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Impressionism
Who She Was…and Is
Though long dispersed, the art of Wilhelmina Godfrey comes together due to the diligence of a young curator By David Masello Tiffany Gaines had an idea a few years ago that she jotted down on a Post-It note. It read: “Wilhelmina Godfrey solo show?” At the time Gaines wrote that note to herself, she was…
Blonde Ambition
The Art and Times of Tamara Lempicka By Lilly Wei Tamara de Lempicka (1894–1980) has always been enveloped in a (couture) cloak of mystery, much of it of her own design, created by a disarming, if also disingenuous, vagueness in the telling of her life story that was only loosely fitted to facts. Her art,…
The Reality of Surrealism
The Hepworth Wakefield in England mounts an exhibition exploring the significance of Surrealist landscape from the early practitioners to today’s rising stars. By Patti Zielinski There is little in this world more surreal than war. During World War I, as a young medical student, André Breton was sent to the frontlines at Verdun, France, as…
Resonant Success
Never a household name, Herman Cherry produced abstractions featuring gestural color on par with his New York School peers. By Ashely Busby Artist Herman Cherry (1909–1992) experienced but also relished the struggle inherent in creative life. In conversation with critic Judd Tully, the artist compared his own path toward abstraction as an arduous journey. He…
Positively Porter
The late Expressionist painter shows us how geometry can be as spirited as gesture by Lilly Wei Katherine Porter died this past April at the age of 82 in Santa Fe, New Mexico. A month before, the unflaggingly productive painter had an exhibition in Santa Fe at the LewAllen Galleries aptly titled “Brilliance of…
Enduring Rebels
Museums celebrate 150 years of Impressionism by Ruth Lopez “Paris 1874: The Impressionist Moment” at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., organized with the Musée d’Orsay in Paris, celebrates the 150th anniversary of the first impressionist exhibition. Of all the origin stories that exist in the field of art history, the birth of Impressionism…
Al Held: About Space
From AbEx to Space X, six decades of Held’s heroic abstractions reconsidered by Lilly Wei Al Held is having a moment—again. Best known for his punchy, hard-edged geometric abstractions, often prodigiously scaled, Held was always a contender in the New York art world (and beyond) although his work never quite received the critical acclaim it…
Revolutionary Joy
Artist Jeffrey Gibson’s work is a radical evaluation of self and history that imagines an Indigenous future by Ashley Busby In April, a celebratory performance enlivened the forecourt of the United States Pavilion at the 2024 Venice Biennale. A gathering of bold, red, columnar forms served as a muti-tiered stage interspersed with Indigenous musicians. In…
A Life in Collage
Eileen Agar’s Surrealism and Storytelling by Sarah Bochicchio “My life is a collage,” writes Eileen Agar (1899–1991) in the first chapter of her autobiography, A Look at My Life. The metaphor is particularly apt for the surrealist artist—and not just because collage was a key medium in her oeuvre. In her writings, Agar lays out…


































