Opening this summer, Rob Fischer's latest installation entitled Omi Pond House will be on view at the Omi International Art Center in Ghent, NY, through October of 2018.
Do Ho Suh @ Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego
Highpoint Editions Joins Artsy
Carlos Amorales’ Black Cloud
Carolyn Swiszcz & Dylan Hicks
Julie Mehretu & Jessica Rankin @ Dhondt-Dhaenens Museum in Belgium
An Interview with Mungo Thomson
Jim Hodges, Winter Speaks
Formless: New Prints by Jay Heikes in Art in Print
Sarah Crowner - Bonding Agent
Jay Heikes & Todd Norsten @ Federica Schiavo Gallery
Alexa Horochowski, Art in Print
Benjamin Levy on Mungo Thomson
Sarah Crowner @ Mass MOCA
Highpoint Editions: Now a Member of IFPDA!
Highpoint Editions is proud to announce that it has been invited to join the International Fine Print Dealers Association (IFPDA), a nonprofit organization of leading art dealers, galleries, and publishers with expertise in the field of original prints. IFPDA members are committed to the highest standards of quality, ethics, and connoisseurship, and to promoting a greater appreciation of original prints among collectors and the general public.
Julie Buffalohead tells trickster tales with her art
Seitu Jones’s The Community Meal featured in Walker Magazine
Photo courtesy Public Art Saint Paul
With the support of Public Art Saint Paul, Jones staged Create: The Community Meal, a half-mile-long luncheon in the middle of Victoria Street in September of 2014. A host of community partners helped to grow, cook, and choreograph the meal that took 400 volunteers to realize. “The Community Meal,” said Christine Podas-Larson, president of Public Art Saint Paul, “is a beacon to the nation about how we behave as a civic body.” Three hundred tables stretching north to south, from University to Minnehaha avenues, came together to form one massive platform around which some two thousand guests gathered. The scene was surprisingly diverse across age, race, ethnicity, and class (negating my preconceptions of Minnesota), yet I was told by my companions that the project had engendered the speckled vista before me and didn’t accurately reflect the neighborhood.
The Community Meal. Photo: Andy King
Learn more about this event and the article from the Walker here!