AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.
A monthly art magazine that covers contemporary visual arts, including painting, sculpture, photography and other arts. Also provides critiques of new artists and reviews of important books.
Set up an RSS feed
Create a link to this page
Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:
Venice Biennale makeover.(Front Page)
October 1, 2004... The Aug. 12 announcement was so densely studded with "firsts"--first Spanish and first American directors of the Venice Biennale, first co-directorship and first women chosen for the post--that one could easily overlook what might be the more...
Political art in election season.(Front Page)
October 1, 2004... The months leading up to the November presidential election have seen a proliferation of political art in New York. Over 200 events were part of the first annual Imagine Festival of Arts, Issues and Ideas during the six days of festivities...
Crisis at the U.S. pavilion.(Front Page)
October 1, 2004... As we go to press, it seems that a stop-gap arrangement may be in the cards for the U.S. pavilion during the 2005 Venice Biennale. The Fund for U.S. Artists at International Festivals and Exhibitions, which since 1987 has overseen American...
Four finalists picked for High Line.(Front Page)(Friends of the High Line)
October 1, 2004... Friends of the High Line, an organization dedicated to preserving a 2-mile-long, disused elevated railway viaduct in Manhattan's Chelsea district, recently announced that four teams are finalists to redesign the structure. Once earmarked for...
Art research: a digital future?(Front Page)(Artstor on-line digital art library)
October 1, 2004... A new on-line digital art library, Artstor, finally launched this summer. The $30-million project is funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and headed by Nell Rudenstine, former president of Harvard University. The service is available to...
Richter gift to Dresden.(Front Page)(Dresden State Art Collections)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... German artist Gerhard Richter, born in Dresden in 1932, recently gave his hometown 41 works from his private collection. Consisting mostly of major paintings dating from the early 1960s to the present, the gift is valued by experts at around...
Akron Museum expansion on track.(Front Page)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... Construction recently got under way for the new Akron Art Museum expansion designed by Coop Himmelb(l)au, the Austrian firm led by architects Wolf D. Prix and Helmut Swiczinsky. Set to open in late summer 2006, the 64,000-square-foot annex,...
Leon Golub (1922-2004).(Front Page)(Obituary)
October 1, 2004... Lefon Golub died Aug. 8 in New York from complications following surgery. Earlier in the year, the 82-year-old painter, who was best known for his epically scaled paintings depicting scenes of torture and political repression, exhibited a group...
Musings on museums.(Book Review)
October 1, 2004... Whose Muse? Art Museums and the Public Trust, edited by James Cuno, with essays by James Curio, Philippe de Montebello, Glenn D. Lowry, Nell MacGregor, John Walsh and James N. Wood, Princeton and Cambridge, Princeton University Press and...
A war and its images: as photographs and films dealing with the Iraq War become the subject of partisan debate, the author considers their ethical and historical context.(Issues & Commentary)
October 1, 2004... Postmodernism tells us that any "truth" is shaped, that images have no meaning outside their context, that reality is at best inaccessible and, at worst, nonexistent. From certain perspectives, the Iraq War seems to substantiate these claims. A...
NY galleries.(Calendar)
October 1, 2004... Chelsea
Bespoke Gallery
453 West 17th Street, 2nd Fl, NY, NY 10011
Tel: 646.642.4437 * Fax: 646.219.6372
Email: rtkubicka@bespokellc.com
Website: www.bespokellc.com
Tuesday-Saturday: 10:00-6:00
Through October...
Graphic art in the summer of discontent: the 2004 election has attracted artists in numbers not seen for a generation. Their designs give progressive politics a distinct visibility.(Art & Politics)(war protest installations New York)
October 1, 2004... New York, late June 2004: On a wall of feel-good iPod ads showing wired-up kids in silhouette dancing against electric-colored backgrounds, there appears, for a few hours, the now-iconic hooded prisoner who has become the emblem of the Abu...
The real McCoy.(Pen & Ink Comic)
October 1, 2004... Artists comment on art through the medium of drawing (the first in an occasional series).
