Art In Conversation
Dewey Crumpler with Constance Lewallen
Dewey Crumpler is an artist, professor, and long time participant in San Franciscos cultural conversations. As a muralist, hes made work that is in direct conversation with older public artworks deemed politically insensitive. Crumpler prefers artwork that challenges social stigmas to be discussed rather than destroyed or hidden from sight. His paintings of hooded figures, currently on view at Cushion Works, were the impetus for the following conversation. We discuss Crumplers mural at George Washington High School, the enigmatic object that has influenced three decades of his creative work, and how teaching informs his art practice.
Art In Conversation
Gillian Laub with Jean Dykstra
Gillian Laub has been photographing societal conflicts for more than 20 years. Her portraits of Israeli Jews and Arabs, Lebanese, and Palestinians whose lives were upended by the conflict in the Middle East were collected in the book Testimony (Aperture, 2007). Her series Southern Rites, which began as a New York Times Magazine assignment to photograph segregated proms in Georgia, eventually became a decade-long photographic project that turned into a traveling exhibition and a documentary film about racial tensions and the legacy of racial inequality. She is used to swimming in turbulent social and political waters and taking viewers on a deep dive that goes beyond surface impressions. But the most painful subject matter personally has probably been the one shes explored in her new book, Family Matters (Aperture, 2021), also an exhibition by the same name on view at the International Center of Photography through January 10, 2022.
Art In Conversation
Glenn Ligon with Raphael Rubinstein
Glenn Ligons practice is so multi-faceted that separate interviews could be devoted to his curating and to his art writing, as well as to the most obvious topic of his art-making. Recently, Ligon has also directly addressed online misuse of his work. While we touched on those topics, this conversation, which was conducted on Zoom the month before his November exhibition of new work at Hauser & Wirth in New York (this will be his first New York show with the gallery), focuses on his art, especially his recent mural-scaled paintings using the entire text of James Baldwins 1953 essay A Stranger in the Village.
Art In Conversation
Dread Scott with Charles M. Schultz
There are those who believe a work of art doesnt exist until it is discussed. As a young artist in Chicago, one of Dread Scotts first audiences was the Supreme Court of the United States from whom a discussion on the merits of a work of art can stimulate a populace. The particular aspect of Scotts work that disturbed them: standing on the American flag. The sitting President made a statement; the conversations led to change. Dread Scott (b.1965) was just getting started. Since then his performance work has inspired and provoked a generation of artists for whom political and historical reckoning are central to their practice. On its most fundamental level much of Scotts work comes down to how a person engages an environment: What they do, or dont do.
Barbara London Calling
By Barbara LondonAs a curator and writer committed to contemporary art, for decades Ive pursued art that explores and adapts to the nonstop changes in technology and in the people who use it. Upgrade is the name of the game. Praxis means keeping my finger on the pulse by engaging directly with artistsemerging and establishedand keeping an open dialogue with passionate colleagues. Everyone adapts in their own way.
From the Publisher & Artistic Director
Dear Friends and Readers,
By Phong BuiAs we all know, the most effective remedy is investing in our own human resources or human potentials, for they will be the key to rebuilding our infrastructures on all fronts through the arts, humanities, and sciences. The great question is how to make them accessible again to the middle and working class as they were during the Great Depression through the WPA and Federal Project One.
Editor's Message
Hold my hand; the ocean is marching
By Yasi AlipourThis collection of essays came together as I asked perhaps a simple question. How do we recognize, honor, protect, and cultivate mentorship in contemporary art? This is an urgent question for all of us that wont fit in history books; we who make and write in a language that is not our own. Political, social, cultural, epistemological, systemic, violence has happened, is happening. The ground is shaking. Im not unique in this. Were surrounded by a world full of artists navigating this relation.
Critics Page
-
This Strange Thing, the Word*
– By Trinh T. Minh-ha -
The Art of Eliminating a Nation
– By Shir Mohammad Karimi -
Sheila Pepe with Rina AC Dweck
– By Sheila Pepe and Rina AC Dweck -
Julie Mehretu with Yasi Alipour
-
Dorothea Rockburne with Yasi Alipour
-
Rirkrit Tiravanija & Tomas Vu with Yasi Alipour
-
Alteronce Gumby with Carrie Moyer
– By Carrie Moyer -
Visions of Anticolonial Futures from Worlds of the Past
– By Shaunna Rodrigues -
when they take what is—As If
– By m. nourbeSe philip -
Tectonic plates meeting
– By Weme -
Can you dig it?
