“The work of art employs a triggering device – a call to seek and reflect – that makes conscious what has been buried in the unconscious, drawing the viewer into awareness.” Clint Woods Cincinnati based artist and designer, Clint Woods, is currently exhibiting in the Lindner Gallery at the Kennedy Heights Art Center. Woods declares […]
May/June 2017
The Way of Everyday Life: Clint Woods at the KHAC
June 10th, 2017 | by Marlene Steele | published in *, May/June 2017
Would you like a Lozenge? A Studio Visit with Angela Heisch
June 10th, 2017 | by Jack Wood | published in *, May/June 2017
The Power of Us
June 10th, 2017 | by Hannah Leow | published in May/June 2017
Nestled in the bustling business district of Oakley Square, C-LINK Gallery is host to The Power of Us and all its fem glory. On display all too briefly, this socially centric exhibition features fifteen artists from May 11 – June 2 of this year. Extracting optimism from the formidable, curator Pam Kravetz brings together a […]
Rebranding Communism, Deconstructing Dreams, Shooting to Thrill: The Propeller Group at Blaffer
June 10th, 2017 | by Joelle Jameson | published in May/June 2017
Listening to a college radio station on my way to Blaffer Art Museum, I heard the song “The American Dream” from the musical “Miss Saigon.” You know—the one with the helicopter, wherein a Vietnamese prostitute is impregnated, and then abandoned, by an American GI. Pieces like “Miss Saigon” are pervasive in the west’s perception of […]
“Resplendent Tendencies” Is an Opportunity to Observe an Emerging Artist’s Evolution in Real Time
June 10th, 2017 | by Anise Stevens | published in May/June 2017
Makan Negahban is a self-taught, first generation Iranian-American artist who initially gained attention for his portraits in oil. Only until recently did he start experimenting with acrylic on paper. While Negahban’s interest remains rooted in portraiture, his approach has clearly evolved as evidenced in “Resplendent Tendencies,” currently on view at Co-Lab Gallery in Los Angeles. […]
Kentucky Museum of Art and Craft // The Drawing Center: “Thread Lines”
June 10th, 2017 | by Megan Bickel | published in May/June 2017
This group exhibition features fifteen artists who utilize sewing, knitting, and weaving to create a wide-range of works that activate the expressive and conceptual potential of line and illuminate affinities between the mediums of textile and drawing. Multi-generational and international in scope, Thread Lines brings together those pioneers who—challenging entrenched modernist hierarchies—first unraveled the distinction […]
Maxime Van Melkebeke
June 10th, 2017 | by Megan Bickel | published in May/June 2017
This article is reproduced courtesy of Five-Dots and all images are courtesy of Maxime Van Melkeke. For this edition of Five-Dots, Megan got to chat with Maxime Van Melkebeke via email coorespondance over the past two months about his project Offspace.xyz. We won’t waste our breath divulging how great it was of an experience, we’ll […]
Fotofolio – Ellen Cantor
June 10th, 2017 | by Kent Krugh | published in May/June 2017
Orca Endgame: SeaWorld's Survival Mission
June 10th, 2017 | by Annabel Osberg | published in May/June 2017
Truly, SeaWorld seems like a world in itself. That the aquarium-amusement park hybrid offers an experience unlike any other explains its success since 1964. Surrounded by ambient piped-in music, bubbles, and sundry other artifices, visitors can watch shows, ride roller coasters, play with animals, and immerse themselves in huge aquariums, all in the same day. […]
Area Presses Offer Services to Artists
June 10th, 2017 | by Laura Hobson | published in May/June 2017
The need for graffiti but dont risk your life for it
June 10th, 2017 | by Julia Davis | published in May/June 2017
Well to my surprise I found a gem in the original slums of London, Whitechapel, which is a neighborhood known for the atrocious acts of Jack the Ripper in the 1800s. Since then it has become a popular area for the city, with the financial district nearby, with ever growing business endeavors, and a great […]
Mary DeVincentis’ “Fables of the Reconstruction”
June 10th, 2017 | by Jack Wood | published in May/June 2017
While I was in New York, during my second day in the city, I finished a studio visit with Angela Heisch, and headed to David & Schweitzer Contemporary to see Mary DeVincentis’ paintings in a group show called Fables of the Reconstruction. The title of the exhibition is taken from the R.E.M. album of the […]
A Gross Mishandling of the Female Nude, From Cool to Warm, Anselm Kiefer at Gagosian New York
June 10th, 2017 | by Jack Wood | published in May/June 2017
We Wear Culture
June 10th, 2017 | by Jenny Perusek | published in May/June 2017
As the world’s top designers showcase their Resort 2018 collections to a waiting-with-baited-breath audience, here’s where we are, as of this writing, as not all of the collections have been released yet. Those shown thus far for this in-between season have been beautifully conceptualized – Prada joined the Resort fashion ranks for the first time […]
Maxwell’s Poetry Corner
June 10th, 2017 | by Maxwell Redder | published in May/June 2017
Would’ve Been Could’ve Been But only one was an astute enough navigator through the precarious tunnels, and strong enough to break through the egg’s rigid shell. A monikered tadpole. An industrious radical. A traveler transformed into a cellular stronghold. She blasted off to blastocyst nine months passed. She’s near to seeing it all- including the […]
Kayla Rae Whitaker’s “The Animators”
June 10th, 2017 | by Daniel Brown | published in May/June 2017
Zoom to your nearest bookstore or library and get ahold of The Animators, by Kayla Rae Whitaker, as it’s by far the best debut novel of 2017. Ebulliently written and full of the kind of energy that big cities seem to generate in people, Whitaker presents two young women, both of whom are from rural backgrounds, […]
Pajtim Statovici’s “My Cat Yugoslavia”
June 10th, 2017 | by Daniel Brown | published in May/June 2017
Another intriguing and often brilliant debut novel, Pajtim Statovci’s My Cat Yugoslavia is particularly timely and topical as it deals with the dislocations of immigration. The novel has two different narrators, which is a fascinating literary trope: one is (at first) a young, marriageable woman in a small Serbian town in the former Yugoslavia, and the other […]