Arts
Progress Knot: Daniel Everett’s Cityscapes
Daniel Everett focuses on the way urban landscapes layer on top of each other, unraveling the sense of order and progress that city structures wield. … read more
Defender of Darkness: Christine Kenyon’s Night-Sky Advocacy
Increasingly, photographer Christine Kenyon’s advocacy work through the Save a Star Foundation has become a focal point of her life. … read more
Photography-Plus: Brent Courtney, Image Sculptor
Brent Courtney vies for his photos to be “clean, balanced and minimal,” as he puts it. He is a Swiss Army Knife when it comes to the mediums he works in. … read more
Capturing the Moment with Michael Kunde
Michael Kunde is a professional commercial and advertising photographer based in Salt Lake City, Utah, with some of his clients being Adobe and Chrysler. … read more
Megan Knobloch Geilman and Works of Translation: The Art of...
“The shift to tableau work came on suddenly, and luckily, all that messing around turned out to be essential,” says Megan Knobloch Geilman. … read more
Levi Jackson Explores Illusions in the Promised Land
In his photography, Levi Jackson balances technical approaches, levity and weightiness of subject with the polish of New York schooling. … read more
Content Shifter: 9 TV Streamers From Spring 2020
Content Shifter presents nine series that debuted recently that you might have missed this last spring. They’re a sharp dozen. … read more
Film Review: Spelling the Dream
Spelling The Dream is an absorbing and inspiring film, and you can’t help but love the kids at the heart of its story of competition. … read more
SLUG Style: Madie Porter
This month’s SLUG Style features Madie Porter, a cyclist, cook and member of the artist and cycling collective Bad Bad Bananas. … read more
Series Review: Space Force
Space Force may not entirely accomplish the bold mission of creating a 21st-century M*A*S*H or Catch-22., but it certainly achieves lift off. … read more
Film Review: The Lovebirds
In The Lovebirds, Jibran and Leilani are a couple who reach a crossroads in their relationship as they are falsely implicated in a murder. … read more
Film Review: Scoob!
Scoob! is exciting enough to entertain kids with just enough winking cleverness aimed at adults so they’re able to sit through with the little ones. … read more