Lauren Moya Ford reviews an installation by the artistic duo Celeste, on view at The Contemporary Austin.
Lauren Moya Ford
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Review
Review: “Sketches for Three Voices” by Joanna Klink, Annette Carlozzi, and Francesca Fuchs at testsite, Austin
Lauren Moya Ford reviews the exhibition "Sketches for Three Voices," on view at testsite in Austin.
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Lauren Moya Ford reflects on the recent restaging of the performance "Dances with Dogs" by Forklift Danceworks in Austin.
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Lauren Moya Ford reviews the group exhibition "fitting" at Northern-Southern gallery in Austin.
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Lauren Moya Ford reviews the solo exhibition by Jenelle Esparza at the McNay Museum in San Antonio.
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Review
Review: “Painted Flowers Shouldn’t Talk Back: The Houston Garden Artists in the Seventies” by Margaret Killinger
Lauren Moya Ford reviews the publication "Painted Flowers Shouldn't Talk Back," a book about the Houston Garden Artists Collective, which discusses their work and lives.
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Lauren Moya Ford reviews the exhibition "A Commitment to What is Before You," on view at Northern-Southern in Austin.
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The exhibition is a luminous, timely exploration of how both artists find the sublime in the close observation of nature.
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The pieces on display illuminate Europeans’ elaborate, often amusing responses to botanicals, and their desire to possess and preserve plants across time and space.
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“It’s a century where artists think very deeply about what drawing is as a concept, but also about materials and how to use them.”
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Reiland's pictures of women are not so much documentary portraits as gestures of a sort of imaginative empathy, where historical facts and artistic interpretations collide.
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Piwonka takes on the misunderstood world of maleness from a refreshingly unexpected angle.
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Welcome to "In Residence," a new interview series that introduces readers to artists who come to Texas from other parts of the country — and other parts of the world — to participate in artist residency programs.
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“The show gave me the opportunity to look backwards and look forwards at the same time, and to think about the resonance of images, actions, and words then and now.”
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Review
Beyond Frida: Female Mexican Painters Paint the Modern Mexican Woman at the Dallas Museum of Art
After the Mexican Revolution, the country’s daring female artists forged a new picture modeled after themselves and who they wanted to be.
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The outlines of teeth and lips are faintly visible across the works, but Jones’s paintings remain tantalizingly amorphous, and hover between abstraction and figuration.
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Davidoff's sincere concern for nature is matched by the pleasure of capturing it in her artworks.
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Webb’s work gives us a glimpse of what these lands look like to someone who comes from so far away.
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Even though the works in Peña’s current exhibition were all made in 2019, they feel sharply prophetic of our grim, lockdown days.
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"I wouldn’t be able to make the work I’m making if I hadn’t left my hometown. I wouldn’t be able to see it and understand it without the perspectives I now have."