“Lena Wolff’s cut and pin pricked collages seem so palatable to me today on this rainy gray day,” muses Meighan O’Toole. “Her choice of color and subject woos me.”
“Lena Wolff’s cut and pin pricked collages seem so palatable to me today on this rainy gray day,” muses Meighan O’Toole. “Her choice of color and subject woos me.”
Whether you’re fashion conscious or live in a location that never seems to attract summer weather, Nike Sportswear has unveiled a preview of its Fall 2010 Athletic West Pack for anxious fans to check out.
“Another sign of the times showing that the economy continues to wreak havoc with the art world,” reports M.I.S.S, “art Fabricator Carlson and Co. perhaps best known for manufacturing Jeff Koons’s larger-than-life, gleaming Balloon Dog sculptures [see our coverage of that Metropolitan show here ] is going out of business.”
It’s widely known that the vibrant New York City graffiti scene would not be what it is without the metropolis’ miles of train and subway tracks. The maze of pathways provided a moving billboard for writers to make themselves and their crews known.
After over a year in planning and a volcano delay, Art From the New World by Corey Helford Gallery opened at the Bristol City Museum. With almost all of the 45 participating artists in attendance, it was the place to see and be seen.
Sleepwalking: New Works by Greg Gossel comes to White Walls gallery June 12th. Sleepwalking critiques mass media’s exploitation of specific groups of people: a consumerist practice that projects biased perceptions of gender, race, and culture.
“An enthusiastic audience crowded into SF’s intimate Museum of Craft and Folk Art space for Clare Rojas’ We They, We They,” writes Erin Dyer. “Complete with Peggy Honeywell performance of six or seven songs (my favorite being ‘Miscommunication’), it’s hard to believe Rojas is only now honored with her first solo show in a museum setting.”