
2011
A reflection on the iconic headquarters of the Johnson Publishing Company in downtown Chicago. The eleven-story Modernist building on South Michigan Avenue was home to Jet and Ebony magazines since its design in 1971. The building was heralded as the first major downtown Chicago building designed by an African-American architect since the eighteenth century. In the case of the Johnson family and its legacy, Hartt looks to the intersection of the publisher’s ideals and values, the style and aesthetics embodied by the site and the lasting cultural impact of the magazines.

Green

The Genius of Leonardo Da Vinci

Marcel Duchamp: The Art of the Possible

Tierra

A New Spirit in Painting: 6 Painters of the 1980's

Darkroom Diaries

All this Roughness

Video Wall Installation of John Cage’s 4’33″

Euphoria

The Flood

Leonardo Da Vinci The Tragic Pursuit of Perfection

Segantini: Back to Nature

Persistencia

Exergo

Kusama's Self-Obliteration

Michael Palin In Wyeth's World

Tim's Vermeer

Dieter Roth. Solo Scenes. 1997-98

A puddle of water held in shape by my thoughts

A Scenic Harvest from the Kingdom of Pain