JACKSON'S DEAD
POONS PAINTS LIKE JACKSON
FRANZ, YOU PAINT LIKE JOHN SLOAN
JACKSON REARRANGED THE STARS, AND EVEN THE BIRDS ARE APPOINTED...
The luminous continent: the revelatory power of images--whether from high-art sources or elsewhere--marked the most recent biennial of African photography in Bamako.(Report From Mali, West Africa)(Recontres de la Photographic Africaine)(various photographers)
October 1, 2004... For all the fashionable talk about a postcolonial redress of the imbalance between major cultural centers and a neglected "periphery," the tact remains that current art, and the critical and commercial attention it generates, still tends to...
Latin American modern: an ambitious exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts examined major themes in Latin America's midcentury avant-garde.(Report From Houston)
October 1, 2004... Generous in its scope, innovative in its nonlinear structure, "Inverted Utopias" at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH), claimed to be the first comprehensive exhibition in the U.S. to rigorously study the relatively unexplored phenomenon...
Northern lights: in installations that variously involve light, color, geometry movement and more, Olafur Eliasson nudges the participant-viewer into an ambient perceptual awareness.("The weather project" at the Tate Modern, London, England)
October 1, 2004... I'm not talking about the water canning in the river. I'm not standing on the side of the river and watching the river passing by. I'm sitting in a boat in the river and watching the water and the bank always being now but constantly...
Farber on Farber: in his more than 50 years as a film critic and painter, Manny Farber has brought an essentially autobiographical sensibility to bear on a wide range of visual idioms, from process-driven abstractions to rebuslike figurative studies. Here, he tells the story straight.(Manny Farber)
October 1, 2004... Born in Douglas, Ariz., in 1917, Manny Farber has had long, prominent careers as both a painter and a film critic. He briefly attended the University of California, Berkeley, playing football there, then transferred to Stanford University,...
A flatland of forms: Thomas Nozkowski's abstract paintings have long been characterized by their small scale and use of eccentric shapes against variegated grounds. His work was recently the subject of a trio of shows in the U.S. and Britain.
October 1, 2004... present in Thomas Nozkowski's paintings is the vernacular of our modern world, streamlined into essential shapes that elicit myriad associations. Through a diligent fine-tuning of form, Nozkowski achieves a delicate equilibrium between...
Erro's history: New York audiences had three opportunities to encounter the vivid and sometimes bitingly political work of Erro, the Icelandic artist who maintained a love-hate relationship with U.S. culture.("Worldscapes: The Art of Erro" at the Grey Art Gallery, New York University, New York)
October 1, 2004... "And that's how history is written!" exclaims the sci-fi comic-book muscleman, gaping out at an unseen menace in a small collage of 1980 included in "Worldscapes: The Art of Erro." This first American retrospective surveys the artist's...
Flirtations with evidence: the factual and the spurious consort in the works of The Atlas Group/Walid Raad. Using the conventions of information-based art, Raad questions the reliability of documentation in general. His projects, which take as their theme the protracted political instability of the Middle East, range in tone from satirical to elegiac.(photography)
October 1, 2004... The fact that people tend to flirt only with serious things--madness, disaster, other people--and the fact that flirting is a pleasure makes it a relationship, a way of doing things, worth considering.... Flirts are dangerous because they have...
Artschwager pinxit: though inspired by photographs and rendered on commercial construction board, Richard Artschwager's paintings reflect an acute awareness of art history. A survey honoring the artist on his 80th birthday sampled the conceptual and technical variety of four decades' work.(Richard Artschwager )
October 1, 2004... For over 40 years, Richard Artschwager has been executing paintings on Celotex, a rigid compound board formed from pressed fibers and generally used in construction. Although it has a smooth side, Artschwager has consistently chosen the...
Moving pictures: structurally complex and narratively engaging, Jon Kessler's new multimedia sculptures often deliver an emotional punch beyond their humble means.
October 1, 2004... Since the 1980s, Jon Kessler has made kinetic sculptures that whir, bellow, shake, spin and perform other actions. He was included in the 1984 Whitney Biennial, had numerous and regular museum and gallery shows in the '80s and early '90s, and...
Erick Swenson at James Cohan.
