Draw Them In, Paint Them Out: Trenton Doyle Hancock Confronts Philip Guston
A review of the exhibition at, and the catalog by, the Jewish Museum.
My latest for The Arts Fuse is a review of “Draw Them In, Paint Them Out: Trenton Doyle Hancock Confronts Philip Guston” at the Jewish Museum and its forthcoming catalog. Have a look.
Content at DMJ is free but paid subscriptions keep it coming. Please consider one for yourself and thank you for reading.
Our current title in the Asynchronous Studio Book Club is Working Space by Frank Stella. For more information, see the ASBC homepage.
The current exhibition in the Dissident Museum is David Curcio: The Point of the Needle.
Dissident Muse’s first publication, Backseat Driver by James Croak, is available now at Amazon.
Aphorisms for Artists: 100 Ways Toward Better Art by Walter Darby Bannard is out now at Allworth Press. More information is available at the site for the book. If you own it already, thank you; please consider reviewing the book at Amazon, B&N, or Goodreads.
The problem, Franklin, is that you make too much sense, and that is antithetical to PC fashion.
As for the Jewish Museum, Franklin would know better than I do, but it would appear (and not just in this instance) that it may not be tough enough to be Jewish (or as the former Caryn Johnson, now a certain W. Goldberg, might say, "Jewish-Jewish").