Contributed by Steven Bartus (Bowdoin, ’08)
Chicago Cultural Center
Contributed by Dien Ho
Ecstatic Alphabets, MOMA (2012)
“In a drawing from 1966, ‘Heaps of Language,’ Robert Smithson assembled a pyramid of words about words: ‘Language’ at the apex, supported by ‘phraseology speech,’ ‘tongue lingo vernacular,’ and on down through a base of synonyms. The playful exhibition ‘Ecstatic Alphabets/Heaps of Language,’ opening on Sunday at the Museum of Modern Art, borrows Smithson’s title and runs wild with his vision of words as materials. . .
One could spend a long time here, listening to poets and staring at Bruce Nauman’s hypnotic flashing neon piece ‘Raw War.’ But that’s all prologue; the show begins, in earnest, with a short printed text by Sharon Hayes — one of four woven through the galleries and installed so close to the floor that you have to crouch down to read them. In these paragraphs Ms. Hayes puts herself forth as Virgil to the viewer’s Dante, though she also assumes the roles of spurned lover, diarist and political agitator.” [. . .] –Karen Rosenberg, The New York Times, May 3, 2012
Rachel Kneebone, “The Descent” at the Brooklyn Museum
“…Even the chef d’oeuvre of the show, “The Descent” (2008), which recalls Rodin’s “Gates of Hell” — which, in turn, was inspired by Dante’s “Inferno” — feels more like a poetic celebration of flesh and the sculptural medium than anything else. Comprising dozens of little figures descending into a cauldron-shaped pit, the sculpture, viewed by stepping up on a narrow wooden platform encircling it, is nearly 11 ½ feet in diameter.” [. . .] –Martha Schwendener, The New York Times, April 4, 2012
On display at The Brooklyn Museum, January 7 – August 12, 2012.
“Questa volta e’ diverso, Virgilio…”
The Facebook profile picture for “Poeti e letterati citati a sproposito da ragazzini pseudo intellettuali.”
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 73
- 74
- 75
- 76
- 77
- …
- 92
- Next Page »