Posts tagged as:

Parallel Art Space

7 Rising Art Stars to Watch: Aaron Williams

by Paddy Johnson Whitney Kimball and Corinna Kirsch on August 20, 2014
Thumbnail image for 7 Rising Art Stars to Watch: Aaron Williams

A brief look at Aaron Williams’s work isn’t going to get you anywhere. His spray painted crumpled posters look like Tauba Auerbach’s work, his photos resemble photoshop gradients, and his routed paintings channel Joan Mitchell. Everything looks familiar. And that’s not an accident. You have to spend time interpreting the references.

Read the full article →

Bushwick Open Studios in Review: 17-17 Troutman

by Paddy Johnson and Corinna Kirsch on June 2, 2014
Thumbnail image for Bushwick Open Studios in Review: 17-17 Troutman

In this edition of Bushwick Open Studios in Review, we look at what happened in the 17-17 Troutman building. We cover Onderdonk, Harbor Gallery, Roll Call, Ortega y Gasset, and Parallel Art Space.

Read the full article →

This Week’s Must-See Art Events: Migratory Art Horses Return, Marking Beginning Of Spring

by Whitney Kimball on March 25, 2013
Thumbnail image for This Week’s Must-See Art Events: Migratory Art Horses Return, Marking Beginning Of Spring

Don’t worry about Tilda. As MoMA and the Armory become even greater parodies of themselves, and after a long series of depressing gallery trips, things outside the mega-art world are looking up.

Read the full article →

This Week’s Must-See Art Events

by Whitney Kimball on February 18, 2013
Thumbnail image for This Week’s Must-See Art Events

Starting tomorrow, of course.

Read the full article →

Bushwick Basel Participants Report: BOS a Success

by Paddy Johnson on June 5, 2012
Thumbnail image for Bushwick Basel Participants Report: BOS a Success

At 1,500 bucks, Bushwick Basel might have the smallest operating budget of any art fair we’ve been to, but it drew some of the largest crowds at this weekend’s Bushwick Open Studios. Debuting at artist and fair organizer Jules de Balincourt’s Starr Space, the fair attracted 11 galleries from around the neighborhood. It was, by many accounts, a success.

Read the full article →