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Unions, City Council, Congresswoman Protest Frieze

by Whitney Kimball on April 19, 2013
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The Frieze Art Fair has provoked a number of union leaders and government officials for outsourcing its labor, as it vies for world’s largest tent. Frieze denies any involvement with a labor dispute.

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Art Fag City at the L Magazine: What’s the Point of a Bad Review?

by Will Brand on October 4, 2012
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This week at the L Magazine, I wonder why we bother. Most art’s crap, and everybody knows it; can a case be made for the bad review?

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Art Fag City at the L Magazine: Gallery Girls is Terrible, and That’s Amazing

by Will Brand on August 10, 2012
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After watching the first episode of “Gallery Girls,” I can promise you that Bravo’s kept up its end on vile. You’ll love it.

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The Official Art Fag City Art Fair and Biennial Guide

by Paddy Johnson Will Brand and Whitney Kimball on March 2, 2012
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Get ready for non-stop art viewing. If you like art at all, next week's schedule should be packed with art fairs, biennial viewings, and openings. If you don't know where to start, we're here to help. Our one sentence synopsis as follows: This year more elitists, more protests, more video art, more foreigners, and continued efforts to disguise art fairs as nightclubs.

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Art Fag City at The L Magazine: #Don’t F”¨ollow”¨ Twitter Art

by Paddy Johnson on July 6, 2011
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Twitter art bums me out. Fine, it's a new medium that we don't know what to do with yet, but it’s receiving a growing amount of attention and most of it is bad. Between Creative Time's Twitter artwork commissions and a recent ARTnews feature on social media, there's enough conversation on the subject to start the complaining. Let me lead the way.

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Art Fag City at The L Magazine: The Art of Disappearing Porn

by Art Fag City on November 12, 2009

POST BY PADDY JOHNSON Stephen Irwin, Choke diptych, 2009, Altered vintage pornography, 11 x 17 inches. Image via: Invisible Exports This week at the L Magazine I write about Stephen Irwin’s exhibition “Sometimes When We Touch” at Invisible Exports. Notably, Jon Haddock, an artist I can in the review for making sloppy erased porn work during the […]

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[Sponsor] Sontag’s Promised Lands Screens at Light Industry This Tuesday

by Karen Archey on August 17, 2009

Susan Sontag at home. Image via: the Brooklyn Museum Brooklyn’s Light Industry hosts the un-missable screening of Susan Sontag’s Promised Lands this Tuesday, August 18th at 7:30 pm. Shot during the Arab-Israeli conflict of October 1973, the film represents the essayist’s third and reportedly most personal cinematic effort. Promised Lands, evincing Sontag’s feelings on contemporary […]

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Support Light Industry’s First Ever Fundraiser!

by Karen Archey on July 29, 2009

POST BY KAREN ARCHEY Image via: Light Industry Light Industry, Brooklyn‘s preeminent alternative exhibition space, kicked off their first-ever fundraiser last week. Co-founded by critic and curator Ed Halter and partner Thomas Beard, the outfit launched in March 2008 to provide a wealth of academic yet approachable programming focused on contemporary art and new media. […]

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17 Hours of Darkness at Light Industry

by Art Fag City on January 12, 2009

I don’t know why the Canadian landscape inspires dark anxieties, but judging by the contemporary cinematic output of the country (hello Adam Egoyan and David Cronenberg), the term maybe understating the psychological trauma investigated.  Tomorrow, Christina Battle curates 17 hours of darkness (reflections on this place I call home) at Light Industry, a program promising […]

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