Michael Paglia reviewed, Designing Women, in his weekly Westword column on Dec. 17.
“A few weeks ago, I went to see the Walt Kuhn/Edie Winograde shows there (“Myth America,” November 26) with the thought that I would also write a brief notice on the other exhibition, Designing Women: Art and the Modern Interior From Postwar Britain. But the minute I entered the gallery, I knew I’d have to scuttle my plans and devote a full-blown review to Women — not just because it’s surprisingly large, but because the quality of what’s included might make you think that you’ve been transported to the Cooper-Hewitt Museum in New York or, maybe more to the point, the Victoria and Albert Memorial in London.
“I can’t say enough about how interesting, thoughtful, intelligently laid out and beautiful Designing Women is. I wasn’t surprised to learn that curators from various museums in Britain as well as from the Cooper-Hewitt, the Wolfsonian and even the Museum of Modern Art have made their way to Colorado Springs to see it. Suffice it to say, it wouldn’t kill you to exert a fraction of that effort to do the same.”
Congratulations to the curator Tariana Navas-Nieves, exhibit designer Laurel Swab and the curatorial team for another great exhibition and positive review.