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Monthly Archives: June 2010

Toast and Roast: Tomorrow’s Events.

How To Read A Book preview at Locust Projects. Image courtesy of Locust Projects. Please join us as we steal a few precious hours from the working week to toast the first year of the Miami Writer’s Prize and its winner, Annie Hollingsworth, at Locust Projects tomorrow. Locust Project’s current exhibition How To Read A [...]

Cory Arcangel’s Unofficial Review

Cory Arcangel talk at MOCA NOMI, April 24, 2010. Copyright: Noelle Theard. The use of technology and self-expression are becoming more and more intertwined as people evolve to depend on everyday use of the Internet. The Internet enables us to extend our assumed personalities over wide networks, which begins to blur the lines between life, [...]

The Sunday Video: The Neistat Brothers

I first heard about these guys several years ago when they were working as studio assistants for Tom Sachs and it was really hard not to instantly fall in love with their videos.  This past week their new HBO TV show premiered, which is low-fi at it’s absolute best. They first won major online cred [...]

Miami Writer’s Prize 2010 Winner!

Image credit. We, the staff at Artlurker, are delighted to announce Annie Hollingsworth as the winner of the 2010 Miami Writer’s Prize for her review of Corwin Hewitt’s current exhibition at Dorsch Gallery (published below). Announcing their unanimous decision after much deliberation our four judges, Scott Cunnigham, Ruba Katrib, Rene Morales and Gean Moreno have [...]

Miami Writer’s Prize Update

Image credit. Apologies for a slow week and to all those eagerly awaiting the announcement of the winner of the Miami Writer’s Prize 2010. The deadline for submissions drew to a close on midnight last Friday and since then the judges and myself have been locked in active debate concerning the entries. Encouragingly I am [...]

The Sunday Video: 2012

Rounding out our Armageddon video series, I bring you a trailer from last year’s 2012.  If you actually watched the film in its entirety, I think you would agree that the trailer is better than its big brother.  It was promoted in a marketing campaign by a fictional organization, the “Institute for Human Continuity” and [...]