Art
In Conversation
E.V. Day with William Corbett
E.V. Day is a New York-based installation artist and sculptor whose work explores themes of feminism and sexuality, while reflecting upon popular culture. Day received her MFA in Sculpture from Yale University in 1995, and she began her dynamic Exploding Couture series in 1999.
In Conversation
SUPERFLEX with PHONG BUI
Just a few hours before the January 22 opening reception of their exhibit Flooded McDonalds at Peter Blum Chelsea, which will be on view till March 22, 2010, Jakob Fenger and Bjørnstjerne Christiansen paid a visit to Art International Radio to talk to Publisher Phong Bui about their lives and work.
In Conversation
WILLIBALD SAUERLÄNDER with SASHA SUDA
In two successive afternoons in late October, 2009, New York-based art historian Sasha Suda came to visit the world renowned scholar of art history Willibald Sauerländer at his home in Munich to talk about his life and work.
In Conversation
ELISA SIGHICELLI with JOHN YAU
On occasion of the artists new exhibit The Party Is Over, which will remain on view at Gagosian Gallery on Madison Avenue till March 6, 2010, Elisa Sighicelli paid a visit to the home of Art Editor John Yau to talk about her new body of work and more.
In Conversation
RICHARD BAKER with JOHN YAU
A week before the opening reception of a new body of paintings at Tibor De Nagy Gallery, Richard Baker welcomed Art Editor John Yau to his DUMBO studio to view the works, and to talk about the painters work.
Kenneth Noland (1924-2010)
By Mark DagleyIve followed other artists gratefully and I hope Ive also followed my own path....sometimes along side other artists. Ive also been willing to share any help that I could give to any other artist. I love art and I love the life of art and I only wish that the real life of art could affect social change in a good way and that the invasion of commercialism in art and the invasion of entertainment into all areas of our lives hadnt brought some of the worst features of our culture into the realm of art. Kenneth Noland The Bennington Years symposium, University of Hartford, March, 1988
WHAT BARBARISM IS?
By Robert Hullot-KentorWhat interests us in the thought and writings of T. W. Adorno cannot interest us. Where it touches us most closely in the urgency of the moment, it misses the mark entirely. When it cuts to the quick, nothing is felt. This is easily demonstrated. For wherever we open Adornos writings, whichever volume we turn to, the topic is the barbaric and barbarism.