Curator’s Corner
By Interview Issue 103
Objects, rituals, and sites make the spiritual present, function as witness or proof of the miraculous, and turn individual perceptions into collective convictions.
Read MoreIn the Studio
By Interview Issue 103
I used to ask myself why humans go through sacrifices and insist on creating things that no one asked for or cares about. But not anymore. I realize that, in my case at least, it is simply an instinctive drive to do, and that’s my way of being.
Read MoreCurator’s Corner: Eva Fischer-Hausdorf
By Interview Issue 102
We want to transform the museum into a place of reflection and contemplation.
Read MoreA Conversation with William Giraldi
By Interview Issue 102
Aside from my children and wife, literature has been the intensest delight of my life.
Read MoreA Conversation with Leslie Jamison
By Interview Issue 101
You can read something spoken or written by somebody from a very different place or time or background or state of being—and it can feel true anyway.
Read MoreLife After Thirty | Death, Change and Time: Bruce Cockburn
By Interview Issue 100
There was a kind of availability I had to learn in order to create a song like that. A capacity for a kind of ecstatic contact.
Read MoreLife After Thirty | Death, Change, and Time: Lia Chavez
By Interview Issue 100
I’m still learning to embrace the boundlessness of art and the trajectory that this implies.
Read MoreLife After Thirty | Death, Change, and Time: Barry Krammes
By Interview Issue 100
Life has been challenging, and occasionally blatantly difficult. The mysteries and complexities of this earthly sojourn continually rattle my brain. These days I am much more comfortable with my weaknesses than with my strengths.
Read MoreLife After Thirty | Death, Change, and Time: Steve Prince
By Interview Issue 100
Thirty is not as old as I thought it would be.
Read MoreLife After Thirty | Death, Change, and Time: Mohammed Ali
By Interview Issue 100
Most would dismiss this lone voice. You’ll always get one, they’d say. You can’t please everybody. But it bothered me.
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