Cultural Historian JoAnn LoSavio (Washington State University) reviews the forthcoming book I Am Oum Ry: A Champion Kickboxer’s Story of Surviving the Cambodian Genocide and Discovering Peace with an eye… Read more “I Am Oum Ry” Strikes Hard →
DoppelHouse author Antoinette LaFarge gives the keynote talk at this all-day virtual symposium celebrating the life and legacy of Norman Daly, who “discovered” the fictional civilization of Llhuros in the… Read more Antoinette LaFarge to give the keynote at Llhuros Symposium →
Amir Zaki is featured in the group exhibition “Out of Control: The Concrete Art of Skateboarding” at the Audain Art Museum. in Whistler, BC, which will be open through high… Read more Amir Zaki Featured at Audain Art Museum →
Amir Zaki gives us more insight into the process behind his pandemic project ‘On being here‘ for Zaptronic. He discusses how he began working in photography, his methods and art… Read more On Being Here: Zaki Interviews at Zaptronic →
DoppelHouse author Peter Wyeth takes issue with the plans to rebuild Welz’s recently demolished Maison Zilveli in Paris. His interview reveals the quixotic nature of his project to turn back… Read more Wyeth Interviewed on Radio France →
Linda Levendusky of DePaul University reviews Jacques and Jacqueline Groag, Architect and Designer. She identifies the importance of primary research in author Ursula Prokop’s work: “Prokop mines numerous public and… Read more Chicago Art Deco Society Magazine on Groags’ Posthumous Trip Home →
“The global pandemic has laid bare the technological crossroads where cultural institutions find themselves in the early 21st century. By promoting a superabundance of ‘content’ and multiplying the transversality of… Read more Join Antoinette LaFarge’s online talk for the “Museum without Walls” conference →
Award winning art critic and editor Shana Nys Dambrot featured Zaki’s Building + Becoming in LA Weekly‘s “Summer Book Stash.” Dambrot writes, “Zaki finds resonance and counterpoint between what we… Read more Amir Zaki: Building + Becoming included in LA Weekly’s “Summer Book Stash” →