Caryl Churchill’s Prophetic Drama
Two things are frequently said about Caryl Churchill: that she is the greatest playwright alive, and that she is one of the most elusive. While she occasionally discusses her work with researchers and...
View ArticleGreat Britain, Strange and Familiar
For the past forty-odd years, the photographer Martin Parr has trained his eye on all manner of British eccentricity: our Union Jack cupcakes and mock-antique gas fires, our atrocious seaside resorts...
View ArticlePaul Strand’s Sense of Things
.See the rest of the story at newyorker.comRelated:Nice Museum. Where’s the Art?An African Photography Exhibit That Spans the Continent and the GlobeCover Story: Christoph Niemann’s “On the Go”
View ArticleGreat Britain, Strange and Familiar
Andrew Dickson on "Strange and Familiar," a show at the Barbican, in London, of images of the United Kingdom taken by foreign photographers.
View ArticlePaul Strand’s Sense of Things
Andrew Dickson on the photographer Paul Strand, whose work is featured in a retrospective at London’s Victoria & Albert Museum.
View ArticleElliott Erwitt’s Visual One-Liners
Andrew Dickson writes about the work of Elliott Erwitt, a photographer with a penchant for visual double-takes and finely tuned one-liners.
View ArticleOn the Campaign Trail with Cornelia Parker, the U.K.’s Official Election Artist
Andrew Dickson on Cornelia Parker, who currently serves as the U.K.’s official election artist, and who has become a news item in her own right.
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