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Rosecrans Baldwin co-founded TMN with publisher Andrew Womack in 1999. His latest book is Everything Now: Lessons From the City-State of Los Angeles. More information can be found at rosecransbaldwin.com.
Intricate designs found in large-scale, labor-intensive relief prints made from the cross sections of trees and lumber.
Irresistible paintings don’t always need giant frames. An interview with the painter who electrified this year’s Whitney Biennial.
Portraits of young men in Panama showing off their bikes—strikingly decorated, variously macho, and altogether priti.
Pictures where the eye lingers not only on the image, but in it, as if something is waiting still deeper inside.
For some Americans, the French way of life is best. Other people simply prefer “freedom fries.” A two-week journey across the U.S.—passing through a handful of towns named Paris—to find out what Americans really think about France today. (Part three of four.)
Photographs of people at war by the co-director of Restrepo, from an upcoming show at New York’s Yossi Milo Gallery.
For some Americans, the French way of life is best. Other people simply prefer “freedom fries.” A two-week journey across the U.S.—passing through a handful of towns named Paris—to find out what Americans really think about France today. (Part two of four.)
Three series where the photographer waits until his subject finds a moment of perfect lighting.
For some Americans, the French way of life is best. Others simply prefer “freedom fries.” A two-week journey across the U.S.—passing through a handful of towns named Paris—to find out what Americans really think about France today. (Parts one through three of four.)
Elegance found inside an Arizona parking lot of retired B-52 bombers, where function and form can be equally disturbing.
Blazing, husky paintings that deal with class in America—where everyone has an equal opportunity to be a mess.
In Laura Plageman’s “Response” photographs, nature pictures are ripped, folded, and turned into sculptures, then re-photographed to become unusual new landscapes.