Swoon’s ethereal paper sculptures have hung in New York’s MoMA and Los Angeles’s MoCA, but you’re just as likely to find her work on a brick wall in a forgotten street. The artist, born Caledonia ...
A large-scale installation by celebrated street artist Swoon will hang like an umbrella from the ceiling of The New Orleans Museum of Art's great hall from June 8 to September 25. Swoon is also known ...
Brooklyn-based street artist Swoon will create a monumental site-specific installation in the fifth-floor rotunda of the Brooklyn Museum. Swoon: Submerged Motherlands will transform the gallery into a ...
Street artist Caledonia Curry, better known as Swoon, is famous for her massive block prints, which she’s pasted in cities around the world. But she’s recently shifted gears to focus on the mediums of ...
Wheat-paste aficionado Swoon is one of the “urban” lady artists up at ALPHABETA for a month, this time administering her street art to gallery walls. Not sure what this enchanting woman is sewing — ...
It was pure coincidence on a recent Tuesday morning that as the street artist Swoon stood in the atrium of Boston’s Institute of Contemporary Art and pondered a reporter’s questions, a tourist ...
An ocean goddess will soon rise inside NOMA, pointing out the water’s oil spill-related decline as well as the sometime graffiti artist’s rise to stardom Michael DeMocker / The Times-PicayuneCaledonia ...
Swoon has sailed in to the Brooklyn Museum. A major new exhibition from Brooklyn artist Swoon has transformed the rotunda of the Brooklyn Museum into a fanciful landscape with a giant aluminum tree, ...
Brooklyn street artist Swoon creates art that makes you feel like a kid again. She’s wheat-pasted life-sized portraits on the sides of industrial buildings and transformed an abandoned warehouse into ...
We are excited to announce that Swoon will be our eminent visiting artist for the 2025-26 academic year! Caledonia Curry, known as Swoon, is an artist and filmmaker recognized for her pioneering ...
Of all artistic mediums, etching has perhaps most unfairly earned a reputation for being a bit dusty, even fuddy-duddy—gone the way of the monocle and iambic pentameter. But a monumental installation ...