Jessica Hankey’s photographic and video work on non-profits, community centers, clubs, and museums, investigates institutions and the relationships that constitute them. Using documentary and narrative filmmaking strategies, she investigates the unstable relationship between location, image, and perception. by Erin Colleen Johnson
Category Archive: Vol. 1, No. 7: April/May 2016
Jaime Gaiti reviews the exhibition Drawing Redefined, which reveals ongoing, intimate drawing processes that have been developed alongside more sculptural bodies of work.
On Our Radar: Mark Price
Mark Price is an artist living and working in Portland, Maine. Here’s what he’s been working on lately, and four quick questions about what he’s also looking at.
In this episode, Anne interviews Pilar about the Maine-Aomori Printmaking Society, and we learn about the concepts of wabi-sabi, sashiko, and boro.
David Martinez takes a look at Walid Raad at the ICA/Boston and examines whether audio tours enhance or detract from a viewer’s experience.
Able Baker Contemporary, a new artist-run space co-founded by Stephen Benenson and Hilary Irons, is set to officially open its doors on April 8 in downtown Portland.
Jenna Crowder recaps some of her recent favorite pieces from other journals, including Pelican Bomb, BURNAWAY, Cairobserver, arts.black, and Temporary Art Review.