contemporary art

Cedric Michael Cox exhibits his new work at the Taft Museum in the Sinton Gallery: "Color + Rhythm" is a new interpretation of the long-standing, important collection of art at the Taft Museum

Cedric Michael Cox exhibits his new work at the Taft Museum in the Sinton Gallery:  "Color + Rhythm" is a new interpretation of the long-standing, important collection of art at the Taft Museum

Cincinnati-based artist Cedric Michael Cox’s bright, lively, and often playful paintings offer abstract twists on traditional painting subjects. For this exhibition, Cox will present a new series of paintings inspired by works in the Taft collection. Working under a broad range of influences, including mythology, music, film, architecture, nature, and the urban environment, Cox encourages viewers to re-examine the world around them. His abstractions range from the geometric to the curvilinear, and look back to the fragmented forms of Cubism, the biomorphic shapes of Surrealism, and even the atmospheric colors of Tonalism.

You'll want to see the Womxn Workers of the World Unite!

You'll want to see the Womxn Workers of the World Unite!

Andrea Bowers is an Ohio-born, Los Angeles-based artist who works at the provocative, often disruptive intersection of art-making, social justice and political activism. Raised in Wilmington, Ohio in what she calls, "an apolitical Republican family," Bowers looks to (and participates in) civil disobedience as a lens to explore contemporary causes including women’s, gay & trans rights, immigration, environmental protection and labor relations.

Introspective & thought-provoking Noel Anderson's exhibit Blak Origin Moment is not to be missed

Introspective & thought-provoking Noel Anderson's exhibit Blak Origin Moment is not to be missed

Noel Anderson is a Louisville, KY-born artist and a professor at the University of Cincinnati, presently working in New York City. He is known for complex investigations into the evolving make-up of black male identity translated through a variety of textiles – from old rugs to digitally produced tapestries.

Don’t Miss: Ai Weiwei: Circle Of Animals Zodiac Heads

Don’t Miss: Ai Weiwei: Circle Of Animals Zodiac Heads

Conceptually, Circle of Animals evokes a complicated history of cultural exchange, war, looting, and commerce. In 1860 Yuanming Yuan was destroyed by invading English and French armies during the Second Opium War. Many of its treasures, including its zodiac heads, were looted and sold. In the late 1980s, five of these heads were auctioned at Sotheby’s, and have since been repatriated to China. Two heads appeared in a controversial 2009 auction at Christie’s. The whereabouts of the remaining five heads remains unknown. Ai Weiwei’s Circle of Animals, a re-creation of these heads in bronze, calls to mind ongoing debates surrounding Chinese nationalism and repatriation.

Digital Art in the Contemporary Market

Digital Art in the Contemporary Market

By Joey Thomas

Paddles ON!, a collaborative auction spawned by Phillips and Tumblr, will close today, marking a legitimately integrating step for digital art in the contemporary market.  While niche markets have evolved gradually, Paddles On! is the first dedicated digital art auction to be initiated by a major contemporary art auction house.