ArchiveVisual Arts Articles
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Articles



Postcards from America: We Don’t Ask About the Oryx
Ginger Strand and Alec Soth
Feb 2012
Postcards from America, the newly published book by a group of five Magnum photographers and writer Ginger Strand, recounts a two-week road trip through the American Southwest in May 2011. Here, published online for the first time, is “Treasure: A True Story,” a collaborative project from the book featuring Strand’s writing and photos by Minnesota’s Alec Soth.
EC


Articles



Ice Land
Paul Schmelzer
Jan 2012
Uncharted territories, even in a relatively sparsely populated state like Minnesota, are few and far between. But each January, when the average temperature lingers around 7 degrees Fahrenheit, one such place comes into being, briefly, on the frozen surface of Medicine Lake, where artists reimagine ice-fishing shacks as the locus for a vibrant pop-up community.
VA


Articles



Frank Gaard on Dionysus and Dualism
Paul Schmelzer
Jan 2012
It’s taken 32 years, but Frank Gaard’s Walker solo show marks a homecoming of sorts for the Minneapolis-based artist: Poison & Candy is the painter’s first solo show here since 1980.
VA


Articles



Tombstone for Phùng Vo
Bartholomew Ryan
Jan 2012
“Here lies one whose name was writ in water.” So reads the inscription on a black stone with gold-leaf engraving that will be installed in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden next spring. A work by Danh Vo, it will reside here until the death of the artist’s father, when it will travel to Copenhagen to mark Phùng Vo’s final resting place.
VA


Articles



The Oculus Inhabited
Paul Schmelzer
Dec 2011
Like some alien organism deep in the core of the machine it controls, Elizabeth Simonson’s biomorphic, bead-based sculptural installation is recessed into the aluminum-clad ceiling just inside the Walker’s Hennepin Avenue entrance. Commissioned for the space, which was dubbed the “oculus” by architects Herzog & de Meuron, the complex and intricate work is intended to suggest biological forms.
FV


Articles


Nathalie Djurberg’s The Parade
Eric Crosby and Dean Otto
Dec 2011
Primal and chaotic, Nathalie Djurberg’s art “doesn’t look like anything else out there,” says Eric Crosby, co-curator of the artist’s first major US museum show. In an interview, he and the Walker’s Dean Otto discuss how Djurberg’s claymation and sculptures fall outside conventions of both the film and contemporary art worlds, while channeling a “universality of experience that speaks to us all.”
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Anthony Burrill’s Advice for Living
Paul Schmelzer
Dec 2011
British designer Anthony Burrill is known for using older technology, namely Victorian wood type, to create posters bearing upbeat, quirky mantras like “Work Hard and Be Kind to People” and “Clear Your Head.” But he’s well aware how social media is changing design—and propelling his ideas around the globe.
PA


Articles



The Muscle of Art: How Cunningham and Rauschenberg Inspire Us to Flex
Abigail Sebaly
Dec 2011
“Activity and open curiosity support the muscle of art,” Robert Rauschenberg once said. His work with choreographer Merce Cunningham actively embodied this idea, spanning more than 20 collaborations, five decades, and countless creative and pragmatic challenges.
VA


Articles



The Problem of Paint
Paul Schmelzer
Dec 2011
The Walker registrar faces myriad challenges — from “weeping Barbie syndrome,” which plagues art made from PVC, to cold storage for a famed choreographer’s fur coat — but none is more prevalent than the problem of paint: protecting and preserving outdoor sculptures ravaged by sun, time and water.