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Artist of the Week 8/15 – 8/21: Federico Uribe Brings Whimsy and Irony to Everyday Objects
Despite a thick Spanish accent, conceptual artist Federico Uribe transcends language barriers with his life-size sculptures that seem to particularly resonate with the American people. When one thinks of Columbia,...
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Where Performance Art & Realism Meet, A Conversation with Street Painter, Carolyn Schultz
E.M. Forster once said that “one person with passion is better than 40 people merely interested.” Perhaps it is this mentality that has allowed Florida based Carolyn Schultz, accomplished street painter and...
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Artist of the Week 8/15 – 8/21: Heidi Lender Peels Away the Layers of Self-Discovery
Bubba, a five-year-old Bichon-Shitzu mix, is made for the camera. He stares off with a serene, faraway look, lazes on elaborate carpets and furniture, or just doggy smiles for the camera. Sometimes he even yawns!
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Marrying Fate and Fashion: An Interview with Madeleine Kirsh
When searching for exquisite clothes from bygone decades, the renowned Madeleine Kirsh is the foremost expert on the subject. As expected, her store, C. Madeleine’s, on Biscayne Boulevard in Miami, is home to an...
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Artist of the Week 8/15 – 8/21: Kevin Bauman Exposes ‘100 Abandoned Houses’
Denver-based photographer Kevin Bauman has transformed mere statistics about his hometown of Detroit, Mich. into captivating artwork.
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Living the Renaissance Life, Part Two: A Conversation with Sabin Howard
When flipping through the pages of the 245 page book The Art of Life, written by author Traci Slatton, one cannot help but be captivated by the full-page photographs that emerge with every next turn. On one page, a...
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A Conversation with the “Fast Speaking” Woman and Author: Anne Waldman
Earlier this year, one of the most conscientious and commanding writers today, Anne Waldman participated in PEN American’s World Voices Festival event, “Translating Poets Alive,” where her work Tell Me...
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Charles Simic: A Man Who Does the Impossible
Charles Simic is undoubtedly one of the greatest poets in America today. Quite appropriately, three months ago, the man who had stated that “some people are more able to do the impossible” had participated in the...
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The Caribbean: The Meeting Place of the Modern World
If finding a friend in a large crowd can be seen as daunting, then identifying international arenas of ideas and goods exchanged must be incredibly exhausting. Yet that is the grand undertaking it took to create the...
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Jenine Shereos’ Leaf Project: Material Both Humble and Ephemeral
The Arte Povera (literally poor art) movement of the 1960s and 1970s was an iconic inspection of the societal implications of the meaning of art not as image, creation, or replication — but as material. There...
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