Posts tagged as:

9.5 Theses on Art and Class

Art at Its Best 2013: A Top Ten List

by Corinna Kirsch on December 23, 2013
Thumbnail image for Art at Its Best 2013: A Top Ten List

I’ve never been able to come up with a top ten list of exhibitions; big, lasting ideas don’t always take place in art on the wall. So, keep that in mind with my best-of list; there’re exhibitions, sure, but my main requirement was picking “art” that I keep coming back to time-and-time again.

Read the full article →

This Week’s Must-See Art Events: Every Nerd Loves a Book Fair

by Matthew Leifheit Gabriela Vainsencher and Whitney Kimball on September 16, 2013
Thumbnail image for This Week’s Must-See Art Events: Every Nerd Loves a Book Fair

Get ready for a little soul-cleansing before fair season. This week’s openings highlight the act of drawing, the highs of New York culture, and females in the Internet. A Rockaways beach house turns pop-up art space, and Paper Monument finally releases Issue Four.

But mostly, the Art Book Fair returns!

Read the full article →

This Week’s Must-See Art Events: Back to School

by Whitney Kimball on September 3, 2013
Thumbnail image for This Week’s Must-See Art Events: Back to School

No more indoor screenings; this week, we are very busy and important people. Chelsea’s bringing the mega-openings. Prolific emerging artists are everywhere, and Transfer Gallery is back in action. And all through fashion week, the PowerSuit Boutique is making PowerSuits for all of us.

Read the full article →

9.5 Theses: Just a Little Radical

by Clara Olshansky on August 21, 2013
Thumbnail image for 9.5 Theses: Just a Little Radical

9.5 Theses on Art and Class, by Ben Davis, editor of Artinfo, is both victim to and substantiated by Davis’s adamant worldview. Beginning with the Marxist-centric essays of the early chapters then expanding to more general issues facing the art world, the text saves itself from being an open-ended musing by framing each subject within its relationship to class ideology. This same ideology, however, leads him make some less than irrefutable claims.

Read the full article →