-
Mattia Bonetti featured in T Magazine
by Dana Thomas April 12, 2015 Mattia Bonetti’s studio in northeastern Paris is exactly the opposite of what you’d expect. The Swiss-born furniture designer is known... View More -
Les Lalanne reviewed in Interview Magazine
by Rachel Small April 6, 2015 A gallery and a garden: two spaces where most would not see parallels. But for Madison Cox, a renowned landscape... View More -
Mattia Bonetti featured in Architectural Digest
by Tim McKeough March 31, 2015 With his diverse portfolio of work, the Swiss-born, Paris-based furniture designer Mattia Bonetti has earned many fans, including Robert Couturier,... View More
-
Les Lalanne reviewed in W Magaine
by Fan Zhong March 30, 2015 In 1967, the artists Francois-Xavier and Claude Lalanne moved from Paris, where they ran in a circle with the likes... View More -
Les Lalanne reviewed in T Magazine
by Julie Baumgardner March 26, 2015 “I loved Les Lalanne’s work before I met them,” the gallerist Paul Kasmin swoons about the artistic duo Claude and... View More -
The New York School, 1969 reviewed in The New York Times
by Roberta Smith January 29, 2015 The current movable feast offers striking contrasts. At the Paul Kasmin Gallery in Chelsea, you can wade into “The New... View More
-
The New York School, 1969 featured in The New York Times
by Julie Baumgardner January 13, 2015 “I’m Henry — just Henry.” Indeed, that sensibility served Henry Geldzahler well. The charismatic curator, short in stature and large... View More -
Robert Motherwell reviewed in Hyperallergic
by Tim Keane December 13, 2014 In 1950, when the painter Robert Motherwell invented the phrase “The School of New York,” he summed up its mission... View More -
Robert Motherwell reviewed in ARTNews
by M.H. Miller October 20, 2014 Paul Kasmin, the Chelsea gallery that represents contemporary artists such as Walton Ford, Nir Hod, and James Nares, will open... View More
-
Elliott Puckette featured in Interview Magazine
October 8, 2014 Making beautiful paintings is rarely seen as an act of rebellion, but when Elliott Puckette began defining her aesthetic, painting... View More -
James Nares reviewed in Forbes
by Ann Binlot September 24, 2014 In many ways James Nares’s art is one linear progression. Many of his paintings capture the curves and movement of... View More -
Roxy Paine interviewed in Brooklyn Rail
by Will Corwin September 4, 2014 Will Corwin has spent the last three years ferreting out Roxy Paine in his various habitats—upstate in Delhi, New York,... View More
-
Bloodflames Revisited reviewed in The New York Times
by Ken Johnson August 7, 2014 To view “Bloodflames Revisited,” an incendiary show of works by more than two dozen artists, you step up an inclined... View More -
Walton Ford interviewed in Wall Street Journal
By Claire Howorth April 30, 2014 The 54-year-old artist has become famous for monumental wildlife pieces that bring a primal kingdom indoors. As he embarks on... View More -
Alexander the Great reviewed in Art In America
by Kim Levin March 1, 2014 The influential intercontinental art dealer Alexander Iolas, active between 1945 and 1987, has been called the “proto-Gagosian” of his day... View More
-
James Nares featured in the New York Review of Books
by J. Hoberman April 24, 2013 James Nares’s Street , an engrossing and celebratory hour-long, oversized video projection of life in New York City, is a... View More -
Walton Ford featured in The New Yorker
by Calvin Tomkins January 18, 2009 The Tasmanian wolf, also known as the Tasmanian tiger, was neither a wolf nor a tiger. It was a thylacine,... View More
Page
3
of 3