The Devil’s Company: A Book Review

DevilsCompanycover

I’m a big fan of Benjamin Weaver, the Jewish prize-figher turned “thief taker,” who is the hero of David Liss’s The Devil’s Company, the third in the series of crime novels set in 18th century London.  (The other two are The Whiskey

Dear Gary Lang

Dear Gary, I trust this finds you thriving, and as deeply immersed in your work as ever. I wanted to report back to you on the “One Hour/One Painting” session with one of your paintings at the Museum of Art

RICHARD JACKSON at Orange County Museum of Art

Richard Jackson_Bad Dog_Vert

If you’re in the area, don’t miss the rare opportunity for a Richard Jackson retrospective exhibition at the Orange County Museum of Art.  In fact, it’s worth traveling a good long way to see: I’m surprised to be informed that it

The Sense of An Ending by Julian Barnes – A Book Review

senseofending-cover

I read the last pages of The Sense of an Ending by Julian Barnes before turning out the light last night.  I wanted to like it more than I actually did.  I wanted to like the narrator more than I

A Late Quartet – Movie Review

a-late-quartet-posters_1

We stumbled upon this marvelous film the other night.  I was scrolling through my Apple TV movie selections and came upon this title, A Late Quartet, that rang a bell as having something to do with Beethoven.  So we downloaded, and

One Hour/One Painting – Laguna Art Museum

Another good session last night, this time at Laguna Art Museum–the first of another series of three–with a fine painting by Allison Schulnik.  Working with thick, juicy layer of paint, laid on directly from the tube, impasto’ed, applied with heavy brush

ALEKSANDAR ANTONIJEVIC

I was delighted, a while ago, to be invited by Berenson Fine Art in Toronto to write a catalogue text for Aleksandar Antonijevic, a principal dancer with the National Ballet of Canada who is also a remarkable photographer.  I had

THE FEAR PROJECT: Book Review

Jaimal Yogis  is the kind of writer who is willing to plumb the depths of his own lived experience—and his own heart—for his material.  I’m not surprised to find him quoting Michel de Montaigne , the granddaddy of this approach to

SPIELBERG’S LINCOLN

tbn_66bb5a3cf70e5787

We saw Lincoln yesterday.  It’s a fine piece of historical drama, with a flawlessly credible performance by Daniel Day Lewis of Lincoln as the most melancholy of men, faced with the dire situation of Americans at war with Americans, the evil of

Caravaggio

EX2463_1

I’ve no doubt I’ll have more thoughts about Caravaggio–and more informed ones–when I’ve finished reading the new book about him, Caravaggio: A Life Sacred and Profane, by Andrew Graham-Dixon. I bought it at the museum bookshop on leaving the current

The Art Dockuments, Carlton Davis

16082892

As anyone knows who has followed its fortunes over the past few decades, the story of contemporary art in Los Angeles has been a peripatetic one.  The center of energy has shifted variously from La Cienega to La Brea to

BOOK REVIEW: John Grisham, “The Confession”

It’s hard to explain why I keep reading a book as dreadfully bad as John Grisham’s The Confession to the end.  In part it’s out of that old addiction I have written about before: the need to know how the story will