Lineage and Light: Rose Marie Cromwell’s “A Geological Survey”
In what ways is a mother like a tree? A mother—a caregiver, really, because lineages are built not merely by blood and biology but…
Read More
    	
            In what ways is a mother like a tree? A mother—a caregiver, really, because lineages are built not merely by blood and biology but…
Read More
    	
            For five months I lived with open windows in a suburb of San Juan, air ventilating through my apartment on days of both intense…
Read More
    	
            Maintenance I: Role Change, 1970 I give myself a haircut using the video system as a mirror. It is completely private, no one in…
Read More
    	
            What was the problem? I didn’t know and nobody told me and what could I do or say, anyway? Yes, I did know…
Read More
    	
            In late June 2024, a couple of weeks before Joe Biden withdrew his bid for reelection and Kamala Harris launched her campaign for president,…
Read More
    	
            In 1969, the young Abenaki singer and activist Alanis Obomsawin, newly hired as a consultant at the National Film Board of Canada (NFB), took…
Read More
    	
            “It is worth wondering, perhaps, what the wishes are in kissing,” Adam Phillips writes. In his readings of Freud, Phillips suggests that a kiss…
Read More
    	
            Near the end of the definitive, long-overdue survey of the artist Marisol at the Buffalo AKG Art Museum, after a parade of totemic sculptural…
Read More
    	
            “Time is more than a container; time participates.” —Susan Rethorst, A Choreographic Mind I often enter retrospectives with a certain girding of the…
Read More
    	
            Like most other instruments of empire used to chart our world, the international prime meridian is an invisible, regnant force. A product of colonial…
Read More