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Between 1980 and 1990, the Village Voice ran photographer Amy Arbus’s “On the Street” photo column, a page documenting downtown’s most vibrant, creative dressers and personalities, and here are its greatest hits.
Can warm colors and personal crisis be political? Can drawings cure artist’s block? Tom Burckhardt burns, drowns, and mourns the canvas—but never paints on it.
Sam Fink’s beautifully illustrated Constitution of the United States of America reminds us of what is good and true about our country and what binds us together, no matter what the pundits or politicians say.
As a street artist, Dan Witz lends wit, color, and grace to New York City. As an oil painter, he seduces outsiders into warm homes and lit storefronts.
Harry Skrdla has a wistful eye for old mansions and giant hospitals that have fallen on hard times. Here he tours a country of ruins in the making.
Catherine Opie photographs the backbone and the marrow of American cities. These portraits show not only a city’s architecture, but its character.
You feel like you’ve seen Gerald Förster’s work before. It’s filled with people who seem legendary. But these photographs, shot in locations across the globe in a portable studio, have never been possible until now.
Tim Dirven’s pictures don’t blur the line between art and journalism—they eliminate it. His camera finds intimacy in the well-worn or far-away news story.
What’s the world except a collection of things? And aren’t things sometimes nicer done in marker and crayon? An interview with artist Gregory Blackstock and a gallery from his new book.
An interview with Korean photographer Atta Kim and a gallery from his most recent show, “The Museum Project,” currently on view at the Yossi Milo Gallery.
Preschoolers today know that hands are not for hitting and words are not for hurting. But learning about ethics doesn’t stop there. An illustrated primer for everyone still unclear on the rights and wrongs of intellectual property.
An interview with photographer Tanyth Berkeley about her inspirations, muses, and settings, and a gallery from her “Orchidaceae” series of pictures.