Rachel Clark
If Philip Guston were a woman, he might have made paintings something like Rachel Clark’s. This is something that Clark herself is clearly aware of, as her painting Philip Guston Balls makes clear. And if the balls in this thick, sticky painting look more like a fleshy T-Bone than male genitalia—which is not to say they don’t also look like male genitalia—the rather unappetizing resemblance is one that finds parallels across her larger body of work. Clark is something of a dirty chef when it comes to cooking up paintings: sausages and fufu feature in the titles of works that otherwise suggest hairy phalluses, snaking intestines, rainbow poop, swarthy buttocks, and so on and so forth. The whole is accomplished with a colorful, loose, comic intensity that belies the paintings’ thoroughly scatological subject matter, as if an eminently charming young woman, knowing full well what she was doing, suddenly turned around and told the most vulgar of jokes.
60 Wrd/min Art Critic Lori Waxman
Art critic Lori Waxman, who has written for Artforum and The Believer, visited the Art Gallery of Knoxville on April 4-6, 2008 to present on-the-spot written reviews of work by local artists in 20 minutes or less. Waxman, who was assisted in Knoxville by receptionists Katie Ries, Veronica Siehl, and Aaron McIntosh, has conducted these critiques/performances, known as the 60 Wrd/min Art Critic, in Chicago and New York. Here are all 36 reviews Waxman wrote.










![David Wolff
At the heart of David Wolff’s experiments in the limits of visual communication seethes a very dark humor, the kind [that] clearly wonders what it might look like to paint out the corner of a room. Hence the deep black overlapping spheres that make a black hole of one section of his 2007 exhibition, There Is No Paradise. Everywhere here neutral signs and symbols are forced into playing games of confusion against their will, revealing that a) there’s no such thing as a neutral sign, b) context is everything, or at least a whole lot, and c) Sol Lewitt got soft and sweet in his old age. Wolff’s work chews on concepts and semiotics, sometimes, as above, pushing them into the three dimensional, while elsewhere, as in his most recent work, sticking to the flatter surfaces and mark-making of maps. In these drawings lines dart here and there, trying desperately to mean something, but bereft of all the extra information necessary for legible content. It’s enough to make a lost soul desperately plea for help—fortunately, Wolff has created just such a suitable contraption, the Surrender Machine, a motorized bundle of odds and ends that, once plugged in, frantically waves a white flag. To whom, and for what, depends ultimately on everything else.
60 Wrd/min Art Critic Lori Waxman](http://media.metropulse.com/media/img/photos/2008/04/09/1815-artbeat-60-second-Wolff_t75_75.jpg)































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