October 1, 2004... Dioramas attract through more or less convincing representations of occurrences in the history of nature or culture. In that tradition, an untitled three-dimensional work from 2004 by Erick Swenson imaginatively depicts the death of a 10-point...
Jan Mancuska at Andrew Kreps.
October 1, 2004... In his first U.S. exhibition, 31-year-old Czech artist Jan Mancuska plumbed the murky yet undeniable distance between word and object. This may sound like dry, academic stuff, yet Mancuska's work--with its humble materials and refreshing sense...
Kendell Geers at Salon 94.
October 1, 2004... South African-born Kendell Geers, widely known on the international festival and gallery circuit for sculpture and video installations exploring themes of violence, social justice and sexuality, had his first New York solo exhibition in the...
Jean Shin at Frederieke Taylor.
October 1, 2004... Jean Shin has recently earned a reputation for her transformative installations that imbue castoffs of our consumerist society with a new vitality. Several ambitious installations (all 2004) engaging sculptural assemblage, architecture,...
Alexander Liberman at Ameringer & Yohe.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... While studying architecture and working as a set designer in Paris in the 1930s, Alexander Liberman (1912-2000), who was born in Kiev, joined the staff of Vu, one of the earliest magazines to incorporate photographs. There he began a multipart...
Rachel Howard at the Bohen Foundation.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... The English painter Rachel Howard's first American exhibition, "Guilty," consisted of a set of large color photographs and a series of 10-foot-high paintings titled after the seven deadly sins: Lust, Avarice, Sloth, Gluttony, Anger, Pride and...
Harriet Korman at Lennon, Weinberg.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... In her latest show, Harriet Korman continues in much the same vein as she has for the past few years, and, in fact, the earliest works among these 18 paintings and four pastels date to 2001. There is something delightfully stubborn about this...
Robert Beauchamp at David Findlay Jr.
October 1, 2004... Although he was a student of Hans Hofmann and drew on the work of the figurative expressionists of the New York School, the real forebears of Robert Beauchamp (1923-1995) were painters who combined phantasmagoric visions with psychological...
Willie Doherty at Alexander and Bonin.
October 1, 2004... Made on the field of the Troubles of Ireland, Willie Doherty's videos and photographs engage the viewer with an awareness of foreboding, of surveillance. In the quasi-cinematic details of such earlier works as Somewhere Else (1998) and...
Philip Kwame Apagya at Jack Shainman.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... Studio portrait photography has held a central position in West African social life since the first daguerreotypists arrived from Europe in the 1850s. The British policy of "indirect rule" encouraged the training of local populations in skills...
Santu Mofokeng at David Krut Projects.
October 1, 2004... One of South Africa's leading photographers, Santu Mofokeng worked as a street photographer in Soweto and documented the antiapartheid struggle in the 1980s. He participated in Documenta 11, in the traveling exhibition "The Short Century:...
Andrea Robbins and Max Becher at Sonnabend.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... That the famed London Bridge is now a favorite spring-break party spot in Lake Havasu, Ariz., is one of several incongruities Andrea Robbins and Max Becher tackle in their series of 14 color photographs "Where Do You Think You Are?". Their...
Martin Kline at Jason McCoy.
October 1, 2004... Each of Martin Kline's unique cast stainless-steel sculptures replicates the surface and support of an encaustic painting sacrificed to the casting process. Kline retains the usually recycled scrap of the pour as an armature that supports the...
Haim Steinbach at Sonnabend.
October 1, 2004... Each of the works included in this survey of Haim Steinbach's sculpture participates in a thoughtful esthetics of display. The identification of unmodified elements and the nature of assembly and presentation on the artist's familiar, angled...
Michal Rovner at Pace Wildenstein.
October 1, 2004... The hazy, imprecise imagery of Michal Rovner's videos and photographs often gains thematic focus from her inventive use of supports and installation formats. This contingency was demonstrated at the 2003 Venice Biennale, where Rovner projected...
Jack Risley at Postmasters.
October 1, 2004... To the familiar hybrid of sculptural form and practical function, Jack Risley's good-natured new work adds the visual animation of comic strips. All potentially mobile and dubiously utilitarian, his recent sculptures have the appealing...
