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Karen Rosenberg

October 3, 2005 | Feature
Lines in the Sand

Is Jenny Holzer’s art in danger of being washed away by the digital storm that surrounds her?

September 12, 2005 | Fall Preview 2005 - Art
Unnatural Wonders

Edward Burtynsky’s industrial landscapes are at once beautiful and horrible.

September 12, 2005 | Fall Preview 2005 - Art
Soviet Reunion

The Met and the Guggenheim celebrate czars and Czechs.

September 12, 2005 | Fall Preview 2005 - Art
Homecoming Queen

The bedrock consistency of Elizabeth Murray pays off.

September 12, 2005 | Fall Preview 2005 - Art
They Ain't No Hollaback Boys

The Finnish Screaming Men’s Choir may seem like something out of Spamalot, but it is in fact an actual group of besuited men who shout song lyrics in violent, percussive fashion.

August 9, 2005 | Long Story Short
How Dick Van Dyke and Paris Hilton co-opted our most famous painting.

From icon of culture to reality-tv spoof in seven steps.

July 18, 2005 | Feature
Show and Tell: William Eggleston

William Eggleston's Photo Portraits at Cheim & Reid.

July 18, 2005 | Feature
The Queens 50

Enjoy it while it lasts. A pre-gentrification to-do list.

June 20, 2005 | Art Review
"All the Mighty World: the Photographs of Roger Fenton, 1852-1860"

It’s a potent reminder that the landscape of war is half-created and half-perceived.

December 20, 2004 | It Happened This Year: A Guide to 2004
Rothko Trumped Renoir.

Young collectors turned up their noses at Impressionists—and opened their wallets for modernists.

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