Arts
fromPortland Monthly
9 hours ago5 Artists to See at Converge 45
Converge 45 aims to create lasting conversations through interactive art rather than traditional blockbuster exhibits.
"It was a very smart trick," he tells me, because he'd start by naming the works he, as a sullen preteen, found stupid or boring, and then, by process of elimination, arrive at the pieces he liked. "Then she'd go, 'Why do you like it?'" Ehrenreich says. Suddenly, he had to learn to express why he was into art.
"There are always a combination of professional and personal factors when it comes to a decision like this. One marker in this process of starting to think about next chapters was the completion of the campus expansion project."
"Museums, art galleries, theaters, and performing arts spaces across the U.K. are facing the biggest financial and existential threat to their survival in generations, and yet their role not just as important public and civic spaces, but as places where people can collectively imagine and create new sustainable futures feels more important than ever."
Gradel first wrote to the museum in 2021, explaining he had found proof that precious objects under its care were being sold on eBay. His correspondence named the British Museum's senior curator Peter Higgs, as the person he believed was behind the sales.
Paulo Nimer Pjota describes his artistic process as akin to a hip-hop producer, sampling imagery and motifs from diverse sources, including ancient civilizations and Brazilian folklore.
I say I'm a dancer, or a physical theater person, or doing performing arts. It gives them a very general framework. Even if I say dancer, they immediately think ballet dancer or contemporary modern dancer.
Forum Florum unfolds across SIAM's courtyard and two historic interior rooms, with the Flower Journey installation opening the sequence. The monumental portal traces the global history of the cut flower industry, an extractive trade that scaled from 19th-century Dutch greenhouse cultivation into today's Kenyan and Colombian export agriculture.
Barney ran for the mayoralty of his beloved hometown in 1933 under the self-declared banner of 'the Need for Political Action by Men of Culture', proposing extensive cultural reforms.
Flea describes his childhood experience with jazz, stating, "They played fast, they played furiously, they played with great tenderness, they played with great violence and physicality, and it was wild. When I was a kid and I heard them playing that jazz, it just blew my mind and changed my life forever."
R1 has been programmed to tell visitors something of the story of how a noble family crossed the Alps in the 11th century, gradually established a powerful duchy, and would eventually offer up the first king of a unified Italy in the mid-19th century.
The case traces back to the 1980s, when the dealer Daniel Wildenstein identified Adolphe Monet Reading in a Garden (1867), a significant early work depicting the artist's father and held by the family of Monet's brother, Léon.
After we bought the palazzo, we lay on the floor in the music room to look at the details in the ceilings-and to understand what we just bought. That spirit of curiosity has guided curatorial decisions, as they placed artworks in conversation with ornate interiors.
The show's centerpiece is the video 'Jeanetta and Alex' (2026) featuring poet Jeanetta Rich and artist Alex Hubbard playing guitar together. In a walkthrough of the show, Gordon described the instrument as 'phallic,' but she explained that the work is less about the cliched sexuality of rock and roll than a meditation on electricity.
Building trust, connection and belonging with our communities begins inside our museums. Treating the people within your institution with respect and care is essential for fostering a positive environment.
Joe Macken revealed to his daughter that he'd made significant progress on his miniature scale model of New York City, a robust project to which he'd devoted the previous two decades. The handmade model is now housed at the Museum of the City of New York in an ongoing exhibition entitled He Built This City: Joe Macken's Model, located in the Museum's Dinan Miller Gallery.