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Karen Mulder: April 2011
Karen Mulder lives under the sign of the ampersand: she is a both/and kind of person. As writer & speaker on art, art history, architecture & spirituality, she is deeply committed to an interdisciplinary way of reading the world.
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John Frame: March 2011
Paradoxically, the work of sculptor John Frame is at once unsettling and profoundly peaceful. His animals, human figures, and tableaux, carved in wood, bronze, lead, and stone and adorned with found objects, are graceful and touchable, mesmerizing as toys.
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Marilyn Nelson: February 2011
American history as conceived by Marilyn Nelson is the inside-out, last-shall-be-first version. She inhabits the voices of the overlooked and disenfranchised and shines light into forgotten corners that reveal essential truths about the whole.
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Suzanne Wolfe: January 2011
A true radical in an age of drab verisimilitude, Suzanne Wolfe subscribes to the notion that the language of literature ought to be beautiful, and that it might therefore sound different from the language we use in our status updates.
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Paul Dannels: December 2010
Architect Paul Dannels reads buildings the way you or I might read a novel. As a tour guide to contemporary architecture, he’s able to let us in on the way that structures, and the way humans move through them, have beauties that are not only formal and static, but also narrative.
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