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09 January 2018 by nathaniel

Briefiew: Art and Tech at VAR Gallery, Milwaukee

Happy New Year, Everyone! I apologize for the minimal posting of late. Aside from the obvious holiday season, my son Julian was just 4 weeks old on Sunday – so I have literally had my hands full quite a bit over the last while (usually full with baby). Things will pick up again, if slowly, […]
Posted in art, art and tech, briefiew, culture, exhibition, me, milwaukee art, philosophy, pop culture · Tagged art, briefiew, culture, digital studio, drawing, ecology, milwaukee, nathaniel stern, technology ·

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20 December 2017 by nathaniel

Tops of 2017: a different kind of year in review

This was a short-lived tradition I started almost a decade ago, and I’m stoked to reboot it. Here, I put forward four Top 5 lists of my own: The Top 5 people I newly met in 2017, The Top 5 people I’d like to meet because of what they did (or the work I saw […]
Posted in art, art and tech, books, culture, exhibition, me, milwaukee art, music, philosophy, pop culture, printmaking, research, reviews, sean slemon, south african art, technology, theory · Tagged aesthetics, art, culture, drawing, ecology, milwaukee, philosophy, public property, reading, sean slemon, teaching, technology, TED, tops ·

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04 November 2017 by nathaniel

Review: Greg Martens’s Out From the Darkness at Grove Gallery

Greg Martens holds a very special place in my heart. He was a traveling salesman who dropped out of college and married the love of his life with whom he raised three children, eventually becoming a cobbler out in Wauwatosa, WI – where his whole family helped fix shoes in their busy little shop. At the […]
Posted in art, exhibition, milwaukee art, pop culture, printmaking · Tagged art, comics, culture, drawing, milwaukee ·

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12 May 2011 by BradyDale

Why make it elusive?

So, allow me to introduce my comic: Eat the Babies. It's about a walking talking TV. There is no continuity to it, other than the fact that the TV does have friends. The two most frequently recurring friends are Woody Guthrie and John Maynard Keynes. It veers into social and philosophical issues a lot, but mainly its concerned with using the TV's confusion about humans to create a humor that is elusive.
Posted in brady dale · Tagged art, avant-garde, comics, drawing, Steve Martin, web-comics, webcomics ·
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nathaniel stern is an awkward artist, writer, and teacher, who likes awkward art, writing, and students.

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