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“The Art Was My Escape”: Lee Quiñones, Subway Graffiti Pioneer, Gets the Mega-Monograph Treatment
Vanity Fair· 2 days agoLee Quiñones always wanted to be an artist. Growing up in the Alfred E. Smith projects in New York...
This photographer has documented Southern California's street gang culture for 40 years
Los Angeles Times· 7 days agoThe bulk of the art, however, focuses on a subject Morton has become deeply associated with:...
A Post About Book Sales Went Viral. Here’s What It Gets Wrong.
Slate via Yahoo Finance· 2 days ago(The closemouthed way the latter handles its data has already famously mucked up movie stats.) But...
Daniel Arsham the Subject of his First-Ever Photography Exhibition
Artnet News· 2 days agoWhat You Need to Know: While American artist Daniel Arsham may be best known for his avant-garde...
New York Photographer James Hamilton Gets the Documentary Treatment
Artnet News· 6 days agoThere might be no way to enumerate photographer James Hamilton’s archive. Hamilton’s photos of...
New England stone walls lie at the intersection of history, archaeology, ecology and geoscience, and...
The Conversation via Yahoo News· 4 days agoThey fell, it seems, through disciplinary cracks. My initial step toward changing this situation was...
72 Minutes Until the End of the World?
Politico via Yahoo News· 3 days agoBruce Blair, a former missileer himself. Now he’s deceased, but he became one of the world’s experts on nuclear command and control systems and authority. And he explained in a monograph ...
Frank Lebon’s 'One Blood' Photo Book Pairs Portraiture With Platelets
W Magazine· 2 days agoThe English photographer Frank Lebon has shot Kim Kardashian swathed in yards of elastic for Skims,...
How Sci-Fi Inspired Conspiracy Theory
The Atlantic· 4 days agoIn 1950, a U.S. Army psyops officer named Paul Linebarger used a pseudonym to publish a science-fiction story titled “Scanners Live in Vain” in a pulp...
The Battle for Attention
The New Yorker· 3 days agoThe idea of following visual attention through the motion of the eyes goes back more than a century. In the eighteen-seventies, Louis Émile Javal, a French ophthalmologist with terrible glaucoma ...