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In the Studio: Dike Blair

Dike Blair is having a good year: in April he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in the visual arts, and this month a major exhibition of his work, "Now and Again," opens at the Weatherspoon Art Museum, in Greensboro, N.C. The show, Blair's first museum solo, is organized by Weatherspoon curator Xandra Eden and is accompanied by a catalogue with essays by Eden and writer Gary Indian. Born in 1952, Blair grew up in western Pennsylvania. He earned an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in1977, and also attended the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program. Since landing in New York in the mid-'70s, Blair has charted a singular path, making work that ranges from early paintings on glass to installations inspired by Disney World's Epcot Center. In the mid'80s, Blair began to make modestly scaled gouaches, and has continued the practice ever since. Over the years these paintings have focused on a succession of thematic pairings: travel scenes and still lifes, windows and flowers, and more recen

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In The Devil's Dictionary, an assassination-by-satire on duplicitous political argot published by Ambrose Bierce in 1911, peace is defined as "a period of cheating between two periods of fighting." Nearly a century onward, the same sense of  integrity that compelled Bierce's dry pen also inspires "No Soul for Sale: A Festival of Independents," a program created by X Initiative to celebrate and advocate for not-for-profit independent arts organizations.

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When first asked to do a video interview with Art in America for "No Soul For Sale: A Festival of Independents," a four-day celebration of independent collectives opening this evening at the X Initiative's Chelsea space, K48 founder Scott Hug agreed with the friendly caveat that the other contributors to the forthcoming issue of the magazine join him in front of the camera.

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Shirin Neshat: An Interview

The Iranian-born artist talks about her first feature film, Women Without Men, and the challenging negotiations it embodies: between fine art and commercial cinema, East and West, metaphor and political reality. Over the last 12 years Shirin Neshat (b. 1957) has produced a series of lyrical video installations that touch on such issues as gender politics, cultural self-definition and the authority of religion. Drawing on the artist’s experiences as a Middle Eastern émigré as well as more universal themes of identity, desire and social isolation, these works have garnered many honors, including, in 1999, a Venice Biennale International Golden Lion prize.

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Known for technophilic representations of biological functions. Delvoye here talks about the 33-foot-high, pseudo-Gothic tower he's made to crown the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice. He'd like the ultimate version to be four times as tall.

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NEWS & OPINION

Christie's Sells Nearly Half a Billion Dollars of Contemporary Art

Christie's contemporary art sale last night achieved the highest total in auction history at $495 mill… Read More

Hammer Museum Hires Curators Butler, Moshayedi

Cornelia Butler, named in April as co-curator with Michael Ned Holte of the upcoming Hammer biennial … Read More

Cooper Occupation Exceeds One-Week Mark

In the latest development in an ongoing conflict, students at New York's Cooper Union have occupied t… Read More

Market News
DECODING IMAGES

Currently on view in the group show "Redux" at New York's Cristin Tierney Gallery (through Feb. 4) are two works by Joe Fig, both related to his 200

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