Jeffrey Gibson will present a series of public art installations, centered around his 2024 video work THE SPIRITS ARE LAUGHING, during Climate Week NYC.
Read MoreJeffrey Gibson: 'THE SPIRITS ARE LAUGHING' for Climate Week
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Jeffrey Gibson will present a series of public art installations, centered around his 2024 video work THE SPIRITS ARE LAUGHING, during Climate Week NYC.
Read MoreKara Walker's interactive installation Fortuna and the Immortality Garden (Machine) is on view at SFMOMA through Spring 2026.
Read MoreJillian Steinhauer for The New York Times
April 13, 2024
Andy Battaglia for ARTnews
April 17, 2024
Jeffrey Gibson, Archie Moore, Inuuteq Storch, and Dare Turner for Frieze
April 17, 2024
Kate Nelson for BBC News
April 18, 2024
Ted Loos for Galerie Magazine
April 19, 2024
Jameson Johnson and Casey Lesser for Artsy
April 19, 2024
Ben Luke for The Art Newspaper
April 19, 2024
Valentina Di Liscia for Hyperallergic
April 19, 2024
Jeffrey Gibson’s history-making turn at the Venice Biennale brings the gay and Native American artist center stage with works of struggle and freedom. By Jillian Steinhauer for The New York Times.
Read MorePhoto: Ari Marcopoulos
The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art has commissioned Kara Walker to create a site-specific installation for the museum’s Roberts Family Gallery, opening July 2024.
Read MoreBrenda Goodman: Self-Portraits has been named one of Hyperallergic’s Top 50 Exhibitions of 2022.
Read MoreShanti Escalante-De Mattei reviews Luiz Zerbini: The Same Story is Never the Same at MASP for ArtNews.
Read MoreZoe Hopkins reviews Deana Lawson at MoMA PS1 for The Brooklyn Rail.
Read MoreOUR LABOUR, 2020-2021, woodblock print on muslin and oil-based, relief block ink on dropcloth, mounted on canvas 15 ft. 6 in. x 38 ft. (4.7 x 11.6 m). © Yashua Klos. Photo by John Bentham.
“I like titles to have double meanings. If I’m lucky, I can find one with a triple meaning. “Our Labour” is first a reference to my family and the work that my family has done in the auto plants in Detroit. It’s a reclamation of a larger history of Black labor in America. But it’s also a larger historical context of the Black “our,” which has been excluded from having visual representation [in this nation’s history].”
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“Blessed Are Those Who Mourn (Breonna! Breonna!)” from 2020 at The Whitney Museum of American Art. Photo by Filip Wolak.
Jennifer Packer: The Eye Is Not Satisfied With Seeing has been reviewed as a Critics’ Pick by Aruna D’Souza in The New York Times. Photo by Felip Wolak.
Read MoreRead Paul Stephens’ review of Kay Rosen: New Work 2020-2021 in Frieze.
Read MoreMarlene McCarty: Into the Weeds is featured in The New Yorker’s “Goings on About Town” for the July 12 and 19, 2021 issue.
Read MoreRead Alfred Mac Adam’s review of the group exhibition Off the Wall, on view via Artsy April 14 – May 15, 2020.
Read MoreBrooklyn-based painter Lous Block interviews Merlin James for The Brooklyn Rail.
Read MoreThe Brooklyn Rail reviews Josephine Halvorson: On the Ground at Sikkema Jenkins & Co.
Read MoreListen to the Art Grind podcast, featuring William Cordova and Josephine Halvorson’s exhibition openings at SIkkema Jenkins & Co.
Read MoreJosephine Halvorson is one of four artists included in the 2019 James and Audrey Foster Prize exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston. The exhibition features new large-scale paintings made in places with which she is deeply connected: her Berkshires home and studio and an old mining site in Death Valley, Utah.
Read MoreMitch Epstein’s Property Rights was featured in The New Yorker’s Photo Booth.
Read MoreFeatured press for Louis Fratino’s solo exhibition, Come Softly To Me, on view at Sikkema Jenkins through May 18, 2019
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