Richard Bell: I Am Not Sorry
Curated by Maura Reilly, Richard Bell: I Am Not Sorry is the first exhibition in the U.S. to survey the work of this controversial Aboriginal artist.
Curated by Maura Reilly, Richard Bell: I Am Not Sorry is the first exhibition in the U.S. to survey the work of this controversial Aboriginal artist.
Curated by Brenda Croft, formerly Senior Curator of Indigenous Art, National Gallery of Australia, Culture Warriors will be the largest and most comprehensive exhibition of contemporary Australian Indigenous art ever presented in the U.S.
The internationally renowned Papunya Tula Artists cooperative, located in the Western Desert of Central Australia, has exhibited widely in Europe and Asia.
Africa: See You, See Me September 16–December 6, 2008 Department of Social and Cultural Analysis, NYU, 41 East 11th Street (near University Place), 7th Floor Reception: Wednesday, September 24, 6:00–8:00 pm. Information: 212/998-3724. Juxtaposing colonial postcards with anti-colonial and postcolonial re-imaging of African spaces and people, this exhibition also includes video projections and texts. […]
S & M: Shrines and Masquerades in Cosmopolitan Times September 16–December 6, 2008 80 Washington Square East Galleries, Department of Art and Art Professions, Steinhardt School, NYU Receptions: Tuesday, September 16 and Monday, October 6, both 6:00–8:00 pm. Information: 212/998-5747. The artists in this exhibition—including Almighty God, Xenobia Bailey, Phyllis Galembo, Lyle Ashton Harris, […]
Phyllis Galembo: Masquerade, A Decade September 10–October 25, 2008 Steven Kasher Gallery, 521 West 23rd Street (near 10th Ave.). Information: 212/966-3978. The first gallery exhibition of Phyllis Galembo’s large-scale color photographs of masked revelers in ritual performances.
A parallel exhibition The Essential Art of African Textiles: Design Without End will be presented at The Metropolitan Museum of Art from September 30, 2008 through March 22, 2009.
All is well that begins well and never ends Opening Reception: Tuesday, September 11, 6–8 pm Exhibition on view through October 31 80 Washington Square East Galleries Department of Art and Art Professions, Steinhardt School of Education, NYU Curated by Jan Van Woensel, Ernesto Burgos, and Jonah Groeneboer, this exhibition focuses on emerging artists working […]
The term “golden hour” denotes the ephemeral moment of perfect cinematic twilight. From stereoscopes to soundtracks, many of the contemporary artists in this exhibition draw upon early film techniques to imagine new possibilities for the moving picture.
Events and exhibits around New York City related to Diane Arbus: Family Albums