Interview with Mixed Media Artist Veronica Schaible
September 5th, 2012 | by Julie Davis
A skull-headed woman in a high-necked gown cries through the cracked eye socket where she just shot herself. A bright [&hellip
September 5th, 2012 | by Julie Davis
A skull-headed woman in a high-necked gown cries through the cracked eye socket where she just shot herself. A bright [&hellip
September 5th, 2012 | by Angela Son
“When you lose almost every work of art that you created over 30 years,” photographer Patricia Izzo said, “including very personal [&hellip
August 29th, 2012 | by Setsu Uzume
Cindy Sherman is a one-woman show. She is not only a photographer, but also her own model, make-up artist, hair-stylist, [&hellip
August 29th, 2012 | by Alicia Coombes
The Mothership Hackermoms have created a child-friendly artist’s dream on Adeline Street in Oakland: the room is furnished with a [&hellip
August 28th, 2012 | by Angela Son
Think of a time that you’ve been at an exhibition you’ve been meaning to check out for weeks: as [&hellip
August 22nd, 2012 | by Julie Davis
A wild-eyed character taking an ax to his coffee machine is the opening image of Crystal Gonzalez’s comic book In [&hellip
August 22nd, 2012 | by Elizabeth Coleman
With so much art being a purely visual experience, artist Jen Lewin wanted to find a way to mix together [&hellip
August 21st, 2012 | by Angela Son
The dress has long been a symbol representative of the female form. Why is it that a simple piece of [&hellip
August 16th, 2012 | by Angela Son
The exhibition was put together by the Women’s Caucus for Art (WCA), a national organization that creates community through art, [&hellip
August 16th, 2012 | by Angela Son
“Each picture is individual and I could tell a little story about every one of them.” – Patti Smith I [&hellip
August 7th, 2012 | by Alicia Coombes
Local artist Holly DeFount didn’t intend to crank out an original hand-painted tarot deck in one year. She was feeling [&hellip
August 7th, 2012 | by Elizabeth Coleman
Seeing a wall of 200 naked, altered Barbies might be a little off-putting for some. But not for assemblage artist Deborah [&hellip