
Art Market
KAYEE C: PERFECT BALANCE BETWEEN PHYSICAL CONSTRAINTS AND CREATIVE EXCITEMENT
Kayee is a fine art photographer born and raised in Hong Kong before relocating to France a decade ago. She uses self-portrait and digital composite techniques to create storytelling images to explore the dynamics of relationships on different levels. Her works can be a humorous, dramatic, or melancholic staging of a variety of human interactions.
2 min |
Issue #53 November 2020

Art Market
JAYNE FOSTER: PORTRAITS OF UNKNOWN SITTERS
Jayne Foster grew up in a small town just north of London. She completed her Bachelor of Arts degree in fashion and textiles at Ravensbourne College of Design & Communication before attending the Royal College of Art, from where she gained her Master's degree in Womenswear Design.
2 min |
Issue #53 November 2020

Art Market
FAIG AHMED: DISSOLVING ORDER
Faig Ahmed (Sumqayit, 1982) graduated from the Sculpture Department of Azerbaijan State Academy of Fine Art in 2004. He represented Azerbaijan at the nation's inaugural pavilion at the Venice Biennale in 2007 and again in 2013. The artist was nominated for the Jameel Prize 3 at Victoria and Albert Museum. His works are in public collections, including Los Angeles County Museum, Seattle Art Museum, and Palm Springs Museum of Art.
4 min |
Issue #53 November 2020

Art Market
Farah A. Malhas: INSPIRATION FROM LEBANON
In her early childhood, Farah grew up surrounded by art. Being creative was both essential and encouraged by her late father; she is a self-taught artist in that regard.
1 min |
Issue #53 November 2020

Art Market
LIZE KRUGER: TWO SERIES
Growth, Mental Health, Loss, And Survival
3 min |
Issue #53 November 2020

Art Market
Bonta Teresa Letizia: THE ROOMS I KEPT CLOSED
For me, photography represents light, that light so strong as to illuminate every dark part that lives within us. In these shots, I tell a phase of my life lived in intense mania, especially spiritually.
2 min |
Issue #53 November 2020

Art Market
DARCY GERBARG: THE NEW GENERATION OF 3DVR ART
Gerbarg's unique artworks are developed from cropped images taken from her 3DVR colored light sculptures, with a virtual camera, in a virtual world. The color' brush' strokes 'painted' with colored light in the virtual world (3DVR), and the entire process, exclusive of the artist's physical abstract expressionist stroke-making gestures, is digital.
2 min |
Issue #53 November 2020

Art Market
ROBBIE GALLOWS: SHADOWS OF THE PAST
I paint my memories, so people will know how we used to live, and then I am reminded that Punk is not dead; it has evolved, and it remains within me, and in the world I live in. - Robbie Gallows
2 min |
Issue #53 November 2020

Art Market
AVNER SHER: EMBRACING VANDALISM
Avner Sher (born 1951, Israel), one of Israel's most successful commercial architects, has earned his B. Arch, Architecture and Town Planning from the Technion, Israel Institute of Technology and graduated his Art studies at Haifa University.
5 min |
Issue #53 November 2020

Art Market
An Exclusive Interview With Barbara Vandendriessche
Barbara Vandendriessche grew up in a small city Roeselare in Belgium, not far away from the French border. Her decision to study and practice theater directing and scenography brought her to Antwerp and finally to Brussels.
10+ min |
Issue #53 November 2020

Illustration
MORTON ROBERTS: A Brief Life at Yale
Morton Roberts was one of the rising stars in the late 50's and early 60's.
6 min |
Illustration No. 70

Illustration
THE ART OF JOE BOWLER
American painter and illustrator Joe Bowler and his creations
10+ min |
Illustration No. 70

Illustration
THE ART OF ROGER KASTEL
An American artist, most famous for creating the poster for the film Jaws
10+ min |
Illustration No. 70

Illustration
It's the shark that gets them.
Movies that made us to watch again and again
10+ min |
Illustration No. 70

Art Market
THE GOOD DISHES
The Good Dishes integrates memory, legacy, and metaphor with my response to loss.
4 min |
Issue #52 October 2020

Art Market
POETIC LANDSCAPES:DITA JACOBOVITZ
Most of my landscape paintings are from my Residential area and from north Italy. I use various techniques, but mostly Oil on canvas. I decided several years ago that I will not try to reach the reality; I am trying to put the colors and shapes as I view them; sometimes, the place is the exactly the same spot, but the artworks are so different." - Dita Jacobovitz
4 min |
Issue #52 October 2020

