The otherwordly art of Kahn & Selesnick
[portfolio_slideshow id=7921] There’s something about good art that takes your brain and tears it wide open, forcing a space
[portfolio_slideshow id=7921] There’s something about good art that takes your brain and tears it wide open, forcing a space
Of all the shoe-gaze, ambient, New Age and blooming, cavernous dream pop that I have heard, none seems truer to
Back in 1973, John Lennon wanted to make New York City his home, but he was being treated like an
Each year about this time, the western flanks of the Shawangunk Ridge become the Carpathians of the New World, as
A repeat performance is called for with the success of last year’s inaugural Hudson Valley Chalk Festival at the Water
Before you’ve even heard Forrest Hackenbrock’s queasy baritone and the even-queasier things that it has to say, the opening two-measure
Dave Mason has been at it for 50 years. His early career seemed to be mostly about leaving, rejoining, leaving
Movie fans – especially those who love to see something a bit out of the ordinary or hear the inside
“One thing that’s so nice about open-air sculpture installations,” says Sarah Bachelier, curator of this year’s Kingston Sculpture Biennial, “is
In the summer of 1987, Russian pianist Vladimir Feltsman – a child prodigy who had debuted with the Moscow Philharmonic