Trisha Donnelly's inscrutability is legendary. She largely forgoes press releases and other sorts of exhibition didactics describing what the artwork is and how it is intended to be interpreted, and…
"A Tale of Today: Yinka Shonibare CBE" inaugurates the Driehaus Museum's exhibition series spotlighting the work of contemporary artists of color, an exciting new direction for this Gilded Age…
Since the late 1990s, Anna Sew Hoy has developed a sculptural, largely ceramic language centered on forms suggesting amoebas, heads, planets, caves, and hives. Familiar yet alien, Sew Hoy's…
Like many Lebanese artists of her generation who grew up in the shadow of the country's civil war, Stéphanie Saadé is interested in experiences of displacement and the mutability of history, but she…
Jonathan Horowitz, who was trained in philosophy, often uses witty juxtapositions of appropriated imagery to emphasize the mutual interdependence of politics, entertainment, and consumerism. The…
The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum's focused, handsomely installed retrospective of Harmony Hammond's work offers something of a corrective to perceptions of her career, which have often been…
A desire for intimacy via surveillance seemed to inform the works in Julia Scher's exhibition at Esther Schipper, "Wonderland," which provided a focused look into her practice since its beginnings…
Though Eric N. Mack describes himself as a painter, his primary medium is fabric. One might say he works in the tradition of Robert Rauschenberg, who expanded painting's formal range to include…