Press

SF Gate: New Painting from Teo González at Brian Gross

June 19, 2010 - Kenneth Baker

The recent works of Teo González at Brian Gross mark a logical next step for a painter who 15 years ago began each picture by ruling on it a strict, tight grid, whose cells he then filled with tiny dollops of color. The color blobs, varying slightly in size, shape and density, created unplannable pulsations throughout each picture's surface. González later extended the same practice to filling freehand grids, producing more dramatic optical warps of the picture plane....Read Full Story

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Art Review: Teo González: “New Paintings” at Brian Gross Fine Art

June 16, 2010 - Jonathan Curiel

The quarter-size ovals that splatter Teo Gonzalez' latest canvases are hypnotic. In turquoise, charcoal, satin red, and other colors, they snake and meander like jewels from a necklace in search of a home. A raised drip of paint dots the center of many ovals, giving the canvases — from the side, anyway — the appearance of armored plates....Read Full Story

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Press: New York Times: Now Showing | Swid/Kaufman, May  6, 2010 - Alix Browne

New York Times: Now Showing | Swid/Kaufman

May 6, 2010 - Alix Browne

In their own ways, Nan Swid and Donald Kaufman have always been enablers. A founder of the design company Swid Powell, Swid worked with an A-list of artists and architects like Frank Gehry, Richard Meier and Ettore Sottsass to produce all manner of tabletop objects.

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Juxtapoz: The Colorful Layers of Omar Chacon

March 28, 2010 - Juxtapoz

Originally from Bogota, Colombia, Omar Chacon received his MFA from SFAI. While in art school, Omar became captivated by the paintings of his maternal grandfather, Mario Suarez Negrelli.

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Press: Time Out NY: "Slash: Paper Under the Knife", January  1, 2010 - Jane Harris

Time Out NY: "Slash: Paper Under the Knife"

January 1, 2010 - Jane Harris

From the papyrus rolls of ancient Egypt to the first sheets of tree pulp manufactured in 19th-century Europe and beyond, paper has been central to the evolution of knowledge, art and commerce. It’s almost impossible to imagine life without it.

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Press: Drawn/Taped/Burned: An Interview about Drawing, Katonah Museum of Art: Drawn / Taped / Burned: Abstraction on Paper Jan. 23rd to May 1st 2011, January  1, 2010 - Diana Knoblauch

Drawn/Taped/Burned: An Interview about Drawing, Katonah Museum of Art: Drawn / Taped / Burned: Abstraction on Paper Jan. 23rd to May 1st 2011

January 1, 2010 - Diana Knoblauch

Diana Knoblauch: Can you tell me about the artistic process of these two drawings?


Tad Mike: Each work needs to be about a place. In New York City I work in Inwood Hill Park, a beautiful forest really. The works in this exhibition were created while I was an artist-in-residence at the Robert M. MacNamara Foundation on Westport Island, Maine. It was a perfect landscape to create work with wonderful people working there on your behalf...

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Art Daily: Solo Exhibition of Dynamic New Work by Nobu Fukui at Stephen Haller Gallery

January 1, 2010 - Art Daily

NEW YORK, NY.- Stephen Haller Gallery presents a solo exhibition of dynamic new work by Nobu Fukui - canvases vibrant with invention. The exhibition is accompanied by a full color catalogue with essay by Carter Ratcliff. Fukui’s work reads as non-objective painting at a distance, yet on closer observation beguiles with surprising imagery that suggests narrative. The eye plays across the surface of his work as if watching a video game in giddy visual delight. Oil paint, acrylics, three-dimensional beads, collage: these are some of the ingredients of this exciting work...Read Full Story

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The Brooklyn Rail: Letter from BERLIN: FRANK BADUR, Why Pattern?

December 11, 2009 - David Rhodes

Frank Badur has been part of the Berlin scene from the time he studied here, between 1963 and 1969. He became a professor at the University of Art in 1985, and, like many other German artists who maintain successful international careers, he has continued to teach. This has resulted in a certain continuity in German art, which makes it less subject to the vagaries of fashion that affect places like London so damagingly. 

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Press: New York Times: Move Over, Humble Doily: Paper Does a Star Turn, October 19, 2009 - Karen Rosenberg

New York Times: Move Over, Humble Doily: Paper Does a Star Turn

October 19, 2009 - Karen Rosenberg

Is paper passé? Your answer will most likely depend on whether you’re reading this sentence on newsprint or on a screen. But it’s safe to say that artists and designers aren’t ready to quit the stuff, at least by the measure of the latest show at the Museum of Arts and Design.

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Press: Shotgun Review: Listening Sequence, October  1, 2009 - Mary Anne Kluth

Shotgun Review: Listening Sequence

October 1, 2009 - Mary Anne Kluth

Listening Sequence,” Freddy Chandra’s solo debut at Brian Gross Fine Art, is a synethesthetic meditation built on Minimalist forms, and evoking multivalent layers of sound. Manipulating the clarity and tonality of deceptively simple blocks on the wall, Chandra composes delicate rhythms of shadow, color, and empty air.

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