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Targets recur through Rashid Johnson's rotunda-filling Guggenheim Museum retrospective, an insightful show that certainly hits the mark. The first can be seen outside the museum: a large steel ...
Rashid Johnson is an African-American Conceptual artist often hailed as a standard bearer for post-black art. View Rashid Johnson’s 322 artworks on artnet. Find an in-depth biography, exhibitions, ...
He also works that anxiety out through his art, in series with such titles as Anxious Men, Broken Men, Anxious Red, Surrender Paintings, and Bruise Paintings. The first of these was made in 2014 ...
NEW YORK — Why has no one previously suspended palms and other indoor plants in the rotunda of the Guggenheim Museum? Frank Lloyd Wright designed the building to include flora year-round. But it ...
Aspen Snowmass has selected the world-renowned, Chicago-born contemporary artist Rashid Johnson to create the 2022-23 lift-ticket images. Johnson is an American artist whose work takes on a range ...
A "quietly joyous" sight currently greets visitors to the Guggenheim when they look up into Frank Lloyd Wright's famous spiraling rotunda, said Holland Cotter in The New York Times. Illinois-born ...
“Rashid Johnson: A Poem for Deep Thinkers” (through January 18, 2026) is the artist’s first solo presentation at the New York institution.
A major exhibition by the acclaimed artist will fill Frank Lloyd Wright’s rotunda with plants and artwork. Johnson stepped down from the Guggenheim’s board last year. By Hilarie M. Sheets The ...
Rashid Johnson is an African-American Conceptual artist often hailed as a standard bearer for post-black art. View Rashid Johnson’s 365 artworks on artnet. Find an in-depth biography, exhibitions, ...
Jan. 28, 1986, was a day that changed Rashid Johnson. He remembers the TV set being rolled into his elementary-school classroom in Evanston, Ill.He remembers watching with his classmates as the ...
Johnson, an artist in his 40s, grew up in Chicago and lives and works in New York. ... “Rashid Johnson: A Poem for Deep Thinkers” through Jan. 18, 2026, at the Guggenheim Museum in New York.