
The House on Utopia Parkway: Joseph Cornell’s Studio Re-Created by Wes Anderson
The House on Utopia Parkway: Joseph Cornell’s Studio Re-Created by Wes Anderson is an exhibition conceived by curator Jasper Sharp and the acclaimed American filmmaker. The show brings Cornell’s New York studio to the heart of Paris, transforming Gagosian’s storefront gallery into a meticulously staged tableau—part time capsule, part life-size shadow box—for the first solo presentation of the artist’s work in Paris in more than four decades. In this video, Anderson discusses the genesis of the exhibition and the process by which it came together.
Michael Heizer: Negative Sculpture
Over the Guardrails, Into the Water
Berthe Weill
Titus Kaphar: The Fire This Time
A Tremendous Generosity: Jeff Koons on Marcel Duchamp
Jonas Wood: The Rules of the Game
Game Changer
Beatrice Wood
Jasper Johns: Between the Clock and the Bed
Nan Goldin: Another Word for Love
Frank Gehry: Every Building, a Self-Portrait
Fashion and Art: Thomas Gainsborough
The Frick Collection, New York, opened Gainsborough: The Fashion of Portraiture on February 12. The first exhibition devoted to the English artist’s portraiture ever held in New York, the show comprises more than two dozen paintings and explores the role of fashion in Gainsborough’s depictions, in terms both of the sitters’ clothes and of the larger context of class, labor, craft, and time. Aimee Ng, the Frick’s Peter Jay Sharp Chief Curator, has been working on the show for a decade; last fall she met with the Quarterly’s Derek C. Blasberg to talk about this historic project.










