Register
Peggy Roalf

Illustrators Coast to Coast

By Peggy Roalf   Monday January 8, 2007

DART presents an occasional lineup of events related to new work by illustrators. Following is the mid-January installment. Please check contact information for details. NEW YORK, NY David Choe: Gardeners of Eden Jonathan LeVine Gallery January 6, 2007 - February 3, 2007 Animated Filmmakers, Screening and Discussion Eastman Kodak Company 360 West 31st Street, New York, NY 10001 (between 8th and 9th Ave.) Tuesday, …   Read the full Story >>

DART Diary: Ken Light at BDC

By Peggy Roalf   Thursday October 3, 2024

Ken Light | American Stories:1969-1995 showcases three decades of work by the acclaimed photographer, highlighting significant moments in American history from 1969 to 1995. Light’s images focus on social issues, human rights, and the lives of overlooked communities, providing a powerful look at the stories of this period. The opening reception is Thursday, October 10, 6:00 pm. The photographer will attend and sign copies …   Read the full Story >>

The Whitney Biennial 2017

By Peggy Roalf   Friday March 17, 2017

The Whitney Biennial, delayed a year due to the museum’s new construction, opens today. By all accounts from those who attended the preview earlier this week, it was worth waiting for. Luckily so, for the opening gala and members’ previews of the 78th installment of the longest-running survey of American art were cancelled due to the Nor’easter that blasted in on Monday night. Above: …   Read the full Story >>

The 2016 List of Lists

By Peggy Roalf   Wednesday December 14, 2016

Best Photobooks of 2016, that is. But not every list is a “top ten.” Time magazine had photography editors, curators, and writers from here and abroad take a stab; their list runs to more than 30 titles. And American Photo, with three separate llsts, has even more. This year, The Guardian, The Washington Post, and The Independent eschewed this category, opening the field to Photograph magazine and …   Read the full Story >>

Artists & Others at the Grolier Club

By Peggy Roalf   Wednesday June 8, 2016

Contemporary artist books are on view in an exhibition of 70 books made during the past 15 years by artists working in France, at the Grolier Club, on New York's Upper East Side, organized by the Koopman Collection at the National Library of the Netherlands. The exhibition presents the art of the book as a seemingly endless variety of mediums and methods, printing and binding crafts, …   Read the full Story >>

Karen Halverson: Mulholland

By Peggy Roalf   Thursday July 22, 2021

Mulholland Drive: Is it a place? A myth? A state of mind? All of the above and more, depending on when you began looking at art and going to arthouse movies. The name alone conjures up still and moving images, populated by mythic events such as the film “Chinatown” (1974, dir. Roman Polanski); the film “Mulholland Drive” (2001, dir. David Lynch); the Tate/LoBianco murders; …   Read the full Story >>

Andy Warhol: The Interview Interview

By Peggy Roalf   Thursday October 17, 2019

Andy Warhol: From A to B and Back opens this weekend at The Art Institute of Chicago. More than 400 works offer a new view of the iconic American Pop artist, not only illuminating the breadth, depth, and interconnectedness of Warhol’s production across the entirety of his career but also highlighting the ways that he anticipated the issues, effects, and pace of our current …   Read the full Story >>

Beauty - Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial

By Peggy Roalf   Thursday April 28, 2016

For the first DART Book Prize Essay Contest, students in Dr. Anastasia Aukeman’s Integrative Seminar 2: Visual Culture course at Parsons School of Design, in the School of Art and Design History and Theory, submitted their critiques of the Beauty–Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial exhibition. The second first place award goes to Anna Kampfe. The honorable mention will be announced and published in the following weeks.—Peggy Roalf  Beauty: Art Emerging from Nature …   Read the full Story >>

Power to the People: Stephen Shames and Bobby Seale

By Peggy Roalf   Wednesday October 19, 2016

UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism is presenting Power to the People: The World of the Black Panthers | Photographs by Stephen Shames, with an opening reception and a talk with the photographer and Bobby Seale tonight. This historic exhibition is mounted on the 50th anniversary of the Party's founding. It is an in-depth chronicle of the controversial and revolutionary organization—presented at a time …   Read the full Story >>

Public Eye: Bringing Copyright Outlaws to Justice in the Web's Wild West

By Eric Meola   Monday July 21, 2014

"The images from my 'Born to Run' photo shoot with Bruce Springsteen and Clarence Clemons are some of the most recognizable images in the pantheon of rock photography; they are also some of the most blatantly misappropriated images on the web." So writes photographer Eric Meola in the latest edition of PPD's ongoing Public Eye series, which looks at new ideas and trends in …   Read the full Story >>

