Joachim Bandau A Painter Doesn’t Dare: A Dialogue Between Sculpture & Watercolor Patricia Sweetow Gallery October 19, 2004 – November 27, 2004 Reviewed by Jordan Essoe A Machine For Living In   In the statement accompanying German artist Joachim Bandau’s new solo exhibit at the Patricia Sweetow Gallery, he writes of his watercolors that “the […]

Jiha Moon: Line Tripping To Saturday, Oct. 27, at Curator’s Office KRISTON CAPPS OCT 5, 2007 For all her fine-lined flourishes—the icons, ribbons, symbols, and content she lifts from both Eastern and Western orthodoxies—Jiha Moon revels in the muddy and abstract. In her latest works, now on display at Curator’s Office, the painter once again […]

by Jessica Gorman September 2007 Korean-born artist Jiha Moon talks with urbancode magazine in advance of her upcoming solo exhibition at the Curator’s Office micro gallery. The space is located in the District at 1515 14th Street NW, suite 201. Moon’s work will be on view from September 15 – October 20, 2007. JG: Process […]

Galleries: Painting turns conceptual as you look Kenneth Baker Saturday, September 22, 2007   Under what circumstances does painting turn into conceptual art? You can see it happen in the work of German artist Markus Linnenbrink at Sweetow, which at first looks excessively optical. Viewer fatigue effects the conversion.   We reasonably demand that a […]

  Visual Art   Fifteen minutes is enough time to discover that Markus Linnenbrink’s paintings combine muscular methodology with a fondness for glitter and droll humor.   By Johnny Ray Huston    Fifteen minutes with Markus Linnenbrink?  Well, I didn’t say no – and didn’t regret spending that amount of time and a bit more […]

Washingtonian July, 2007 By Mary Clare Fleury Video Art Holds a New Take on Race Relations Jefferson Pinder came up with the idea for his exhibit “Juke” while driving around Washington. Pinder, a video artist, found himself turning down the volume on bands like Radiohead and Ben Folds Five. He asked himself why he felt […]

Weather Channels By DAVID COHEN May 17, 2007 When it comes to painting, evoking the elements calls for elemental solutions. In three beautiful exhibitions in Chelsea right now, contemporary artists balance a fascination with water, clouds, and ethereal, billowing forms with audacious experimental attitudes toward traditional materials. Each body of work manifests a heightened consciousness […]

Artillery March 2007 by Tucker Neel Jefferson Pinder G Fine Arts Washington, DC With his recent video installation entitled Juke, Jefferson Pinder not only exhibits a penetrating knowledge of America’s schizophrenic fascination with race and identity, he proves himself to have an ear for music as well. The beauty of Pinder’s installation is that it […]

The Washington Post By Jessica Dawson First Impressions, Second Thoughts A rare, complicated and utterly engaging video work by Maryland artist Jefferson Pinder is on view in the back room of G Fine Art. Called “Juke,” the piece uses a hoary bit of showbiz treachery — lip-syncing — to force us to think about our […]

ASIAN POP / Art Breakers A new generation of Asian American artists challenges outmoded expectations of what it means to be Asian, American and — for that matter — a “new generation.” By Jeff Yang Monday, October 16, 2006 When you step into the atrium leading to Asia Society’s new exhibition of works by contemporary […]