Jessica Dawson's "Galleries" column in today's Post "scraps the art criticism and talks religion instead."
Jessica reviews Lane Twitchell at G Fine Art, in Georgetown (Annie, please update your website!).
She asks: "After all, religion and art can't occupy the same conversational space, can they?"
Catriona pointed out to me: How about America's best selling "artist"? Now that Thomas Kinkade is having a solo at a "real" art gallery, we've all faced with the question of the legitimacy of America's best-selling painter as an artist. And isn't Kinkade's huge success because of his marriage of art and religion?
I do not like it, will never like it and don't understand people who amass Kinkade's "art," but now that the "artworld" has cracked the door open for him, the ensuing dialogue (and food fight) that will follow, will be both interesting and good for art.
In fact, if any gallerist in Washington (not us, thank you) wants to really make the national headlines, they should contact Kinkade and offer him his first solo in a commercial fine arts space. Then we'd let Blake and Dixon loose on him, and the rest would be great publicity and probably a sell-out show.
Hey! Maybe that's what those missing DC art collectors are buying?
Thursday, April 01, 2004
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