John Duff at Knoedler.
October 1, 2004... "I am interested in the way separate materials combine to form something greater than each alone," said sculptor John Duff in a 1986 interview. In a recent show of new work, this concern was most explicit in Five Materials in Combination...
Glenn Brown at Gagosian.
October 1, 2004... This exhibition of recent works by Glenn Brown was the long-awaited New York solo debut for the 38-year-old English artist who has gained an international reputation since his participation in "Sensation." In that landmark museum show, which in...
Four Americans at Marlborough Chelsea.
October 1, 2004... A disparate gathering of artists spanning generations and crossing disciplines, Manny Farber (b. 1917), Sven Lukin (b. 1934), William Tunberg (b. 1936) and Camille Utterback (b. 1970) seem most linked by a questioning of the necessity for the...
Alexis Smith at Artemis * Greenber Van Doren.
October 1, 2004... Examining the cultural impetus that breeds today's wars of opportunity, Alexis Smith reconsiders the moral valence of discarded objects by means of selective juxtaposition and the addition of borrowed texts, as she enlists the viewer in the...
Hilary Harkness at Mary Boone.
October 1, 2004... Precious is one way of characterizing the three small paintings in Hilary Harkness's recent exhibition. Her intricate, minutely detailed canvases might have looked absurd in Mary Boone's gigantic Chelsea gallery, but the Lilliputian societies...
Laurie Simmons at Sperone Westwater.
October 1, 2004... Beyond her valley of the dolls, Laurie Simmons's recent photographs hold up to ridicule and contempt the furnishings of consumer culture and desire. She overloads the architecture of made-up modern interiors with collages of superfluous objects...
Mia Enell at Luxe.
October 1, 2004... In her drawings and paintings, Mia Enell places discrete, occasionally flimsy images at the center of large monochrome fields. Odd juxtapositions seem to have been arrived at by means of free association, situating this body of work within the...
Sabine Friesicke at Robert Steele.
October 1, 2004... "Light in the Basement," Sabine Friesicke's exhibition at Robert Steele Gallery, included 11 square paintings in acrylic on canvas, 64 by 64 inches each, and three small acrylic drawings on paper (all works except one 2003). These abstract...
Maria Nordman at Christine Burgin.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... Since 1967, conceptual artist Maria Nordman has employed the simplest elements as her medium. In preparatory notes concerning this exhibition, "Standing Pictures Manhattan," Nordman recasts this vest-pocket gallery as an installation, "a place...
Tim Prentice at Maxwell Davidson.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... "Facades and Fragments," Tim Prentice's exhibition at Maxwell Davidson, contained a large selection of his kinetic sculpture from the past six years, with an emphasis on works from 2003. Prentice uses aluminum, stainless steel and occasionally...
John McCracken at David Zwirner.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... For decades, John McCracken has created simple objects that occasion the perception of specific colors. Built by hand, each form consists of a fiberglass and plywood support coated with highly finished polyester resin. In this recent show, the...
Willem de Kooning at Gagosian, Mitchell-Innes & Nash, and Richard Gray.
October 1, 2004... The phenomenon of the commercial gallery performing as an intermittent kunsthalle reached its apogee this spring with the de Kooning centenary exhibition at the Gagosian gallery in Chelsea, a museum-worthy survey supported by smaller uptown...
Peter Wegner at the Bohen Foundation.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... The verbose title of Peter Wegner's recent exhibition was writ large on an entry wall and read, in part, "Complete and Final Color Theory Superseding All Previous Theories & Preempting All Future Theories." While this statement confirmed...
Patricia Cronin at the University at Buffalo Art Gallery.
October 1, 2004... "The Domain of Perfect Affection," the title of an exhibition of Patricia Cronin's work in various mediums from 1993-2003, was the nickname Rosa Bonheur, one of the great horse painters of the 19th century (and a lesbian), gave to her country...
Jasper Johns at the Cleveland Museum of Art.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... Most of Jasper Johns's paintings, drawings, prints and reliefs that use number imagery were realized from the mid-'50s to the early '60s. The Cleveland Museum's exhibition surveying this work was conceived to celebrate the acquisition of Ten...
