All three artists are asking the kinds of questions everyone should be asking about our brave new Screen World.
Liz Trosper
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Works from Christina Fernandez, LaToya Ruby Frazier, Jeffrey Gibson, Edgar Heap of Birds, Kirk Hayes, Earlie Hudnall Jr., Marcelyn McNeil, and Liz Trosper will enter the museum's permanent collection.
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William Sarradet and Christina Rees recommend some choice shows that Texas galleries have on view right now, whether through a window, online, or by appointment.
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Christopher Blay talks with Dallas-based artist Liz Trosper about her work, her students (she is a lecturer at the University of North Texas), and our perspectives on what comes next.
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My hope is that you look at these images as a sort of proof-of-life document. Check in on these artists if you know them, and others you may know.
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Is it redundant to show works from the same artists and series concurrently in the same zip code, or, in this case, does it expand the conversation about printed paintings?
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"The artist as someone who needs to source material has always been a thing, but it has come into high relief in the art and technology space."
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Produced by Rachael Anderson, Abby Bagby, John Logan, and Liz Trosper, Dallas’ ArtSkool returns! Beginning tonight with its Preskool Soiree, the weekly series is free and open to beginners to art…
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Christina Rees and guest host Danette Dufilho of Conduit Gallery on a show of artists and their mentors, the trickiness of teleportation, and a Texas artist’s evolution.
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The show gathers together a trove of work from many young Texas-based artists, along with their peers from across the country, and aims to represent the inherent 'untruth' of photography.
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ArtSkool is a project of John Logan, Abby Bagby, and Rachael Anderson designed to “enlighten and excite those with limited-to-no exposure to visual culture about art through discussions about theory…
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A message to you all from Frank Artsmarter: “What if you create an art prize that mimics another failed (or postponed) prize—which is itself based on yet another prix of dubious distinction—and…