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By MATTHEW NASH Print this article After reading and reviewing the new book “Critical Mess,” and reading others’ responses to it, I am left with the lingering question of what, exactly, we expect from art criticism. As an artist, not an art historian, writer or critic by training, I find myself turning to the examples of what others are doing, and wondering how we arrived at these methods of discussing and exploring work on the public stage. I should start by saying that Big RED & Shiny was not started as a…

By PATRICK SHORT Print this article In December I walked into the Visual Arts Library at Boston University and was told by a friend that we were going to the Armory Show in February. “Whatev” I replied, in usual fashion. Two months later I was standing at Pier 94 in New York City pushing through groves of thick-rimmed black glasses and wealthy women speaking with affectations. I felt like I should have gone through some sort of boot camp. It was noon; we had until about three in the afternoon to get…

By JOHN RUGGIERI Print this article “Where’s the Marketing Department?” “Is your office over there, Tim?” I naughtily quipped. The grey grid pattern of endless squares on every single surface of the museum spoke more to the corporate world than the art world, more Microsoft than Magritte. We both felt that as monumental and attractive as the buildings are, the architecture doesn’t seem to invite visitors to see the art within its walls but in some cases discourages trespass with its impractical or non-existent signage and floor plan. It was never very…

By JAMES HULL Print this article In 1993 I visited Chicago for the first time with my younger brother Robert. We had a good friend who had just moved there and went to see him, the town and have some fun. During the day between visits to attractions like the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Billy Goat Tavern we visited the Museum of Contemporary Art in the center of the city in a small shared building (the MCA is now in a big new building looking out on the lake). The two…

By FRANK PEREZ Print this article “Rough Bush” works to undo what every common suburban household values most – safety through stuff – and reveals the artist’s vision of the suburb’s safety as a web of prejudices, group sex, chemical dependencies and general misinterpretations, co-opting spirituality, teeming with underlying sexual tension or unknown goings on of teens, gangbangs, punk, Goth, and rap… all to return home to the safety of your Laura Ashley decorated room. The exhibition puts its own value system into play with its totems, knick knacks, fetishes, and fine…

By JON PETRO Print this article Given that fine art, by character and presentation, is an objective venture; it would be futile to refute, but not to debate an artist’s concept which yields a contradiction between its aesthetic values and opposed to the object’s conceptual content. Perhaps the human brain is hardwired to make relations from all it witnesses, so only under the threat of some type of Orwellian circumstance, would a viewer see a red painting and describe it as a blue painting. It comes as no surprise to me that…

By SCOTT ALBERG Print this article Space Other’s current exhibit Artists’ Books: Transgression/Excess brings together more than 150 artists who have worked with the artist book over the course of the 20th and 21st centuries. The exhibition features more than 200 pieces and feels more like a library or bookstore than an art exhibit. Gallery visitors can peruse and handle any of the books in the exhibit. The installation allows for leisurely browsing, as the gallery has installed desks and a reading room for viewers to spend significant time with the artworks.…

By MATTHEW NASH Print this article Part I: The Crisis In the new book Critical Mess: Art Critics on the State of their Practice, edited by Raphael Rubinstein, the heavyweights of contemporary art criticism each take a turn at defining the “crisis” as they see it, or refuting the idea of a crisis altogether. Some do it with grace and elegance, such as James Elkins and JJ Charlesworth; others defend their long-held territory, such as Jerry Salz and Arthur Danto; and a few try hard to not play at the game while,…

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