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Recent Articles
"Ever seen pig after pig being bled at a slaughterhouse? I can tell you knife hunting often pales in comparison."
"Just assume these local politicians are lying when they say anything."
"He has managed to buy the majority of his support with false promises of better lives for the population."
Power to the people.
"If the missiles had remained, we would have used them against the very heart of America, including New York."
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National Features >
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
How a mother of two ended up in a plot to smuggle high-tech gear to the enemy.
By Deirdra Funcheon
Westword
In life and death, tattoo artist Kauri Tiyme made her mark.
By Alan Prendergast
Village Voice
Amy Neustein never could resist going public with her family dramas.
By Elizabeth Dwoskin
Houston Press
A visit with the hurricane victims that a country forgot.
By John Nova Lomax
Love at First Crawl
Kick off 2008 in fine Wynwood style.
Published on January 10, 2008 at 3:00am
Aramis Gutierrez lights the fuse on the years first Wynwood arts crawl with an arsenal of combustible works that revel in the uncanny and grotesque. Even Now, in the Final Hour of My Life, Im Falling in Love Again, opening tonight at 7 at the David Castillo Gallery (2234 NW Second Ave., Miami), features the painters searing canvases fueled by lurid narratives of untimely death and corruption. A Gutierrez love letter to Eighties Miami depicts a drug runner racing a cyclone on rough seas. Another work captures a pair of bimbos brawling poolside beneath a spectacular sunset, and yet another canvas drips with menace as a prehistoric shark attacks two fishermen on a tiny skiff. Saints, preserve us! See it through February 2. Call 305-573-8110, or visit www.castilloart.com.
Over at Locust Projects (105 NW 23rd St., Miami) London-born artist Graham Hudson unveils his site-specific installation created from found and purchased objects. It incorporates sculpture, light, and hypnotic sound elements played on turntables that twirl light bulbs.
In the project room, L.A.s Aili Schmeltz has used string and nails to create a topographical 3-D map of Miami titled The Magic City, which harks back to 1970s string art or those funky dime-store DIY art kits Granny gave us for Christmas. Through February 29. Call 305-576-8570, or visit www.locustprojects.org.
Sat., Jan. 12, 2008