New Southern Review editor Jeanne Leiby hitting her stride at prestigious literary journal
It is one thing to display and explain a work of art to a crowd of college students who have voluntarily chosen to be holed up in a dark classroom, eyes narrowing on silver from the reflection of Egon Schiele's drawings or Cindy Sherman's photographs as they bounce off the projection screen.
Last week the art community bit down on the piece of gold known as the Art Melt in attempts to see if it was real.
There's this fabulously infectious song by Justice, called D.A.N.C.E., I first heard on NPR two months ago (I can hear Alex V. Cook rolling his eyes in the blog next to mine).
Was it my own mental collapse or did last weekend draw a stark contrast to the weekends before it?
I had the unique experience of attending Department of Defense schools almost my whole life.
More of
Off the Wall
On incorporating wine bottles into his art
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This is the year of the takeover.
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B.R. conservators staying busy saving damaged art, including works feared lost to Katrina
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Grab lunch to go and head downtown Wednesday, June 18 to see Chartreuse on Lafayette: A Tableau Vivant, a modern twist on a bygone performance art, at 202 Lafayette St., across from Hilton Capitol Center.
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Despite its smash success, Art Melt fails to attract some top local artists
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