Artists, when they work, delve really deeply into issues, so we thought, ‘Why not create a platform that kind provides a face for those ideas and perspectives to be shared with a broad public?’
...her conversations with artists reveal a sensitivity to how a work of art can carry the complexity of an individual’s experience, especially by quietly illuminating that which is usually hidden from view.
Some of my most impactful projects
This past April, I worked with fellow RISD professors Daniel Lefcourt and Marco Roso (co-founder of DIS) to put together a two-day symposium called “Debates in AI.” We had speakers fly in from around the world to debate how the technology will impact culture and arts education.
I interviewed artist Sarah Sze for T Magazine’s Artist Questionnaire.
At the Whitney Museum right now is one of the best exhibitions on artificial intelligence and art. I covered it for Monocle on Culture.
One of the world’s oldest Hebrew Bibles went up for auction. I told the story about it for NPR.
I recently co-founded the Center for Artistic Inquiry and Reporting. The organization’s vision is to deepen and expand support for artists reimagining investigative journalism.
For WNYC and Gothamist I reported on a new visitor in Madison Square Park. She’s gleaming, golden, 18 feet high, and made by the artist Shahzia Sikander.
I had an opportunity to spend time with Sheida Soleimani, an artist and wildlife rehabilitator living in Providence, Rhode Island, for T Magazine. Her work speaks to so many important issues happening in the Middle East and beyond.
Because of rising sea levels, Venice could be uninhabitable by the end of this century. For Architectural Digest, I wrote about an effort to gird Venice for an inevitable climate change transformation from a consortium of organizations, which includes the ARCHiVe center, Factum Foundation, Fondazione Giorgio Cini and EPFL.
This is a book of work made by artists who contributed to Creative Time Reports. Featured voices in the book include Ai Weiwei, Molly Crabapple, Boots Riley and David Byrne.
I interviewed the artist Michael Rakowitz (one of my favorites) for the New York Review of Books.
Archaeologists are racing to save Afghanistan’s cultural heritage before the Chinese start digging on one of the world’s most valuable new copper mines.