Art Market
HIGHLIGHTING THE BEAUTY OF NATURE
Steven George Clark, 42, is a self-taught contemporary wood sculptor, and his aesthetic aspirations are headed towards highlighting the beauty of nature contrasted by industrial elements.
3 min |
Issue #52 October 2020

Art Market
GARY MILLER Distorted Portraits
Distorted Portraits is a series of colorful mixed-media works in which I explore a contemporary, exaggerated, and dynamic approach to portraiture.
4 min |
Issue #52 October 2020

Art Market
Around Day's End:Downtown New york, 1970-1986
Anticipating the completion in late fall 2020 of David Hammons’s Day’s End, a major public artwork located in Hudson River Park, the Whitney will present a selection of works from the Museum’s collection that explore downtown New York as site, history, and memory.
4 min |
Issue #52 October 2020

Art Market
ALFRED FREDDY KRUPA : New Ink Art
Geneva 20 /street/ at the end of her journey. Sepia with black and white ink & plastic pen on old newspapers glued on canvas, 40x60 cm. 2020 Alfred Freddy Krupa © All rights reserved
4 min |
Issue #52 October 2020

Art Market
BORDER-LESS IDENTITY
Social identity determines women's status in society. In the context of family, religion, economy, patriarchy, misogyny, gender discrimination, etc., determine Iranian women's status in society. To keep the concept of a woman's identity alive, a change in Iranian society is required.
4 min |
Issue #52 October 2020

Art Market
Agita Keiri
The Italian Renaissance
5 min |
Issue #52 October 2020

DesignSTL
A Painter of People and Places
Artist Anne Molasky is inspired by the outdoors and its many shades of light.
3 min |
November/December 2020

Poets & Writers Magazine
OUR FIFTH ANNUAL 5 over 50
For the past five years we’ve dedicated this space to featuring five debut authors who have lived a good deal of life before publishing their first books. From the start our aim was to highlight not one path—not some mythical road, paved with youthful intentions, upon which so many “new and emerging” authors travel— but rather the countless individual routes, some considerably longer and circuitous than others, that lead to the publication of a debut book.
10+ min |
November - December 2020

Poets & Writers Magazine
Reading in the Bardo
SEEKING COMFORT IN THE ABSENCE OF RITUAL
10+ min |
November - December 2020

Poets & Writers Magazine
Order Out of Chaos
REVISING YOUR POETRY MANUSCRIPT
10+ min |
November - December 2020

Poets & Writers Magazine
The Clifton House
On the ninth anniversary of poet Lucille Clifton’s death, her eldest daugh-ter, Sidney Clifton, felt a strong desire to be back in her family’s former home in Baltimore. She decided to call the owner, who told her the house had been put up for sale that very day, February 13, 2019. A reunion with the house seemed fated, and Sidney Clifton jumped at the chance to buy her childhood home. Soon the space will once again be filled with the energy and cheerful noise of artists at work and in conversation as the poet’s family develops the Clifton House as a place where new generations of artists can flourish.
3 min |
November - December 2020

Poets & Writers Magazine
THE CONFOUNDING INSISTENCE ON INNOCENCE
TEN YEARS AFTER HER DEBUT STORY COLLECTION, BEFORE YOU SUFFOCATE YOUR OWN FOOL SELF, MARKED HER ARRIVAL AS A BOLD NEW VOICE IN AMERICAN SHORT FICTION, DANIELLE EVANS RETURNS WITH HER SECOND, THE OFFICE OF HISTORICAL CORRECTIONS, A TIMELY RECKONING WITH, AMONG OTHER THINGS, AMERICA’S HISTORY OF RACIALIZED VIOLENCE.
10+ min |
November - December 2020
Poets & Writers Magazine
House Celebrates Broadside Lotus
After founding the Detroit-based Broadside Press in 1965, Dudley Randall wrote: “We (Africans in the United States) are a nation of twenty-two million souls, larger than Athens in the age of Pericles or England in the age of Elizabeth. There is no reason why we should not create and support a literature which will be to our own nation what those literatures were to theirs.”
3 min |
November - December 2020

Poets & Writers Magazine
MacDowell Tests Virtual Residencies
In the midst of COVID-19, the country’s oldest arts residency is reimagining itself after 113 years. In August, MacDowell launched its first Virtual MacDowell “residency,” a fully online program intended to support artists and foster a sense of connection during the time of social distancing.
4 min |