The DART Board: 09.22.2021

By Peggy Roalf   Wednesday September 22, 2021

  DART honors National Hispanic Heritage Month [September 15-October 15] this week with a feature on Salvadoran-born muralist Josué Rojas. The story of how he found his way in life through painting unfolds in two recent articles about this San Francisco artist, who holds degrees from California College of the Arts and Boston University. Above: Josué Rojas, "Enrique’s Journey" (image courtesy Shane Menez) Rojas …   Read the full Story >>

Alice Rosati on Being Mermaid

By Peggy Roalf   Thursday January 23, 2020

While sex in cinema [Hollywood-made anyway] has been nearly absent for more than a decade, it thankfully still maintains a home in the world of fashion. On a tip from a Paris cohort I am delighted to present a new book from Kahl Editions, Alice Rosati’s I am a Mermaid, prints from which are on display at Galerie Charraudeau, rue Bonaparte, …   Read the full Story >>

Noguchi: Commission for Idlewild Airport

By Peggy Roalf   Thursday February 20, 2020

In 1956, the sculptor Isamu Noguchi (1904-1988) was invited by the architectural firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill to submit a design for a monumental sculpture for the new International Arrivals Building they were designing for Idlewild Airport [now JFK], the world's first large-scale international airport. The totemic column he proposed (above, front) suggests human aspiration for the cosmos and was envisioned as carved from granite …   Read the full Story >>

Beauty at the Cooper Hewitt Triennial

By Peggy Roalf   Wednesday May 4, 2016

For the first DART Book Prize Essay Contest, students in Dr. Anastasia Aukeman’s Integrative Seminar 2: Visual Culture course at Parsons School of Design, in the School of Art and Design History and Theory, submitted their critiques of the Beauty—Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial exhibition. Honorable Mention goes to Jaya Jankowski, in the morning section.—Peggy Roalf  Beauty by Jaya Jankowski  |  In the exhibition Beauty—Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial, …   Read the full Story >>

Paul Buckley's Classic Penguin

By Peggy Roalf   Wednesday September 14, 2016

When Paul Buckley, Creative Director for Penguin Classics, sent me a copy of his new book, Classic Penguin/Cover to Cover, I jumped at the chance to slack off for a good read. It’s no lie that I’m a big fan of Paul’s work over the years [more]. It’s also true that I ran away from home at age 4.5 years to …   Read the full Story >>

Holiday Bookstore Report

By Peggy Roalf   Thursday December 8, 2016

New York’s independent booksellers offer shelter from the storm of holiday shopping and plenty of eye candy in the form of photo books, illustrated books, prints and objects. DART’s list of NYC’s best follows, in geographic order [south to north, then east], with a few new entries this year, including two distinctly photo-centric spots. Downtown Tenement Museum Shop, 97 Orchard Street, NY, NY. Well chosen array of …   Read the full Story >>

Archive Fever: Annie Leibovitz in Arles

By Peggy Roalf   Thursday May 11, 2017

Smart phones and social media make it possible for anyone to become a celebrity—if only in their own minds and in those of their best “friends.” But while the book on celebrity culture is yet to be written, the photos have already been made. Annie Leibovitz, the photographer whose work for Rolling Stone (1970 to 1983) elevated the genre to an art form, will …   Read the full Story >>

Archive Fever: Horace Poolaw

By Peggy Roalf   Thursday November 10, 2016

Horace Poolaw, of the Kiowa tribe, took thousands of photos of his multitribal community around Anadarko, Oklahoma, between the 1920s and 1950s. A selection of his images appears in a new volume, For a Love of His People: The Photography of Horace Poolaw (Yale 2014), which accompanies the National Museum of the American Indian’s exhibition of the same name, which opens next week. Info Spanning …   Read the full Story >>

Art and Design in New York

By Peggy Roalf   Wednesday March 24, 2021

Currently on view at Japan Society, When Practice Becomes Form: Carpentry Tools from Japanfeatures a diverse array of hand tools—planes, axes, saws—and joinery techniques that have been used to build Japan’s wooden architectural masterpieces for hundreds of years—from temples and shrines to bridges.  In the press release, gallery director Yukie Kamiya says, “This year is the 50th anniversary of the landmark building …   Read the full Story >>

David Butow: BRINK

By Peggy Roalf   Thursday January 20, 2022

  Independent photojournalist David Butow sensed a dark undercurrent in the American political psyche while covering the early days of the Trump campaign back in 2016. As he followed events in the upper Midwest rustbelt and rural towns, he concluded that the ever-changing narrative of the highly unpredictable candidate signaled dramatic times to come. So he moved to Washington, D.C. for an immersive experience …   Read the full Story >>

Older Posts
Newer Posts
DART