This week, learn about the under-sung women of the Arte Povera movement with a new spring lecture ser
This week, learn about the under-sung women of the Arte Povera movement with a new spring lecture series from Magazzino Italian Art. Around town, Daniella Brito peruses De Lo Mío, an intriguing if occasionally paradoxical exhibition of contemporary Dominican art. As Brito writes, the works on view “[usher] viewers into a steamy, and ultimately unforgiving climate.”And don’t miss David Rothenberg’s nostalgic portraits of Queens commuters. Shot pre-pandemic, they’ve become a time capsule we didn’t know we needed.—Dessane Lopez Cassell, Editor, Reviews | |
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Dona Nelson Stands Alone The dizzying effect of Nelson’s two-sided paintings brings to mind the sensory overload of living in a city. John Yau |
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Lured by Two Contemporary Masters Long after I left Robert Grosvenor and David Novros at Paula Cooper, certain works floated up in my memory, calling me to return. John Yau |
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| Ming Smith, "America seen through Stars and Stripes, New York City, New York" (printed ca. 1976), gelatin silver print, sheet (image courtesy Virginia Museum of Fine Arts; © Ming Smith) |
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