Taylor Dafoe
TAYLOR DAFOE is a writer and photographer based in Brooklyn. His writing has appeared in Afterimage, artnet News, BOMB, Elephant, Interview, Modern Painters, and Photograph Magazine, among others.
RICHARD PRINCE New Portraits
By Taylor DafoeA few hours before April Fools Day, Richard Prince was kicked off Instagram for posting an installation shot of Spiritual America, his infamous re-photograph of a then-10-year-old nude Brooke Shields.
Photo-Poetics: An Anthology
By Taylor DafoeAt first glance, Photo-Poetics seems like a rehashing of recent iterations of the New Photography series at MoMA. Six out of the ten artists, including Anne Collier, Moyra Davey, Leslie Hewitt, Elad Lassry, Lisa Oppenheim, and Sara VanDerBeek, have been featured in MoMA’s series, itself perhaps the closest thing New York has to a proper survey of newfangled photo-based work.
RYDER RIPPS Ho
By Taylor DafoeIve now written two reviews of Ho, Ryder Rippss debut show at Postmasters. The first, in which I discussed the merits of the canvases, and how and why they were created, I chose to rewrite after I discovered that many pieces of information available about the show online (some of which factored into my original evaluation of the work), were fabricated by Ripps himself. More on this later.
MATT DUCKLO Tomorrow is a Long Time
By Taylor DafoeLike so many, photographer Matt Ducklo seems to have a complicated relationship with his hometown. He was born and raised in Memphis, Tennessee, and around 2010, after a decade-long stint in New York, he moved back there.
Highly Selective Listings
Brooklyn Rail Highly Selective Music Events
A thoughtful, discerning and carefully compiled list of the most notable, promising and unique musical events for the month of April in New York City.
Muzak for the Manic
By Taylor DafoeA review of Marc Weidenbaum's book on Selected Ambient Works Volume II, the landmark album by Aphex Twin. The book is an installment in the 33 1/3rd series, published by Bloomsbury, which looks at a different classic album with each release. April marks the 20th anniversary of the album.
Call it Punk Rockhausen: Excepter
By Taylor DafoeThe band was several minutes into their set before I realized they had started. At first I thought it was the beerI was a couple of drinks in at that point, as it was well after 1:00 a.m. on a weeknight. But that wasnt it.
Highly Selective Listings
Brooklyn Rail Highly Selective Music Events
A thoughtful, discerning, and carefully compiled list of the most notable, promising and unique musical events for the month of May in New York City.
Highly Selective Listings
Brooklyn Rail Highly Selective Music Events
A thoughtful, discerning, and carefully compiled list of the most notable, promising and unique musical events for the month of June in New York City.
And in the Margins, the Mad Scientists: Synth Nights at the Kitchen
By Taylor DafoeLive electronic music is never quite in the moment. Its concerned with creating the future or busy sampling the past. Its delivered from laptops with dimly-lit Digital Audio Workstations, or performed by robots. Its fascinated with space and time, but never explores the moment in which it actually exists. Its also rarely visually engaging.
Vision Anew
By Taylor DafoeHumans take several billion photos each day, approximately two billion of which are uploaded online. It’s estimated that more than 800 billion photos were taken in 2014, and this year we’ll likely pass the one-trillion mark.
Steel Stillman: Black Point
By Taylor DafoeThe pictures in Black Point—culled from a larger body of work called Enlargements—began as old point-and-shoot photos taken by the artist from 1979 to 2014.
Anna Ostoya's and Ben Lerner's The Polish Rider
By Taylor DafoeIn June of 2016, Ben Lerner published a short story in the New Yorker about an artist who, on the eve of a big opening, loses two paintings in the back of an Uber. Lerners story was largely based on Polish painter Anna Ostoya, a real-life friend of the authors who experienced this while finalizing an exhibition at Bortolami Gallery earlier that spring.