George Clark
Here's my pick for the Gold Medal.
Tor thinks it's too cheesy,
but apparently that's what I like.
And it feels airy, breezy, and full of hope
for a day well spent on planet earth.
Stuart Fullerton
I'd give medal to this one, too.
Kind of ominous, aggressive, annoying.
And strange.
A fine example of Chicago painting.
Soko Okada
I am SO TIRED of portraits that idealize their subjects.
So this uncomfortable woman pleases me.
She is not a happy camper.
Mark Huddle
Is it a depressing cityscape?
Is it an edgy geo-form abstract painting ?
I like it.
Lilly Y. Lee
out of portraying sweet junk food.
This dramatic piece is a fine example of that genre,
The donuts appear to be having
a personal relationship.
Ali Hasmut
A highly personal view of our glass and steel canyons
Stacey Street
A lively celebration of urban energy
Stephanie Weidner
I've written about this painting before.
At this viewing -- it seemed like a time trip back to a hotel gift shop in the 1950's.
Rich Morrow
I've devoted
a separate post to this masterpiece
.
It won this year's Gold Medal,
though its artistry is more conceptual than formal.
It certainly celebrates the Palette and Chisel.
But it also undermines what makes it special.
Andrew Conklin
Cathy Berry
Charlotte Arnold
Christine Body
Clayton Beck III
Dan Kolleng
Dayle Sazonoff
Errol Jacobson
Helen Oh
Henrique Cerne-Lima
Lenin DelSol
M. Abbott Trboyevic
Michael Margherone
Misha Livshitz
Paul Bond
Phyllis Brodny
Steve Puttrich
Val Yachik
Sex and death - what more can we ask for?
Wei Hsueh
William Schneider