Intelligencer
The Cut
Vulture
The Strategist
Curbed
Grub Street
Magazine
Subscribe to the Magazine
Give a Gift Subscription
Buy Back Issues
Current Issue Contents
New York
Shop
Subscribe
Sign In
Account
Profile
Sign Out
Menu
Menu
Close
Close
TV
Movies
Comedy
Music
TV Recaps
What to Stream
Vulture Lists
Books
Theater
Art
Awards
Podcasts
About
Newsletters
Vulture Insiders
Video
Vulture Festival
Like Us
Follow Us
Follow
NYMag.com
New York Magazine
Intelligencer
Vulture
The Cut
The Strategist
Grub Street
Curbed
Search
Search
Close
Subscribe
Give A
Gift
Menu
Menu
Close
Close
TV
Movies
Comedy
Music
TV Recaps
What to Stream
Vulture Lists
Books
Theater
Art
Awards
Podcasts
About
Newsletters
Vulture Insiders
Video
Vulture Festival
Like Us
Follow Us
Follow
NYMag.com
New York Magazine
Intelligencer
Vulture
The Cut
The Strategist
Grub Street
Curbed
Search
Search
Close
Displaying all articles tagged:
Dana Schutz
black lives matter
Jan. 31, 2022
The Misguided Empathy of Dana Schutz’s
Open Casket
The controversial painting of Emmett Till was equally clinical and tempestuous.
By
Kimberly Drew
art review
May 12, 2021
Frieze New York and the Return of the Megafairs
Social reentry, sensory overload, and some very good art at the first big event since … well, you know when.
By
Jerry Saltz
art
Jan. 17, 2019
Dana Schutz Takes Back Her Painterly Name
Her canvasses are hyper-assertive, full of operatic grandeur, self-mocking turbulence, disfigured hideousness and the psychopathology of her figures.
By
Jerry Saltz
art and design 2017
Apr. 20, 2017
Is Political Art the Only Art That Matters Now?
The art world is going to war with Trump. If it doesn’t shoot itself in the foot first.
By
Carl Swanson
controversies
Apr. 3, 2017
Open Casket
Artist Defends Her Emmett Till Painting, Says It Needs Context
“I knew the risks going into this. What I didn’t realize was how bad it would look when seen out of context.”
By
Hunter Harris
Sept. 29, 2015
The Maddening Fate of the Bad-Boy Female Artist
Dana Schutz, Katherine Bernhardt, and why the art world overlooks its dangerous women.
By
Jerry Saltz
in the magazine
May 4, 2007
An Afternoon in Chelsea — On Your Desktop