Performance Artist Alix Pearlstein Breaks Down Nonbiodegradable Material
Performance Artist Alix Pearlstein Breaks Down Nonbiodegradable Material
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Performance Artist Alix Pearlstein Breaks Down Nonbiodegradable Material
Thompson is showing giant photographs of beautiful objects like butterflies, rose-lipped women, and a curvy torso drenched in watery blue.
Photographer Bill Durgin’s torsos aren't as elegant as Degas's, but they're definitely happy-making.
Perry's frothy work is capable of evoking gastronomical extremes.
Kehinde Wiley approaches men on the streets of Harlem, Lagos, and Dakar, and paints them into grand, opulently framed works that you'd expect to see on a wall in a Wes Anderson movie.
This image of her almost-teen daughter in a frilled bathing suit would work there in a diorama of prehistoric adolescent life.
Happy Labor Day weekend from Art Candy!
Hoyle's subject is often water and the people who swim in it.
Burghardt’s dirty-elbowed hippie is swathed in heavenly light. Is she Jesus's secret girlfriend? Joni Mitchell?
Shen Jingdong, who served for sixteen years in the Chinese military, merges Pop Art with Marxist propaganda.
J.J. Abrams would do well to take a look at Lia Halloran’s spooky photographs of late-night skate parks.
And that line is not, surprisingly, 'HELF.'
Mircea Suciu's paintings are apparently inspired by advertisements from the forties and fifties.
Adria Sartore's unimpressed redhead, 'Flora 9,' looks like she's just landed, but we're not sure from where or when.
While humans behave like superheroes inside the arena, outside, an army of workers keeps the Olympics running smoothly.
Nara's 'Puff Marshie' was inspired by childhood, just before all the icky stuff creeps in.
Day turns a sultry-eyed Barbie into a glamorous bondage model.
She's walking on ice shoes!