Twin brothers, Ad and Droo (aka Brooklyn’s Skewville), opened Playground Tactics last month at White Walls in San Francisco. Curated by Tova Lobatz, Playground Tactics featured 30 new pieces
Chicago-based artist, Jeremy Tinder, opens The Living Line, a show of paintings and wooden sculptures tonight at Rotofugi. The new, affordable artwork is made up of simple, pleasing shapes and
San Francisco’s own Dirty Donny Gillies will take you on a Vantastic Voyage. (It’s OK for you to get in his van; it’s not creepy because he’s Canadian.)
Brooklyn-based designer Peter Pracilio meticulously applied Swarovski crystals to taxidermy animals “to archive their beauty”. The blinging beasts are currently available on Fab.com for 50% off. Fab members
What’s this? A Takashi Murakami dollhouse? Of course not, silly. You can’t fit an ego into a shoebox. For the first time, Takashi Murakami is exhibiting his work in the middle
I’ve written before about Stefan Gross‘ Doomies and Rebirdies and Dutch People in Vegetable Houses. Recently, the Rotterdam-based conceptual artist showed his work at Harlan Levey Projects in
Tam Dieu, aka Okedoki and one of my favorite Canadians, came out of her igloo earlier this week to hand-paint a new big Benny the Dreamer. The sculpture
When I remember my dreams, they look a lot like the photography of Sandy Skoglund. Skoglund has been installing and documenting her conceptual ideas for four decades. Although
It turns out stuffed animals aren’t the only non-traditional medium used by artist, Agustina Woodgate. When her work calls for something more organic than synthetic fur, Woodgate turns