A painter who took his subjects from pop culture, he was also the founding editor of Artnet.com and chronicled the rise of the SoHo art scene in the 1970s. By Deborah Solomon Walter Robinson ...
Walter Robinson was one of the first people I met in the New York art world, when I started writing about art and the art market in the late 1990s. Alexandra Peers, my editor at the Wall Street ...
Walter Robinson, a painter and journalist who presided over coverage of the New York art world in publications ranging from a freebie newspaper in the 1970s to Artnet.com, which began in the 1990s ...
He edited influential outlets, made alluring appropriation art, and with a rare, wry sensibility, helped define his era. Walter Robinson with one of his works at the opening of "Go Figure!" ...
The impact of Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson on the Columbus art community cannot be understated. One can scarcely throw a rock without hitting someone who has been influenced by the late artist.
The artist and writer Walter Robinson—known for creating bright and dryly humourous paintings, and for writing incisive and sometimes irreverent musings on the New York art world—has died ...
Going to art shows with Walter Robinson, the artist, writer, and human bullshit detector who died earlier this week at age 74, was like walking around with an oracle. He always had insightful ...
“Demolishing Uncle Billy’s was a necessity. Now that we’re done cleaning up the sins of the past, so to speak, the question is, How do we proceed proactively?” McCully said legislation ...
Off of Sunbury Road on Columbus’s northeast side, the two-story home of Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson stands apart from its neighbors. The front doors have painted images of smiling Black women ...
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