Month: November 2015
Wendy Artin finds beauty everywhere – in a clutch of beets, old paintbrushes, ruined statues, the human body.
Read MoreIf the creators of Flesh and Bone want to whip upanother trite soap opera, that’s their prerogative. But hush about the “realism.”
Read MoreArts Fuse critics select the best in film, theater, dance, music, visual arts, and author events for the coming week.
Read MoreYet another cinematic variation on Mary Shelley’s novel—and this one too often opts for slick jolts of adrenaline over credibility.
Read MoreCreed easily taps into the sensibility and adrenaline of the original Rocky.
Read MoreThe Flamin’ Groovies in a nutshell — doubling as a rock institution and the best party band in town.
Read MoreEven without museum commentary, Native Fashion Now is an important show – visually, socially, and politically.
Read MoreTrumbo is content to be a potted history lesson rather than a thought-provoking work of art.
Read MoreLaurie Anderson’s abstract drawings, 8mm documentary, found footage, and scratched-on celluloid are combined in a frequently mesmerizing way.
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Book Review: Michel Houellebecq and the Wages of “Submission”
If you’ve recently been mourning the end of the Novel of Ideas—take heart. And dig in, for Submission offers a smorgasbord.
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