Art in America, the world’s premier art magazine, delivers in-depth coverage of the global contemporary art scene. Published 11 times per year, every issue contains profiles on respected and rising talents, critical essays and reviews of current exhibitions around the world, written by today’s leading artists, curators and historians.
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Charisse Pearlina Weston • Working in glass, a sculptor challenges beliefs about transparency.
Sam Lipsyte • The novelist, who recently published a short story in the Gagosian Picture Book series, discusses creative composition and America’s demise, along with related interests.
Geobiology • A conversation about how different timescales complicate the distinction between life and nonlife.
Thamas & Hudson • new books for fall
Fire Safety • A collector wonders how he can fire his adviser, and a spurned NFT devotee pines for the past.
Hungry Listening • Mariah Carey’s “Honey” complicates distinctions between enjoyment and addiction, desire and dependency.
Eva Hesse • Expanded Expansion (1969)
Peasant Politics • Jumana Manna explores the “preservation” of plants as a tool of colonialism in occupied Palestine.
RBG • RUDOLF BUDJA GALLERY
GORDON
Medium Specificity • The unfinished reception of Hilma af Klint.
AT HOME IN THE BORDERLAND • Domesticity and defiance commingle in images from Spanish-speaking migrant communities.
GOD’S-EYE VIEWS • From sweeping natural vistas to urban sprawl to hints of government secrecy, Southwestern aerial photography exposes the region’s social terrain.
BOTTLED LIGHTNING • The Lightning Field in New Mexico communes with Cormac McCarthy, Herman Melville, and the confidence men of Web3.
Shock Waves & Wet Concrete • Lucy Raven in conversation with Andy Battaglia
FROM THE GROUND UP • Contemporary Diné artists enlist Native feminisms in a fight for environmental justice.
Scripts for the Land • A dedication to Pueblo culture and language unifies Felice Lucero’s work in visual art, agriculture, and pedagogy.
DROUGHTCORE • Rose B. Simpson’s ceramic and automotive sculptures honor Pueblo traditions while anticipating another apocalypse.
Isaac Julien • Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia
Tala Madani • Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles
Zoe Leonard • Hauser & Wirth, New York
Jorge Tacla • Cristin Tierney Gallery, New York
Cannupa Hanska Luger • Center for Craft, Asheville, North Carolina
Kylie Manning • Pace, Los Angeles
Kaari Upson • Sprüth Magers, Los Angeless
Rosa Barba • Esther Schipper, Berlin
Hands On • A.i.A. Hangs with the People Who Handle the Art