When British sculptor Phyllida Barlow attended art school in London in the 1960s, feminine materials were considered taboo, and students were encouraged to make monumental, assertive, and sleek works.
In galleries and museums around the world, teetering masses of plywood, Phyllida Barlow turned piles of fabric, plaster, and cardboard into whimsical, gentle-giant sculptures. “My mother was very ...
A young boy's vacation with his father is cancelled when an emergency salvage mission takes place. He soon stumbles on the hiding place of a monster at a remote Canadian lake.