Interviews Catherine Telford Keogh on Sculpting Trash and Compressed Landfill into Striking Assemblages "Sandblasting is almost like a mechanized geologic process, but it also creates this ghostly or fossilized image of the waste." By Emily Watlington May 22, 2023 3:49 pm
Interviews Artist Madeline Peckenpaugh On How She Turns Everyday Experiences into “Spontaneous” Paintings "I like making the background look like it was the last thing that happened, even though it was first." By Emily Watlington May 15, 2023 7:50 pm
Reviews At the Met, Juan de Pareja Is Revealed as More Than the Subject of an Iconic Velázquez Portrait "Juan de Pareja: Afro-Hispanic Painter" considers the life—and afterlives—of the once enslaved painter. By Maria H. Loh Apr 17, 2023 3:15 pm
Reviews Bispo do Rosario’s Posthumous US Debut Sidesteps Disputes In Brazil Over Whether His Compulsive Creations Were “Art” "Bispo do Rosario: All Existing Materials on Earth" at the Americas Society is brimming with intricate assemblages. By Elise Chagas Apr 11, 2023 11:20 am
Reviews Nöle Giulini’s Alchemical Artworks Turn Kombucha and Gelatin Into Sculpture A retrospective of the bio art pioneer at 15 Orient highlighted her work with kombucha leather. By Cassie Packard Mar 28, 2023 10:58 am
Reviews How Iconic Gallery Just Above Midtown Swapped Art History’s Lone Geniuses for Vibrant Community A show at MoMA pays tribute to a bastion for Black artists starting in 1974. By Josie Roland Hodson Feb 17, 2023 1:23 pm
Reviews Untamed, Shifting Landscapes: Brett Goodroad at Greene Naftali Linger a moment and Goodroad's frequently murky pictures dissolve into tracts of color, patches of texture, fields of forms, evocations of feelings. By Cassie Packard Jan 13, 2023 8:03 am
Reviews Ancient Feminine Power: “She Who Wrote” at the Morgan Library An exhibition about history's first known author, Enheduanna, challenges narratives about the roles of women in early society. By Emily Watlington Dec 19, 2022 5:30 pm
Reviews One Work: Black Power Naps’s “Chill Pill (Rockabye Baby)” Considering the "sleep gap" that Black and Latinx people often experience, Black Power Naps creates sites for rest. By Charlene K. Lau Dec 6, 2022 12:50 pm
Reviews Labor, Luster, and Lineage: “Hear Me Now” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art While unable to profit from their skills, enslaved Black potters in 19th-century South Carolina exercised great artistry in the vessels on view. By Nicholas T Rinehart Nov 29, 2022 11:08 am
WWD Remembering Iris Apfel: Former Met Curator Harold Koda Talks Style Influence, Bartering and Originality