Kerry James Marshall at the Museum of Contemporary Art.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... In "One True Thing: Meditations of Black Aesthetics," Kerry James Marshall's first major exhibition since 1998, the artist reclaimed the notion of a black esthetic, an artistic and political strategy born out of the Black Arts movement of the...
Robert Chambers at Laumeier Sculpture Park.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... Robert Chambers's ambitious exhibition, which included 19 works made over a 15-year period, looked as much like a science fair or a fun-house installation as an art show. On view in Laumeier mansion's five indoor galleries were objects that...
Jack Mims at McKinney Avenue Contemporary.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... The legend of the Black Taj informs Jack Mims's "The Black Maps" series (all works 2001-03). According to that legend, the sultan who built the gorgeously white Taj Mahal as a tomb for his wife constructed a black replica for himself across the...
Dan Collins at the Tucson Museum of Art.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... When art meets technology, the results aren't always as compelling as the idea that sparked the union. But in "Return to the Garden," a retrospective of Dan Collins's work at the Tucson Museum of Art, these two modes of human creativity enjoy a...
Luis Gonzalez Palma at Lisa Sette.
October 1, 2004... Luis Gonzalez Palma has turned his lens away from the Maya descendants of his native Guatemala to explore people and places in his new home in Argentina.
His recent exhibition featured three portraits and eight interior views (all 2004)....
Spandau Parks at Anna Helwing.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... Like a number of artists who create works meant to be experienced in reproduction rather than directly--ames Casebere and Thomas Demand come to mind--Spandau Parks displays not his paintings, but large photographs of details of his paintings....
Inez Storer at the De Saisset Museum.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... It is worth noting that this 40-year survey of Inez Storer's paintings, works on paper, artist's books and assemblages opened at the same time that the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art's Marc Chagall retrospective was attracting record...
Juan Granados at Bryan Ohno.(Brief Article)(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... Metaphors of landscape and organic growth interface with allusions to industrialized agribusiness in the new work of Texas-based ceramic sculptor Juan Granados. Twelve wall-mounted sculptures--averaging 12 to 24 inches in height and made of...
J.C.J. Vanderheyden at the Van Abbemuseum.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... Filling one large gallery of the museum, this impressive recent mini-survey of 17 paintings, constructions and photo works was a tribute to the Dutch artist J.C.J. Vanderheyden, who is recognized in his homeland as a key figure in postwar art...
Alec Soth at Wohnmaschine.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... The large-format color photographs of Alec Soth, a Minneapolis-based artist in his mid-30s, were among the standouts at last spring's Whitney Biennial. His portraits, landscapes and interiors explore a particularly rich slice of American...
Thorsten Kirchhoff at V.M.21.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... A mercurial talent who embraces popular culture firmly but coolly, Thorsten Kirchhoff is a performance and installation artist, rock musician, video maker and painter. He briefly tried his hand at furniture design and excels at contriving...
Alex Hanimann and Marlene McCarty at the Kunsthalle.(Critical Essay)
October 1, 2004... Strange twittering sounds confronted viewers entering the newly built spaces of the relocated St. Gallen Kunsthalle. The first room was filled with an immense, wood-walled, 8,122-cubic-foot structure resembling four enlarged work cubicles...
Art schools directory.(Directory)
October 1, 2004... NEW ENGLAND
The Art Institute of Boston at Lesley University
Office of Admissions
700 Beacon Street, Boston, MA 02215
tel: 617.585.6700 or 800 773 04.94 toll-free
fax: 617.437.1226
e-mail: admissions@aiboston.edu...
Art services directory.(Directory)
October 1, 2004... ADVERTISING DESIGN PRINTING
Dynacolor Graphics Inc.
P.O. Box 699037, Miami. FL 33269-9037
800.624.8840 ext. 322 Web: www.dynacolor.com
Dynacolor Graphics is one of the fine art industry's leading printers of full color gallery...
Obituaries.(Artworld)(Obituary)
October 1, 2004... Anne Coffin Hanson, 82, art historian, died Sept. 3 in New Haven. She was the first woman to be hired as a full tenured professor at Yale, where she taught for more than two decades before retiring in 1992. An authority on late 19th- and early...
