Monthly Archives: January 2020

The Alligator Pit Recoded

  Longtime Academy faculty member John Jacobsmeyer, director of the Printmaking Program, will have a solo exhibition of new paintings and prints at the Academy. “The Alligator Pit Recoded” will be on view February 27 through March 22 and features paintings and prints created during Jacobsmeyer’s sabbatical year. Jacobsmeyer has been an active contributor to the discourse in conceptual figuration… Read More

Robin Williams Artist Talk

Robin F. Williams (b. 1984) utilizes a variety of techniques, including oil, acrylic, airbrush, marbling, and the staining of raw canvas, to create figurative paintings that are at once confounding and familiar. Challenging systemic conventions of representations of women in art history, commercial advertising, and pop culture, Williams refers to her female figures as “zombie nudes” – figures that are… Read More

Eric Fischl in conversation with Peter Drake on collecting

  Eric Fischl (b. 1948, New York City) is an internationally acclaimed American painter and sculptor. He attended Phoenix College and earned his B.F.A. from the California Institute for the Arts in 1972. His paintings, sculptures, drawings and prints have been the subject of numerous solo and major group exhibitions and his work is represented in many museums, as well… Read More

Conversation with the Critics: Melissa Smith and Laura van Straaten

Melissa Smith is an arts writer based in Brooklyn. She graduated from NYU with a B.A. in Fine Arts before working for nearly a decade at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. After getting her master’s degree in journalism from Columbia, she launched her writing career, contributing profiles, reviews, and think-pieces on all things art to publications such as the New… Read More

Brendan Fernandes in conversation with Dexter Wimberly

Brendan Fernandes (b. 1979, Nairobi, Kenya) is an internationally recognized Canadian artist working at the intersection of dance and visual arts. Currently based out of Chicago, Brendan’s projects address issues of race, queer culture, migration, protest and other forms of collective movement. Always looking to create new spaces and new forms of agency, Brendan’s projects take on hybrid forms: part… Read More

Joeonna Bellorado-Samuels in conversation with Dexter Wimberly

Image / photo Credit: Sean Donnola   Joeonna Bellorado-Samuels is a Director at the Jack Shainman Gallery where she manages artists within the gallery roster including Hank Willis Thomas, Toyin Ojih Odutola, Nina Chanel Abney and Meleko Mokgosi, among others. She is also the founder of We Buy Gold, a roving gallery. She is also on the curatorial team of The… Read More

Artist Talk: Barnaby Furnas

Barnaby Furnas is a contemporary American painter known for his gestural paint handling and chaotic imagery. In his portrayals of violent battlefield scenes, the artist melds the formal virtuoso of historical painting techniques with emblems of American history, as seen in his Untitled (Antietam) II (2008). “Paintings don’t just show one minute happening. They can show an hour of things… Read More

David Antonio Cruz

David Antonio Cruz is a multidisciplinary artist. Cruz fuses painting, video, and performance to explore the visibility and intersectionality of brown, black, and queer bodies. Cruz received a BFA in painting from Pratt Institute and an MFA from Yale University. He attended Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture and completed the AIM Program at the Bronx Museum. Recent residencies include… Read More

Jerry Saltz Presents “How To Be An Artist”

Jerry Saltz is the senior art critic at New York magazine and its entertainment site Vulture. He is the winner of the 2018 Pulitzer Prize in Criticism and a 2019 National Magazine Award. Before joining New York in 2007, Saltz had been art critic for The Village Voice since 1998, and was twice nominated for the Pulitzer Prize during his tenure there. A frequent guest lecturer, he has spoken… Read More

Collectouples

  We reveal ourselves in part by the objects in our lives. Our homes are filled with things that speak suggestively to who we are, such as our books, music and art collections. It is not uncommon to enter someone’s home and find yourself looking at a library or record collection and thinking, “I wouldn’t have pegged him for an… Read More