By Sarah Fisch on May 14, 2011
You still have time to see the Texas Biennial 2011! It’s up until May 21, extended by a week. At least the main exhibition — curated by Virgina Rutledge, copyright attorney/art historian/former special counsel to Creative Commons — is still up in this large office building at 816 Congress. I think this is sort of [...]
Posted in Review | Tagged 816 Congress, austin art, Being John Malkovich, border issues, Caravaggio, Catherine Colangelo, cumbia, drug cartels, drug wars, Goya, Hieronymous Bosch, Jessica Mallios, Kathryn Kelley, Katy Horan, Marcelyn McNeil, Michael Anthony García, nautical art, Rembrandt, Ricardo Paniagua, Richard Martinez, Rigoberto A. Gonzales, San Antonio art, Sarah Fisch, soft sculpture, Tejano culture, texas painting, texas video art, TX Biennial 2011, Virginia Rutledge |
By Sarah Fisch on May 3, 2011
I’ve seen the Sala Diaz effect encourage unprecedented audacity more than once. More than ten times. The secret is, to a large extent, the flip-flop of the usual S.A. gallery show, in which an artist hangs finished work in the course of one or two days, and that art hangs or stands in there for [...]
Posted in Blog, Chupacabrona | Tagged alejandro diaz, cotton ball art, cupacabrona, hills snyder, jung hee mun, jung mun, proprium cycle, rounding up of self, sala diaz, sala diaz effect, San Antonio contemporary artists, San Antonio Current, Sarah Fisch, texas artist residencies, texas painting, texas video art, the Texas Biennial, youtube |