century of the child
Century of the Child: Growing by Design, 1900-2000, at the MoMA, “is the first large-scale overview of the modernist preoccupation with children and childhood as a paradigm for progressive design thinking.”
Century of the Child: Growing by Design, 1900-2000, at the MoMA, “is the first large-scale overview of the modernist preoccupation with children and childhood as a paradigm for progressive design thinking.”
PØST Gallery in Los Angeles has been hosting a month of “Kamikaze” exhibits, with a new show every day throughout July.
Alex Gingrow’s show at Mike Weiss sounds kind of interesting, in a William Powhida sort of way.
Screw You, at Susan Inglett, “shines a light on the intersection of counterculture publishing, tabloid pornography and the art world which occurred in the creatively fertile years of the late 1960s and early 1970s.”
Piping Down the Valleys Wild, Stux’s summer show, “presents a timely update on the discussion of the sustainability of innocence in the contemporary world.”
Yayoi Kusama’s retrospective at the Whitney will run through the end of September.
The Drawing Center, which is currently undergoing a $10 million expansion that will add 50% more public space, has delayed its re-opening until November.
“Levitated Mass,” Michael Heizer’s $10-million environmental sculpture on the grounds of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, recently made its long-awaited debut.
NYFA recently announced its 2012 Artists’ Fellowship Awardees.
Andrea Rosen will be opening a new space, Gallery 2, in Fall 2012, also located on West 24th Street.