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Sue Coe is a sociopolitical artist whose burning convictions inform her work with relentless force. She publishes in newspapers and magazines and through the medium of affordable prints to get her ...
The artist Sue Coe proudly labels her own work propaganda, whether she’s taking on factory farming or current events. Credit...Rahim Fortune for The New York Times Supported by By Hilarie M.
Sue Coe, Grenfell Tower Corporate Murder ... and change starts to happen. Art doesn’t happen until the viewer says it does, many times artists are testing to see what works to create change.
A prominent critic once called British-born artist Sue Coe “the greatest living practitioner of confrontational, revolutionary art.” Coe, 50, creates artwork that isn’t easily forgotten.
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Sue Coe is a provocateur. Her impeccably realized paintings and drawings prick and prod, offering troubling, sometimes even painful glimpses at such wide-ranging issues as war, rape, racism ...
Coe's truth telling and confidence in us to change our behavior as a result of her creativity is what this exhibition and award are all about.
Sue Coe’s “The AIDS Suite,” opening Thursday at the Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library, showcases drawings of patients suffering from HIV/AIDS. The exhibit features 27 drawings and prints ...
But the powerful exhibition of noted British illustrator and artist Sue Coe’s work at Georgia State University gallery may single-handedly remind you of the power of art to bear witness ...
A 1992 portrait of activist and artist Sue Coe photographed by Steve Heller. Coe is set to give a lecture on Oct. 9 at the Wexner Center for the Arts. Credit: Courtesy of Galerie St. Etienne, New York ...