Henri Cartier-Bresson, 1908-2004.(Artworld)(Obituary)
October 1, 2004... Henri Cartier-Bresson, influential photographer and co-founder of Magnum Photos, died at his home in southern France on Aug. 3, shortly before his 96th birthday on Aug. 22. With a background in painting and drawing, Cartier-Bresson became...
Studio program saved, again.(Artworld)(Marie Walsh Sharpe Foundation, Manhattan, New York, New York)(Space Program)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... The Marie Walsh Sharpe Foundation, whose Space Program has provided free Manhattan studios to 14 artists per year since 1990, has managed to survive another financial crunch [see "Front Page," May '04]. The program was threatened three years...
Art show at old TWA terminal.(Artworld)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... In homage to Eero Saarinen's TWA terminal at Kennedy Airport in New York, an ambitious art exhibition is being mounted within the landmark building, before construction begins and the building undergoes alterations to become part of a new...
Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam.(People)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... Gijs van Tuyl has been appointed to a five-year stint as director of the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. From 1969 to '76, he was a curator there, and since 1992 has been head of the Kunstmuseum in Wolfsburg, Germany. Van Tuyl replaces Rudi...
Addison Gallery of American Art.(People)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... Brian T. Allen is the new director of the Addison Gallery of American Art at the Phillips Academy in Andover, Mass. Since 1997, he was director of collections and exhibitions and curator of American art at the Clark Art Institute in...
Victoria & Albert Museum.(People)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... Deborah Swallow, director of collections at the Victoria & Albert Museum, has been appointed director of the Courtauld Institute in London, replacing James Cuno, who is now head of the Art Institute of Chicago.
The Bellevue Art Museum.(People)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... The Bellevue Art Museum in Washington State has selected Michael W. Monroe as its executive director and chief curator. An independent curator and craft expert, Monroe was with the Renwick Gallery in Washington, D.C., from 1976 to 1995; he...
Alfred University.(People)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... Joseph S. Lewis III, artist and A.i.A. contributor, has been appointed dean of the School of Art and Design at Alfred University in Alfred, N.Y. For the past three years, he was dean at the School of Art and Design at the Fashion Institute of...
American Folk Art Museum.(People)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... Gerard C. Wertkin, director since 1991 of the American Folk Art Museum in New York, has announced his plans to retire within the year. He led the museum through a period of growth and expansion, including its move to a new building in 2001. The...
Harry N. Abrams, Inc.(People)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... Michael Jacobs is the new president and CEO of Harry N. Abrams, Inc., a leading publisher of art books. He most recently served as senior vice president of the trade division at Scholastic.
MacDowell Colony.(Awards)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... Nam June Paik has been given the Edward MacDowell Medal in Visual Art by the MacDowell Colony in New Hampshire for his outstanding contribution to the arts.
Moore College of Art & Design.(Awards)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... Judy Chicago is the winner of the Visionary Woman Award, given by the Moore College of Art & Design in Philadelphia.
Rhode Island School of Design.(Awards)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... Lucy Lippard, Christo and Jeanne-Claude, and Ken Robinson, senior advisor to the president of the Getty Center, will be presented with Athena Awards for prominent art and design leaders, given by the Rhode Island School of Design.
The Rolex Mentor and Protege Arts Initiative.(Awards)(David Hookney and Matthias Weischer)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... The Rolex Mentor and Protege Arts Initiative has announced the new participants in its program, which pairs an established artist with an emerging talent for one year. The visual arts team comprises David Hookney and Matthias Weischer. Mentors...
Center for Curatorial Studies at Bard College.(Awards)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... Walter Hopps was recently presented with the Award for Curatorial Excellence by the Center for Curatorial Studies at Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, N.Y.
American Federation of Arts.(Awards)(Brief Article)
October 1, 2004... Painter Caio Fonseca and architect Annabelle Selldorf are the winners of the inaugural Visionary Awards, given by the American Federation of Arts. The AFA also honored Hannelore Schulhof for service to the arts.