
Marco Grassi
Articles
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Aug 12, 2024 |
dissidentmuse.substack.com | Marco Grassi |Walter Darby Bannard |Franklin Einspruch
If you didn’t have the opportunity to see my first solo exhibition in New York City back in June, or did and want to relive it, kindly have a look at the digital version, with complete works, installation images, statements, and press links. Once again I want to thank my paid subscribers for making both the physical and digital versions of the show possible. I’m grateful for you. Content at DMJ is free but paid subscriptions keep it coming. Please consider one for yourself and thank you for reading.
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Aug 9, 2024 |
dissidentmuse.substack.com | Marco Grassi |Walter Darby Bannard |Franklin Einspruch
It is easier by far to write a negative review than a positive one. A negative review gives you a dramatic conflict to work with. In the case of Marco Grassi’s In the Kitchen of Art, at least as of the end of Part 2, he hardly has had reason to utter a complaint. The prose delivers drama anyway because Grassi fully comprehends the stakes of creating and displaying art.
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Jul 22, 2024 |
dissidentmuse.substack.com | Marco Grassi |Walter Darby Bannard |Franklin Einspruch
Audio playback is not supported on your browser. Please upgrade. Just in time for your afternoon commute or studio session: I’m pleased to introduce Dissident Musings, the podcast of Dissident Muse. The inaugural episode is an interview with J.F. Martel, whose Reclaiming Art in the Age of Artifice: A Treatise, Critique, and Call to Action we examined inthreeparts in the Asynchronous Studio Book Club. I hope you enjoy it. Content at DMJ is free but paid subscriptions keep it coming.
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Jun 4, 2024 |
newcriterion.com | Gary Saul Morson |James Panero |Roger Kimball |Marco Grassi
Jeremy Black, author of The Holocaust: History and Memory, and James Panero, Executive Editor of The New Criterion, discuss Jeremy’s article from the June issue.
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Jun 4, 2024 |
newcriterion.com | Gary Saul Morson |James Panero |Roger Kimball |Marco Grassi
Nonfiction:The Cleopatras: The Forgotten Queens of Egypt, by Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones (Basic Books): It doesn’t take a historian to remind us that the late Roman Republic, and perhaps the West as we know it, would have looked quite different without Cleopatra VII of Egypt.
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