Scalawag x Burnaway: Art, Labor, and Struggle in the South
Burnaway and Scalawag announce the first stories in their collaborative series on art, labor, and struggle in the South, including a survey of labor films and a video essay.
Burnaway and Scalawag announce the first stories in their collaborative series on art, labor, and struggle in the South, including a survey of labor films and a video essay.
Ade J. Omotosho responds to a video by artist Terence Price II with a meditation on photography and time, family archives, and the voice of the matriarch.
In a group exhibition in New Orleans, eight women artists confront and reconfigure the largely white, male histories of Modernism.
Judy Chicago’s name is synonymous with feminist art of the 1970’s. Her solo exhibition at ICA Miami demonstrates why her work still resonates fifty years later.
En su retrospectiva actual en MOCA GA en Atlanta, la artista Rocío Rodríguez presenta cuadros de los últimos treinta años. Leer una reseña por escritor TK Smith, en español e inglés.
At the Whitney Museum in New York, artist Kevin Beasley plays a cotton gin like a musical instrument and reinterprets the Southern landscape. Read BA contributor Sam Korman’s review.
As we begin a new year, BURNAWAY looks ahead to ten exhibitions we’re anticipating in 2019, including shows in Atlanta, Richmond, New Orleans, Lexington, and elsewhere.
As the year comes to a close, BURNAWAY Executive Director Erin Jane Nelson and Editor Logan Lockner reflect on their favorite exhibitions in the South in 2018.
Founded by artist R.D. King in 2017, Extended Play is an independent small press based in Nashville, with projects produced in collaboration between King and other local and regional artists. For example, We Love You We Know You Always Watch We Will Try To Do Better Next Year is an anarchic send-up of Christmas-themed kids’ … Continued