Opening up the Art World — One Residency at a Time
In San Francisco’s Tenderloin, gallerist Jonathan Carver Moore is turning a vacant storefront into a live-in artist residency—inviting painters to create in public.
Capital A is a new B2B feature series and bi-weekly newsletter highlighting forward-thinking approaches in the art world, and introducing the people shaping 21st-century culture.
In San Francisco’s Tenderloin, gallerist Jonathan Carver Moore is turning a vacant storefront into a live-in artist residency—inviting painters to create in public.
Cultural institutions aren’t failing to innovate, they’re crumbling under the weight of technical debt.
Tired of hustle culture, gallerist Robbie Fitzpatrick opts for slow, site-specific exhibitions outside the white cube.
Since 2015, Black Cube has followed artists’ ideas anywhere–from rural Texas to Nevada’s atomic-testing ground–creating ambitious, site-specific artworks in close dialogue with the local communities.