“Party of 36 (Plus 1 Serpent), The New York Times

One winter morning in 2001, the artist James Drake was sitting over coffee with the novelist Cormac McCarthy. They were at one of their regular haunts in Santa Fe, N.M., where they both live, chatting about work and family, the kinds of things said idly that lead to other thoughts.

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“Chihuly’s Delicate Garden of Blown Glass”, Los Angeles Times

Of all the reactions likely to be observed among visitors to an exhibition of contemporary art-quiet contemplation, hushed commentary, a smile or a chuckle-a genuine gasp is surely among the most rare. Good art can be beautiful, intelligent, humorous or moving, but it takes something pretty spectacular to cut through the refined atmosphere of your typical gallery and evoke a real, spontaneous expression of astonishment.

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“Terror Takes a Holiday”, The Times Picayune

The thing I admire most about Luis Cruz Azaceta is that he lets his art change, and change and change again. When he moved to New Orleans 12 years ago from New York, he was already in mid-career, with a big-time national rep for his cartoonish expressionist paintings and junk sculpture installations.

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Luis Cruz Azaceta: Happy-Deadly in New Orleans

Luis Cruz Azaceta - Where is Superman When You Need Him

Exhibition Dates: December 4 – December 31, 2004 Opening Reception: Saturday, December 4 from 6–8 pm Gallery Location: 432 Julia Street, New Orleans, LA 70130 Hours: Monday–Saturday, 10 am–5 pm… 

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Chihuly

The Arthur Roger Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of new glass sculpture and installations by internationally-acclaimed artist Dale Chihuly from his newest body of work, the Fiori series.

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“Ida Kohlmeyer: Abstraction & Life”, New Orleans Art Review

The remarkable exhibition now at the Newcomb Art Gallery — a retrospective of Ida Kohlmeyer’s painting and sculpture — does much to cement her position among our major artists. Curated by Professor Michael Plante, the show clarifies, especially, Kohlmeyer’s commerce with Abstract Expressionism — her debt to certain of the movement’s pioneers and, notably, her singular protraction of its imperatives.

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“Technique & Meaning”, New Orleans Art Review

Texas photographer Ted Kincaid, exhibiting concurrently at Arthur Roger, seems to reexplore one aspect of the old Romantic impulse — its penchant for exalting the look of nature. Of course, Kincaid’s methods, it must quickly be said, are decidedly of our time.

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