One could say Cecily Brown is drunk on art history. Throughout her 25-year career, the virtuosic British artist has engaged with seemingly every aspect of the Western canon—Renaissance artists’ ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Chadd Scott covers the intersection of art and travel. Not romantic sexy, lustful sexy. What was your name again sexy. Sometimes ...
As her largest U.S. retrospective opens at the Dallas Museum of Art, the artist reflects on her life’s work, from bunnies to Bruegel. Artworks by Cecily Brown courtesy of the artist and Dallas Museum ...
THERE’s a streak of mischief running through Cecily Brown’s landmark Blenheim Palace show. She may be one of the world’s most respected – and certainly most interesting – painters, but she is also a ...
Welcome to One Fine Show, where Observer highlights a recently opened exhibition at a museum not in New York City, a place we know and love that already receives plenty of attention. There’s something ...
After panning an artist’s work 23 years ago, our veteran critic had a change of mind following three visits to “Death and the Maid” at the Met. By Roberta Smith Artists change, but so do critics.
What with the continued reports of her demise and subsequent reinvigoration, it's hard not to imagine the geriatric art form as a patient on "ER," bleeding on a gut-splattered gurney as a crowd of ...
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