Posted inArts & Entertainment

Mellow Bellows

In 1969, thousands of peace-loving music devotees gathered near a small town in the Catskills for what was to become a landmark in American cultural history. The Woodstock that George Bellows knew and loved, half a century earlier, was an altogether smaller affair. But for many of the artists who came to work there, it […]

Posted inArts & Entertainment

Art is long

In 1914 Kathleen McEnery was a rising figure on the New York art scene when suddenly, at the age of 26, she disappeared. What happened? She got married and came to live in Rochester.             A year earlier, in 1913, she had exhibited two paintings at the legendary Armory Show in New York. This was […]

Posted inArts & Entertainment

Sweet nothings

Pow! Roy Lichtenstein’s brightly colored enlargement of a fight scene from a comic strip in Sweet Dreams Baby (1965) smacks you right in the face. But the impact is purely visual. Pop Art rarely offers much more than this kind of immediate thrill, but that is its greatest strength. Sometimes you just don’t want to […]

Posted inArts & Entertainment

Creative cultivation

Artists can be solitary creatures. For many, shutting out the world with all its demands is an essential part of the creative process. Isolation though, has its downside and, as the saying goes, it’s good to get out once in a while. At some point, whether it be through exhibition, publication, or performance, the work […]

Posted inArts & Entertainment

Automatic art

The Art-o-mat cometh. Yes, thanks to a collaboration between Rochester Contemporary and the Record Archive, our city finally gets to experience the joys of “vended art.”             In 1997, in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Clark Whittington invented the Art-o-mat by turning an abandoned cigarette vending machine to the service of art. Initially, it dispensed Whittington’s own […]

Posted inArts & Entertainment

Math or myth?

Modigliani was a noisy drunkard, a passionate womanizer, a hashish eater, a lousy singer, a boisterous poet. He died tragically young, aged 35, an impoverished and unrecognized artist. Such is the legend. Kenneth Wayne, the curator of Modigliani and the Artists of Montparnasse at Buffalo’s Albright-Knox Art Gallery and author of the accompanying catalogue, seeks […]

Posted inArts & Entertainment

Degas in 3D

There’s something bewitching about the new exhibition at the Memorial Art Gallery. The Degas bronzes, which form the core of the show, are dazzlingly seductive in their beauty. But what lies beneath those gleaming surfaces?             The story begins at the end, when Degas died in 1917 after years of failing health and virtual blindness. […]

Posted inArts & Entertainment

Alchemy with shadows

I should confess that I have long been one of Adam Fuss’s biggest fans. So I came to this show with high expectations. I was not disappointed.             Scott Laird, the gallery director, and Deborah Ronnen, a prominent local art dealer, have taken a side room at the Visual Studies Workshop and transformed it into […]

Gift this article