Thanks to all who came to hear us talk about the heyday of Asian American print magazines at MOCA. I always knew that what we were doing at Hyphen was valuable but it’s still surreal to see us in a museum exhibition.
October, nothing-going-on month, necessary to find a way to fill it up. November: We are seeing the Amano exhibition so nice + Dragonfly? Drawing the first page at least, then the second. December: ///. All in all what happened to 2024? Useless, evil year
Liverpool, England. Today was a Beatles kind of day as you can tell. Second last full day of the entire holiday before we finally go back.
My wife and I were at MFA in Boston for an exhibition of early Picasso drawings and paintings, which was in itself, insanely great. And as we exited the gift shop, we ran into MFA's prized piece, Renoir's "Dance at Bougival" which is so vibrant, so alive in person it knocked us both on our asses.
Two in person viewings that have stuck me are seeing The Black Prince at Crécy by Julian Russell, and seeing an exhibition of Mark Messersmith's work. I had few words I could find for either.
Theatrically titled “Autobiography”, a Robert Rauschenberg exhibition in California features just eight artworks, yet it shines with its self-explanatory nature.
In many ways, Autobiography, a small Rauschenberg exhibition in Santa Barbara, is self-explanatory, and this is its great strength.
I've only seen that one piece in person, everything else in photographs--it was part of an exhibition I got to visit in high school. I hope to see more face to face one day.
Seeing Ragnar Kjartansson’s The Visitors at the ICA in Boston. It’s mesmerizing. And currently on view in SF, apparently! www.sfmoma.org/exhibition/r...
Ragnar Kjartansson’s beloved video installation The Visitors (2012) is back at SFMOMA. In this mesmerizing hour-long work projected across nine screens, viewers are transported once again to the seren...
I should have loved to have been the curator of a retrospective exhibition of the works of Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres. I would have called it 'Look back in Ingres' and it would also have featured violins.
Saw a great exhibition on Dr Dee there