84th – Gauguin and Youngerman
As the summer approaches, I am looking forward to some projects in the works for the fall. Atlas will be less frequent (bi-weekly) until September, but…
As the summer approaches, I am looking forward to some projects in the works for the fall. Atlas will be less frequent (bi-weekly) until September, but…
The exhibition Overland at Planthouse takes two artists exploring place and space and brings them up against each other, in a mismatched joining; more collusion than juxtaposition. As a…
Let’s start with the fact that I don’t have an opinion one way or another about Carl Andre’s role in the death of Ana Mendieta. He…
I have begun a list of fiction that is about a work of art (or several), real or imagined. With the help of some…
“When the Stars Begin to Fall: Imagination and the American South” at the Studio Museum in Harlem is worth a trip uptown. Karen Rosenberg called it…
I started this memory series a few months back with The Rothko Seagrams Murals at The Tate. I was hoping to jog our collective memory for…
A few weeks back I wrote about Matthias Bitzer at Marianne Boesky. Bitzer is building something as a contemporary artist, but is it something that…
William Dutterer’s career defies conventional categorizations. He began his work at a time where Pop was dying and minimal and conceptual work were taking hold. The…
Matthias Bitzer’s solo show Saturnine Swing at Marianne Boesky uptown garnered a blurb review from Roberta Smith in last weeks “Art Galleries of New York”…
Matt Magee Interview March/ April 2014 This week, Atlas presents a new format for Matt Magee: An Interview. I became aware of Magee’s work a few…