Mayme Kratz talks reconciling differences, using found objects, and how she approaches art and the natural world in this WTP interview.
Search Results for: august smith
WTP Artist: Tao Ho
Vol. V #7 artist Tao Ho strives to reconcile the chaotic imbalances of photography in his abstract analog photographs.
WTP Roundup: From the Editor
Introducing some exciting new additions to the WTP team. And we are still looking for art correspondents! From Sandra Tyler, Editor-in-Chief.
Hard-Hitting, Hard-Boiled Fiction
Jack Remick’s recent work, Man Alone, is a hard-hitting, hard-boiled existential novella at its best.
A Nicaraguan Noir Trilogy
In his trilogy of Nicaraguan noir mysteries, Sergio Ramirez explores authoritarianism through the framework of a police procedural.
A Poet and Photographer
WTP editor Sara London interviews Rachel Eliza Griffiths, whose most recent book includes her work as both a poet and photographer.
Shape of Shape at MoMA
Amy Sillman’s selection for her exhibition Shape of Shape, part of MoMA’s Artist’s Choice series, spans time periods, styles, and mediums relating to shape.
On Fact and Fiction
“We don’t have to bullfight to write believably about bullfighting, or love, or crime, or suicide.” DeWitt Henry on the lines writers blur between fact and fiction.
Art Roundup: New York City
New York City’s summer art higlights span large venues like the NYPL and the MoMA, to smaller galleries like Blum & Poe and Cavalier Gallery.
Featured Bookmarks: The Arts
This month, noteworthy stories of recovered art, from a painted-over canvas to Picasso’s lithographs in a newsroom.
Featured Bookmarks: The Literary
More poetry bookmarks this month in honor of our contest. Hilary Vaughn Dobel, Carolyn Guinzio, and Cave Canem: A Home for Black Poetry.
Eye on the Indies
Laura Esther Wolfson’s FOR SINGLE MOTHERS WORKING AS TRAIN CONDUCTORS from the University of Iowa Press is this month’s indie read.