Art
Luke Strosnider on July 1st, 2009
Humanity's needs (and, more troubling, its wants) bring profound changes to the planet's landscape, a story that can be understood just by looking. This summer, the George Eastman House focuses on our awkward relationship with land with two separate exhibitions, "New Topographics" and "Nature as Artifice: New Dutch Landscape in
Art
Luke Strosnider on June 3rd, 2009
Dense with humanity and concrete, cities are the amalgam of three periods of time: past, present, and future. Plans made long ago create successes, as well as nagging, current needs, while residents (and their elected officials) hammer out hopeful visions of the future. Thus, slow but wrenching change is the
Art
Luke Strosnider on May 6th, 2009
Without a doubt the most renowned glass artist of our time is Dale Chihuly, the enterprising Seattleite whose squiggly chandeliers, delicate floating orbs, and walk-through installations are the most familiar examples of "glass art." His work is ubiquitous, and love it or loath it (it's sometimes a challenge to appreciate
Art
Luke Strosnider on April 15th, 2009
"Orchard Park" is British photographer Andy Lock's documentation of the vacant rooms in an apartment tower of the same name. The photographs record the time after the tenants had left the complex and just prior to the building's demolition. Lock, who will take the stage at the Dryden Theatre on
Art
Luke Strosnider on February 25th, 2009
Density, among many other methods, can be employed to measure an exhibition. How many reactions are piqued by that one visit to the museum or studio? How many issues were raised? Did the subject punch or caress? Were the medium and materials challenged? Matters of display can add or subtract
Art
Luke Strosnider on November 21st, 2007
It's as if music and visual art have long been gracefully waltzing, always alternating who leads. The 20th century alone witnessed much of the mutual benefit of this dance - proto-postmodernist Marcel Duchamp created music based on unpredictability and chance in the early 1910s. Those ideas would later inspire legendary
Art
Luke Strosnider on October 17th, 2007
Given current sensitivities surrounding the thorny issue of immigration, one might be puzzled to find Mexican artist Marcos Ramirez (also known as "Erre") erecting a towering Trojan Horse at the border between Tijuana and San Diego. As legend has it, the original Trojan Horse enabled Greek troops to clandestinely enter
Art
Luke Strosnider on August 8th, 2007
Though only one name is signed beneath the text greeting visitors to Rochester Contemporary's "For Drawing Sake," the words serve as a voice for all six artists whose work is on view. Unfolding as a series of one-line statements, it explains why they do what they do: "We draw to
Art
Luke Strosnider on June 26th, 2007
It's tempting to think the Memorial Art Gallery's biennial "Rochester-Finger Lakes Exhibition" is something it's not. Though one might anticipate seeing the best works by the region's most talented artists, this is an impression the MAG seems eager to dispel. "‘Finger Lakes' does not attempt to be a comprehensive survey,
Art
Luke Strosnider on April 4th, 2007
Like a formal dinner party, the orchestration of a group show of contemporary art is no easy task. Decisions of who to invite and where they'll be seated can bring chaos or harmony --- have painting and photography reconciled their initial difficulties enough to play nice? Will a boisterous multimedia
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