Reviews: New York - Deborah Masters at Maurice Arlos
Fine Art
By Jonathon Goodman
Deborah Masters at Maurice Arlos and Smack Mellon By Lilly Wei
'Sacred Matter’ - Karen Dolmanisth and Deborah Masters
By Holland Cotter - Smack Mellon Studios
DEBORAH MASTERS - An American in New York By Paquerette Villeneuve
Thinking Big - Sculptor Deborah Masters Talks about her
‘Angel’ in the Brooklyn Public Library
By Lisa J. Curtis
Deborah Masters at LedisFlam By Nancy Princenthal
“Women in Command”
By Arlene Raven
Public Art in New JFK Terminal By Cathy Lebowitz
Being Met At the Airport By New Art - Big, Bold Installations
For a Rebuilt Kennedy Arrivals Terminal
By CELESTINE BOHLEN
Awards...
Greenline- Revelations- Artist and Activist
Philadelphia Inquirer- In Sculptor's Figures, A Mysterious Gravity
ART GUIDE - Last Chance
Missing Cloth’s No Cover-Up
By Pete Bowles
The Fine Art of Traveling
“Artist Adds Loincloth to Jesus in JFK Mural”
By Warren Woodberry Jr.
Blushing, Then Brushing, Artist Covers Nude Christ
By SUSAN SAULNY
Hipster auf Asbest
Nur eins stört den industriellen Charme im Szeneviertel Williamsburg:
die Industrie
Thomas Fischermann
New $1.4 Billion Terminal at J.F.K. Aims to Ease Waits for Passengers
By Ronald Smothers
Crossing Brooklyn: Angel in Crown Heights
Deborah Masters
Describing the theme of her narrative relief panels mounted on a 300-foot
wide space above the immigration booths, sculptor Deborah Masters emphasizes
the familiar, as well as the diverse in New York
Terminal Bliss / New York's JFK
By David Butwin
First Class - Skidmore, Owings & Merrill designs
a new international terminal at JFK. By Edie Cohen
“New York’s JFK Airport Opens a New Terminal”
“Casts of Thousands”
By Bonnie Schwartz
Blue Angel: The Decline of Sexual Stereotypes in Post-Feminist
Sculpture By Michael Brenson
“Beyond Slickness: Sculptors Get Back to Basics”
By Michael Brenson
LedisFlam - ‘Covert Action’
By Elizabeth Hess
“Garden of Statues Grows at Chico State”
A Publication of the Art Department of California State University at
Chico
“The Monoliths Have Landed”
Mural Modesty - After complaint, artist adds loincloth
to nude figure of Jesus - By Paul Mose
Newsday Copy- Profile- Sheila McKenna
“Visiting Artists & Scholars”
- Deborah Masters
California State University, Chico
Forsaken Warehouse District Is New York’s Latest Art Home
By Blake Gopnik
“New York in Review”
By Robert Mahoney
Women at War 1993
By Ruth Bass
X-rated Jesus given face-saving Y-fronts
JFK Catalogue Copy
LedisFlam
‘Trails of Showing Sculpture in Park’
“Three Sisters and a Rose Garden”
“Sister, Sister: Masters’ Final Sculpture
Project Looks Inward”
By Courtney Rastatter
“Sculpture’s New Location Solves Controversy”
By Lauren Dodge
“Sculpture Garden Receives an Angel”
New Yorker, Nancy Ramsey, Loft Tenants
Brooklyn Magazine
Brooklyn Artists, The Newest Left Bank
Amy Virshup, 1986
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Style: The Washington Post,
Wednesday, September 4, 2002
N.Y.’s
Dumbo, A Blank Canvas For Artists
Forget SoHo.
Now It’s Dumbo.
Forsaken Warehouse District Is New York’s Latest Art Home
By Blake Gopnik
Washington Post Staff Writer
BROOKLYN
It’s the sound that hits you first. A double-barreled roar,
as trains and traffic crash across the Brooklyn and Manhattan bridges
overhead. Down at street level, where the footings of the two bridges
almost meet, the rush of the East River and its shipping fills in
any sonic gaps.
The local sights fit with those heavy-duty sounds: the iron-girdered
bridges themselves; decaying cobbled streets; ancient warehouses
and factories that fill whole city blocks. Some of these industrial-age
behemoths are now abandoned; others are cut up for a ragtag bunch
of newer occupants.
You can still find spaces making cardboard boxes, a former mainstay
in the neighborhood. Others house more current labors in design
or multimedia. But a good number of buildings, these days, shelter
people putting oils down on canvas, or shooting experimental videos.
You
are in Dumbo- Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass- the latest
neighborhood to make a claim for rising status on the New York scene.
In its 15 rough- hewn square blocks, about 1,000 artist and performers
fill some 700 lofts. As New York’s fall art season gets set
to a launch Dumbo is poised to make a splash.
Creative Time, a Manhattan-based bastion of temporary public art
projects, has got a jump on things: For some three weeks already,
it has filled a few of Dumbo’s that closes Sept. 15 includes
work by Erwin Wurm, a well-known Austrian conceptualist- his Dumbo
piece invited visitors to be photographed behaving like a dog, and
then to send the picture to him for his artist’s signature-
as well as a charismatic assortment of videos and sculpture by artist
from Dumbo and other near by parts. If it wasn’t necessarily
inspired by Dumbo’s charmingly blunt edges, it was clearly
calculated to fit in with them.
The two upcoming installations at Smack Mellon, like most that director
Kathleen Gilrain programs into her ex-factory, have also been chosen
for how well they fill a rugged Dumbo space. Artists Karen Dolmanisth
and Deborah Masters have each been given half with a very personal
array of talismanic objects and votive creations. Dolmanisth favors
bundles of twigs suspended from the ceiling and laboratory vessels
hanging from the walls; Masters gives us table after table filled
with household collections of discarded giant-headed figures molded
in concrete.
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