Lucio Pozzi
Lucio Pozzi is a contributor to the Rail
WOLF KAHN In Latter-Day Focus
Color & Consequence
By Lucio Pozzi
Several years ago, the late art historian Robert Rosenblum paid a visit to Wolf Kahns studio and, after a lengthy and attentive stay, turned to him and said: There is nothing here that Monet hasnt done already.
Herbie Vogel
By Lucio PozziCertain summer afternoons Herbie would ring my bell, unannounced. He was wearing checkered shorts, an old pair of sandals and a light non-descript shirt.
Herbie Vogel
By Lucio PozziFor a few years I lived under a giant skylight in a windowless, basement level, 19th-century police truck repair garage on Mulberry Street. There, the city was far away.
A Tribute to Michael Goldberg (19242008)
By Janet Coleman, Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe, and Lucio PozziMy mental snapshots of Michael Goldberg start circa 1968 on an Easthampton bay beach. Its windy, early spring. Our party of daytime drinkers is crouched on the dunes, smoking Gauloises and pot. The one at the shore line pouring the Bloody Marys tells me Goldbergs backstory: Back in the '50s, when he made his precocious reputation, he signed his paintings Michael Stuart.
Letter from VENEZIA
By Lucio PozziLet me explain. There are two polarities in town. The Biennale proper is an affair conducted with dignity by the American curator Robert Storr, a painter and curator of notable sensibility.
Lucio Pozzi
Wolf understood the watershed mutation that painting has undergone. It took guts to select a field of art such as landscape painting and persist in a venture around which so much else bustles with attitudes that dismiss the very art one makes. All matters counted, at the root of Wolf Kahns art there is his passion for painting as filtered through the landscape.