Jacquelyn Gleisner picks three poems to end National Poetry Month.
Jacquelyn Gleisner picks three poems to end National Poetry Month.
Megan Craig adds her recommendations to the series: Mary Oliver, Emmanuel Levinas, and bell hooks.
Taking a different approach, Jeff Ostergren pairs songs with each of his selected texts.
During the Covid19 pandemic, artist David Livingston has been reading Ursula K. LeGuin, Tommy Orange, and Richard Prum.
How much human life is worth sacrificing in the pursuit of scientific progress? Can humanity be trusted with weapons of ultimate destruction? And are we all alone in the Universe? Danielle Schmitt finds potential answers to these big questions by reading post-apocalyptic fiction.
Interdisciplinary Artist Amira Brown’s list includes a collection of writings by Jack Whitten, an American artist known for his expressive application of paint.
Nate Lerner kicks off the Quarantine Reading List with his broadly conceived quarantine reading list featuring the opera to music from an intersectional feminist record label.
Kelly Daniels interviews Fairfield-based photographer Kristie Kistner about her series of images documenting Tourette’s Syndrome.
Christine Holls speaks to Monique Atherton about making connections as a photographer.
Nichole Licata reviews Hong Kong in Poor Images at the Ely Center for Contemporary Art.
Jenna McIlwrath reviews James Prosek: Art, Artifact, Artifice at the Yale University Art Gallery.
Anna Tran reviews On the Edge of the World: Masterworks by Laurits Andersen Ring.
Cristina Francisco review’s The Incident: John Wilson’s Sketches for a Mural at the Yale University Art Gallery.
Kelly Daniels reviews the group exhibition Strange Loops, on view through February 29 at Artspace, New Haven.
Sharon Lin reviews Designer Bookbindings at the Yale Center for British Art.
West Haven-based artist Jeff Slomba merges his interest in technology with his education as a figurative sculptor.
Project al-Khwarizmi (PAK) POP-UP Workshop by Stephanie Dinkins probes the intersection of race and algorithms by interviewing BINA48, a robot developed by Hanson Robotics in 2010 whose likeness mimics the creator’s real-life partner.
Review | Do Plankton Have Feelings?
Artspace New Haven
Through February 29, 2020
Review | Somewhere in the Sequence
Real Art Ways
Through January 5, 2020
The youngest artist in this series, Ruby Gonzales Hernandez, 21, is an entrepreneur and nationally recognized artist.