Posted on March 25, 2025April 4, 2025Categories Magazine   Leave a comment on Shyama Golden: Mirrors and Windows

Shyama Golden: Mirrors and Windows

Shyama Golden is a surrealist storyteller, weaving together a multiplex of references to envision her own lyrical journey of endless rebirth. Los Angeles, Golden’s home, is a primary character in her work, as she merges her internal and external landscapes, mining the mystical to conjure reflections. Allegories abound in her richly detailed paintings. Our story begins with the artist falling down a gopher hole…

Posted on January 27, 2025April 4, 2025Categories Magazine   Leave a comment on Ruby Neri: A Cycle Around the Sun 

Ruby Neri: A Cycle Around the Sun 

At the time of this interview with Ruby Neri, it was November 2024. Her solo show at David Kordansky in Los Angeles had just opened, a solo show was set to open at Massimodecarlo in London in January 2025, and her first solo institutional show, Deep Dive at the Manetti Shrem Museum of Art, was in the final stages of preparation. For Neri, who was quite relaxed in her Frogtown studio during my afternoon visit, it was the end of … Continue reading “Ruby Neri: A Cycle Around the Sun “

Posted on January 13, 2025April 4, 2025Categories Magazine   Leave a comment on Anastasia Bay: Homage to the Body Electric

Anastasia Bay: Homage to the Body Electric

Describing Anastasia Bay as someone who sketches figures is akin to calling Giuseppe Verdi a songwriter. She paints big, and with authority, in gestures that are seen, felt and remembered. Among her many interests is opera, which has been crowned the “queen of the arts”—so I’m going to continue in grandiose fashion and coronate this French artist into a most royal court of creatives. In a desire to revive and invigorate the rich magnificence of ancient Greek drama, opera summoned … Continue reading “Anastasia Bay: Homage to the Body Electric”

Posted on January 6, 2025April 4, 2025Categories Magazine   Leave a comment on Morteza Khakshoor: Post-Picasso

Morteza Khakshoor: Post-Picasso

Morteza Khakshoor is the definition of an artist’s artist. An ideal conversationalist, his practice is guided by the divine sensation a creator forever chases: where everything feels inexplicably right. He quotes Picasso in casual conversation; his admiration for history’s most mentioned artist is pure and true. However, the Cubism comparison often applied to Khakshoor’s work is a sliver of interpretation, and we’re going much deeper.

Posted on December 30, 2024April 4, 2025Categories Magazine   Leave a comment on Gabriela Ruiz: Valley Girl

Gabriela Ruiz: Valley Girl

When entering the downtown Los Angeles studio of artist Gabriela Ruiz, I was struck by a painting of an eye. Not just any eye, but a puffy, surreal orb that turned out to be inspired by a horrific ocular infection, which resulted in an obsession for looking at eyes and how constrained and odd they could be. It’s her gift, thinking beyond, designing an opening and pushing the idea into strange places. She brings these concepts to life through zany … Continue reading “Gabriela Ruiz: Valley Girl”

Posted on December 20, 2024April 4, 2025Categories Magazine   Leave a comment on Christian Quin Newell: A Dream Sequence

Christian Quin Newell: A Dream Sequence

As soon as I first read about the practice of London-based Christian Quin Newell, I knew I wanted to interview him. His show there this past summer at Public Gallery was a collection of—and I directly quote—“Cosmological paintings opening up portals to an internal realm informed by Buddhist philosophy, mysticism, meditation, and the dream.” See what I’m talking about?

Posted on December 19, 2024April 4, 2025Categories Magazine   Leave a comment on Tim Conlon the Freight Painter

Tim Conlon the Freight Painter

We have a longstanding romance with the American train, a slow and poetic vision that crosses rivers, slices through mountains and connects towns, cities and new frontiers. The railroad has been the subject of songs, novels, paintings and film, but the train car itself has an intimate and unique relationship to graffiti. The American folk history of hobo and rail worker graffiti is steeped in our culture, from the Beatniks to the contemporary graffiti movement that has stretched from Colossus … Continue reading “Tim Conlon the Freight Painter”

Posted on December 9, 2024April 4, 2025Categories Magazine   Leave a comment on Anthony Cudahy: The Inflections of Somebody

Anthony Cudahy: The Inflections of Somebody

It begins with a space. The original, creaking floors of GRIMM’s Tribeca space brings out something special in the viewing of Anthony Cudahy’s paintings, a show I wanted to see before speaking with the artist on the brink of another show, his museum show, Spinneret, opening at the Green Family Art Foundation this fall. Cudahy paints emotion and something quite moody, and when you circle the gallery, the timeworn floorboards enhance the intimacy of the works on view, evoking an … Continue reading “Anthony Cudahy: The Inflections of Somebody”

Posted on November 27, 2024April 4, 2025Categories Magazine   Leave a comment on Poetry and Paintboxes in Provincetown: Documenting the Legacy of The Fine Arts Work Center

Poetry and Paintboxes in Provincetown: Documenting the Legacy of The Fine Arts Work Center

Art residencies are like idyllic adult summer camps, and although the Fine Arts Work Center has a fulsome summer program, their fellowships take place when a knit cap and down vest are appreciated. That hardly discourages the writers and visual artists who attend, as expressed by poet John Murillo; “One thing is to have a good idea for a poem or image that is resonant or impactful, but that’s not enough. You need something else to push against or to … Continue reading “Poetry and Paintboxes in Provincetown: Documenting the Legacy of The Fine Arts Work Center”