | by Jenny Perusek | published in January/February 2018
“Every flower is a soul blossoming in nature.” – Guo Pei Elysium, originally a word not commonly used in our modern vernacular, has become a part of the zeitgeist of fashion and pop culture. What is Elysium? It’s a yearly artistic installation that captures the attention of Hollywood celebrities and fashion elite in Los Angeles […]
An Interview With Jessica Cannon about FAR X WIDE a New Initiative in Fundraising Fueled by Contemporary Art
February 19th, 2018 | by Jack Wood | published in January/February 2018
I have known Jessica Cannon now for nearly two and a half years. We met through instagram, which is the lightning rod for image based culture and the social community that revolves around it. I loved the way Jes painted landscapes, untethered as if everything might turn into snow, or as if mutated by […]
Weldon Butler’s at G. Gibson Gallery
February 19th, 2018 | by Martha Dunham | published in January/February 2018
Weldon Butler’s show at G. Gibson Gallery reveals the hidden forces at work in Seattle. Although Weldon Butler’s artwork is in the collections of the Seattle Art Museum as well as numerous design and architectural firms, it is not well known locally and it should be. Here, he is finally brought to the foreground in […]
"HARD: Subversive Representation" at UMass Boston
February 19th, 2018 | by Joelle Jameson | published in January/February 2018
Fotofolio – Jerry Birchfield
February 19th, 2018 | by Kent Krugh | published in January/February 2018
“Yes, They Were Made to Level” Jerry’s statement: The title, Yes, They Were Made to Level, comes from an answer to my question about the function of holes in the concrete driveway on which the exhibition was to be first installed. While concrete layers and homeowners might know perfectly well what holes in a driveway […]
Across Borders: Two Artists Respond to Nature Mystically Emily Carr at the Audain Museum, Whistler, B.C. and The Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver, B.C. Charles Burchfield at The Burchfield Penney Art Center-SUNY at Buffalo State University, Buffalo, New York
February 19th, 2018 | by Cynthia Kukla | published in January/February 2018
Emily Carr is one of those heroic early 20th century artists who should escape attention no more. It was her singular vision to document the magic of the British Columbian wilderness and to be the very first artist who recognized and painted the magnificence of First Nations’ peoples’ totems that existed throughout British Columbia and […]
A Brief Elaboration of a Tube: Letita Quesenberry and Aaron Rosenblum at Huff Gallery (Spalding University)
February 19th, 2018 | by Megan Bickel | published in January/February 2018
A Brief Elaboration of a Tube is equal parts local soundscape fiction and monument to reflection and introspection. Huff Gallery is located in the basement of the library of Spalding University (Louisville, Kentucky); a suitable location for an installation as subversive and introspective as this. As the viewer enters the space from the main stairwell, […]
The Material Girls’ Exhibition XOXO at the Museum of Human Achievement
February 19th, 2018 | by Jack Wood | published in January/February 2018
The Material Girls’ exhibition XOXO opened at the Museum of Human Achievement (MOHA) on the 19th of January and remained there until the 28th. I discovered the Material Girls through Gracelee Lawrence who is part of the collective and with whom I also attended Guilford College. Rather coincidentally we both ended up in Texas for […]
Notes on Today from Tomorrow
February 19th, 2018 | by Libby Andress | published in January/February 2018
Questions of creative identity and displacement loom large for the show entitled, “Notes on Today from Tomorrow” curated by C. Miles Turner at IRL Gallery, which ran January 5th through 26th. featuring four artists of Greek identity. In Esmeralda Kosmatopoulos’ Oracle – Typing video of long-winded text messages, relying on random predictive text and garbled logic, gives way to […]
Tiger Lily Press: Working Artist Program, Brazee Art Gallery. Through February 23, 2018
February 19th, 2018 | by Amy Bogard | published in January/February 2018
In this world so chock full of the ‘printed image’ in one form or another–read: magazines, online avenues, etc..—one can easily overlook a show of Prints at a local studio/gallery space. “Prints” can be found everywhere, ubiquitous and constant. But one must not confuse a mere printed image with the actual art of Printmaking. In […]
Jenny Erpenbeck’s “Go, Went, Gone”
February 19th, 2018 | by Daniel Brown | published in January/February 2018
“Go, Went, Gone”, by German writer Jenny Erpenbeck, is one of the best novels to date about the subject of immigration/migrants/emigrants. The title is particularly evocative, since the African migrants around whom this novel is written, are being taught the German language, simply because they have nothing else to do–they are not allowed to work–and the […]
Romain Gary’s “The Kites”
February 19th, 2018 | by Daniel Brown | published in January/February 2018
I’d never read anything by the multi-talented French writer Romain Gary before, and “The Kites” appears to be a sequel to other novels he wrote. “The Kites” is a powerful novel about The French Resistance in occupied Normandy just before and during the Nazi occupation there. Gary himself, originally a Lithuanian Jew, left for France […]