Month: March 2021
Constitutionally Flawed
María Korol’s artist project traces the subtext of history and autobiography in her practice of layered obfuscation.
Resisting the Spectacle
Sasha Cordingley explores the shift in representations of pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, from the international news media’s spectacle to the intimate banalities of continual struggle, in Resisting the Spectacle—Tiffany Sia’s Never Rest/Unrest.
Cajsa von Zeipel: Nine Lives
Mimicry, Camouflage, Transformation
Letter from the Editor
Alexa Horochowski: Nomeacuerdo (I-don’t-remember-land)
There Will Be Sacrifices Along The Way
Across six paintings, Tori Tinsley tells the story of a parent, a child, and their donkey helper.
After Carolee: Tender and Fierce
The Museum Union Wave
No one could remember a time when wages for work in the arts met the cost of living in an American city.
A Living Presence + and the body, Felix, where is it?
Christian’s essay and machado’s poem produce a dialogue that—in content and form—responds to the work of Felix Gonzalez-Torres. These interwoven texts can be read separately or as one dialogue in two voices.