If we take Henri Matisse’s famous assertion that art should be something like a good armchair in which to rest from physical fatigue at face value, we might end up with something approaching the “happy [x]” philosophy of Bob Ross, whose message was perfectly suited for television—the medium which help to spread it. I discuss […]
A couple of months ago I came across a fascinating little book published by Frieze in 1998. It was a bibliography intended to help young artists to become better young artists. The material was solicited from a few dozen art world people (artists, critics, curators) by Jerry Saltz, who also edited the volume. The same […]
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art world,
books,
Charles Ray,
Cindy Sherman,
Dave Hickey,
David Batchelor,
David Sylvester,
Ed Ruscha,
Elizabeth Peyton,
Hilton Als,
Jeff Koons,
Jeremy Golbert-Rolfe,
Jerry Saltz,
Kara Walker,
Laura Owens,
Luc Tuymans,
Matthew Barney,
Nancy Spector,
Paul Schimmer,
Peter Doig,
Peter Plagens,
Peter Schjeldahl,
Pulitzer Prize,
Rachel Whiteread,
Raymond Pettiblon,
Robert Storr,
Rony Horn,
The New Criterion,
Vito Acconci,
young artists Comments Off on Summer reading suggestions |
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One of the bast museum shows I have seen in a while turned out to be a retrospective of a local artist in a local museum. My review of it is on The New Criterion site.
My alma mater, UW-Madison, has been making some very unsettling choices lately. More on that in my latest blog post “The user-centric university” in The New Criterion dispatches section.
The #MeToo’ers got their aesthetic affiliation all wrong as they went for Puritanism—one of history’s archetypal patriarchies. In my latest contribution to The New Criterion, I discuss how the movement’s desire to disassociate itself from traditional trappings of femininity, including color, is incongruent with their professed embrace of the oppressed “other.”
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#MeToo,
Ashley Judd,
chromophilia,
chromophobia,
Dave Hickey,
David Batchelor,
Frans Hals,
Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe,
Masha Gessen,
Puritanism,
Stella Paul,
Steve Bannon,
Time magazine,
Vanessa Friedman Comments Off on Why chromophobia of #MeToo does not make any sense |
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In the latest tragical-comical episode linking the art world and the #MeToo movement, a group of artists and activists, with the help of the gallery’s curator, removed a seminal Pre-Raphaelite artwork from the wall of the Manchester Art Gallery “to initiate a discussion.” My analysis of what happened was just published in Dispatches section of […]
#MeToo is in the news again (still), now going after paintings with unpalatable content. My article “A Warning about the Balthus Warning,” just posted in the Dispatch section of The New Criterion. It explains why it is a very bad idea to decide whether an artwork deserves to grace museum walls based on how offensive […]