Finnish musician Kimmo Pohjonen provides background music for wrestlers, and a glorious spectacle for the rest of us.
Tiffany Jow
Tiffany is a New York-based writer and editor whose work has appeared in Surface, Wallpaper*, Acne Paper, Art Review, Paper and Nylon, among others. Most recently, she was part of the Victoria & Albert Museum’s curatorial team that produced the 2011 exhibition, “Postmodernism: Style and Subversion 1970–1990.”
Posts written by Tiffany Jow
The New York Public LIbrary’s latest exhibition offers food for thought.
You know Henri Rousseau’s paintings of lion attacks? He made those based on taxidermic displays. If you liked that, this is the book for you.
Impress your friends at Yoko Ono’s mini-retrospective in London.
Brooklyn artist Shantell Martin draws on every surface she can find—including the walls of her bedroom, sweatshirts, and people’s faces.
Should artists tailor their work to go viral? Writer Kyle Chayka investigates.
Heavyweights like Rachel Whiteread, Sarah Morris, and Martin Creed have works in Luhring Augustine’s new group show, which benefits the pioneering curatorial program at Bard College.
Duchamp-esque trickster Christian Jankowski is at it again—this time, he’s investigating verbiage used in the art world.
This week the Whitney unveils There’s So Much I Want to Say About You, a showcase by New York-based artist Sharon Hayes that devotes the museum’s entire third floor to her pieces about political protest in the twentieth century.
Want to talk like an art buff but not willing to do your homework? We’ve got your back.
Picasso did it. Now, you can too.
Photographer James Cathcart captures the unofficial graveyards for planes and automobiles, some of which might have once been in your very own backyard.









































