By HEIDI MARSTON AISHMAN —- Rhys Gallery “Amir H. Fallah and Evelyn Rydz” is on view September 06 – October 05, 2007 at The Rhys Gallery. Heidi Marston Aishman is an artist, curator and regular contributor to Big RED…
Browsing: Volume 1 : Issue #69
By BIG RED Friday September 7th 2007 Candid snaps from a Big RED night on-the-town at First Friday openings in SOWA and the Big Red & Shiny book release party at Axiom. Photos by James Manning. Video by Heidi Marston…
By BIG RED Friday September 7th 2007 Candid snaps from a Big RED night on-the-town at the First Friday openings on Newbury Street and SOWA. Paul Beliveau ‘Les Humanities’ at Arden Gallery From Minimal to Bling: Contemporary Studio Jewelry at…
By CHRISTIAN HOLLAND In the past couple weeks we’ve been buckling down for the new school year: putting the final touches on our lesson plans, picking up our tweed blazers from the cleaners, or, in my case, actually going back…
By STEVE AISHMAN Editor’s Note: This installment of Steve Aishman’s “Report From The Phantom Zone” may have been written in collaboration with his wife and long-time Big RED contributor, Heidi Marston Aishman. “It’s amazing how much you can get done…
By THOMAS MARQUET #22: Danny is called on the carpet to explain why a bad review is a good review. “The White Cube” comics can be read in series in the Big RED & Shiny Collections section. Thomas Marquet…
By CARL GUNHOUSE Trashing the Museum of Modern Art has become a sport for art critics since it reopened in 2004. Jerry Saltz complained that MoMA focused too heavily on the greats of art history, presenting a predictable and homogenized…
By JOHN RUGGIERI In the museum retrospective of Rudolf Stingel, the quiet drama in his work is heightened by scale and context. The art world has been wrestling with the idea that “Painting is dead” for quite some time. Some…
By MATTHEW NASH A few years ago, I gave my father a book of Dilbert cartoons. He gave it back. To me, Dilbert is an hilarious sendup of corporate culture, showing the ridiculousness of cubicle life and how impersonal it…