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Artforum.com / home

Artforum.com / home

Artinfo manystuff.org – Graphic Design, Art, Publishing, Curating… The Wondrous Design Magazine 100 Best Scholarly Art Blogs October 10th, 2005 Students, artists, and scholars will enjoy these 100 blogs, sites, tools, and resources to help them learn a great deal about their craft, along with what other top artists are doing. Best Art News Artists looking to stay ahead of the curve should visit the below sites for the latest in art news and much more. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Best Art Critic Blogs Those looking to get inside the heads of leading art critics will enjoy the below blogs. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. Best Art Communities Artists looking to connect with each other, buyers, and critics will enjoy looking into or even joining the below online communities. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. Best Art Lover’s Blogs The below blogs are written by people with many different professions but all with a love of art. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. Best Artist’s Blogs Read the blogs and view the works of those who create art as their profession. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51.

Art|Basel Over 300 leading galleries from North America, Latin America, Europe, Asia, and Africa show work from great masters of Modern and contemporary art to the latest generation of emerging stars. Every artistic medium is represented: paintings, sculpture, installations, videos, multiples, prints, photography, and performance. To learn more, click here. For Visitors Art Basel draws tens of thousands of visitors – collectors, gallerists, artists, curators, art enthusiasts – from across the globe who come to experience the highest quality Modern and contemporary art, including works by well-known artists and newly emerging artists. For Galleries Art Basel is strongly rooted in the principle that galleries play an essential role in the development and promotion of visual arts, and our sectors are thus carefully defined to provide opportunities for visitors to see many types of exhibitions.

THE GLASSLESS GLASSES STUDIO - NEW YORK London Review of Books · 5 June 2014 Great Art in Ugly Rooms Great Art in Ugly Rooms Kerry James Marshall Oct. 17 2016 443 notes Mark Rothko Oct. 4 2016 302 notes “.. artworks and their contexts aren’t just there to be passed by and ticked off our ‘must see’ lists: they should be probed, absorbed and reabsorbed, as if they were towering over us in our bedrooms” - Lizzy Hajos thoughtful writeup at Seven Shades of Black – Dec. 14 2015 572 notes greatartinuglyrooms: Pierre-Auguste Renoir Hey Renoir protesters,… this better? Oct. 19 2015 Via greatartinuglyrooms 355 notes greatartinuglyrooms: Monet, Manet, Renoir Problem solved. Oct. 19 2015 Via greatartinuglyrooms 83,136 notes Happy birthday to Carmen Herrera, who turns 100 today! May. 31 2015 171 notes Richard Prince’s instagram paintings in facebook’s office… May. 27 2015 229 notes Greg Fadell opens at Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit. May. 15 2015 545 notes James Turrell May. 6 2015

Art Scatter » Blog Archive » Thompson, Delisle, Sacco and comics non-fiction That’s Joe Sacco, to the right, looking out of the window in a restaurant in the old part of Sarajevo. As usual he is passive — listening to the stories that other people tell him, observing life around him and presumably taking notes, though in this frame, he doesn’t seem to have a notebook with him. He looks a lot like a — journalist. Oh. There’s no drawing pad, either. By this particular moment in War’s End: Profiles From Bosnia 1995-96 (2005, Drawn and Quarterly Books), Sacco has drawn and interviewed his subject, Soba, a lot. This is still a disorienting experience. Our disorientation is apparent in how we categorize books like War’s End — in the graphic novel section of the bookstore, though it’s no more a “novel” than any words-only memoir. 1) They give a “true” account of what they witnessed and felt. 2) Their accounts are in first person. 4) Although their drawing aims and intensity levels may differ, their visual images are at least as important as the words.

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