– By Hunter Blu and Krista Gay -
Language Cant Solve Our Problems
– By Hunter Blu and Krista Gay
ArtSeen
-
Eric Holzman: Thinning the Veil
– By Louis Block -
Cinga Samson: Iyabanda Intsimbi / The metal is cold
– By Jonathan Goodman -
Lumin Wakoa: In Time
– By Elizabeth Buhe -
Genieve Figgis: Immortal Reflection
– By Alfred Mac Adam -
Betsy Damon: Passages: Rites and Rituals
– By Alex A. Jones -
Alan Sonfist: American Earth Landscape
– By Norman L Kleeblatt -
Picasso: Seven Decades of Drawing
– By David Rhodes -
Susan Rothenberg: On Both Sides of My Line
– By Alfred Mac Adam -
Renée Stout
– By Jonathan Goodman -
Polina Barskaya: Still
– By Andrew L. Shea -
Global Mode > Omnivores
– By Hovey Brock -
Underground Modernist: E. McKnight Kauffer
– By Mary Ann Caws -
Thomas Demand: Mirror Without Memory
– By Valerie Mindlin -
Joseph Rodriguez: Taxi: Journey Through My Windows 1977–1987
– By Michael Shorris -
Steffani Jemison: Broken Fall
– By David C. Shuford -
Etel Adnan: Light’s New Measure
– By Dina A. Ramadan -
Shannon Cartier Lucy: The Loo Table
– By Jason Rosenfeld -
John Kelsey: The Pea Stakers
– By Emma Pordige -
Suzanne Valadon: Model, Painter, Rebel
– By Jonathan Fineberg -
Elizabeth Murray & Jessi Reaves: Wild Life
– By David Carrier -
Tom Doyle in Germany 1964–65
– By William Corwin -
Takako Yamaguchi: 7 + 7
– By Mary Jones -
Dewey Crumpler: The Complete Hoodie Works, 1993–Present
– By Maddie Klett -
After the summer of smoke and fire
– By Enos Nyamor -
Barbara Hammer: Tell me there is a lesbian forever…
– By Ksenia Soboleva -
Myron Stout and Cycladic Art
– By Tom McGlynn -
Doron Langberg: Give Me Love
– By Claire Phillips -
Beauford Delaney: Be Your Wonderful Self
– By Zoë Hopkins -
Labyrinth of Forms: Women and Abstraction, 1930–1950
– By Nina Wolpow -
Pipilotti Rist: Big Heartedness, Be My Neighbor
– By Olivia Gauthier -
Diane Severin Nguyen: If Revolution Is a Sickness
– By Rachel Remick -
Titian: Women, Myth, and Power
– By Christian Kleinbub -
Michael Gitlin: Compressions
– By Robert C. Morgan -
Peter Bradley
– By David Rhodes -
Rosemary Mayer: Ways of Attaching
– By Candice Chu -
John Ferren: From Paris to Springs
– By David Ebony -
Jeff Koons. Shine
– By Natalia Gierowska -
Julian Schnabel: Self Portraits of Others
– By Phong Bui -
The Beauty of Friends Being Together
– By Phong Bui -
Patricia Miranda: Punto in Aria
– By Gaby Collins-Fernandez
Table of Contents
Editor's Message
-
Hold my hand; the ocean is marching
– By Yasi Alipour
Publisher's Message
-
Dear Friends and Readers,
– By Phong Bui
Art
-
Dewey Crumpler with Constance Lewallen
-
Gillian Laub with Jean Dykstra
-
Glenn Ligon with Raphael Rubinstein
-
Dread Scott with Charles M. Schultz
-
Barbara London Calling
– By Barbara London
ArtSeen
-
Eric Holzman: Thinning the Veil
– By Louis Block -
Cinga Samson: Iyabanda Intsimbi / The metal is cold
– By Jonathan Goodman -
Lumin Wakoa: In Time
– By Elizabeth Buhe -
Genieve Figgis: Immortal Reflection
– By Alfred Mac Adam -
Betsy Damon: Passages: Rites and Rituals
– By Alex A. Jones -
Alan Sonfist: American Earth Landscape
– By Norman L Kleeblatt -
Picasso: Seven Decades of Drawing
– By David Rhodes -
Susan Rothenberg: On Both Sides of My Line
– By Alfred Mac Adam -
Renée Stout
– By Jonathan Goodman -
Polina Barskaya: Still
– By Andrew L. Shea -
Global Mode > Omnivores
– By Hovey Brock -
Underground Modernist: E. McKnight Kauffer
– By Mary Ann Caws -
Thomas Demand: Mirror Without Memory
– By Valerie Mindlin -
Joseph Rodriguez: Taxi: Journey Through My Windows 1977–1987
– By Michael Shorris -
Steffani Jemison: Broken Fall
– By David C. Shuford -
Etel Adnan: Light’s New Measure
– By Dina A. Ramadan -
Shannon Cartier Lucy: The Loo Table
– By Jason Rosenfeld -
John Kelsey: The Pea Stakers
– By Emma Pordige -
Suzanne Valadon: Model, Painter, Rebel
– By Jonathan Fineberg -
Elizabeth Murray & Jessi Reaves: Wild Life
– By David Carrier -
Tom Doyle in Germany 1964–65
– By William Corwin -
Takako Yamaguchi: 7 + 7
– By Mary Jones -
Dewey Crumpler: The Complete Hoodie Works, 1993–Present
– By Maddie Klett -
After the summer of smoke and fire
– By Enos Nyamor -
Barbara Hammer: Tell me there is a lesbian forever…
– By Ksenia Soboleva -
Myron Stout and Cycladic Art
– By Tom McGlynn -
Doron Langberg: Give Me Love
– By Claire Phillips -
Beauford Delaney: Be Your Wonderful Self
– By Zoë Hopkins -
Labyrinth of Forms: Women and Abstraction, 1930–1950
– By Nina Wolpow -
Pipilotti Rist: Big Heartedness, Be My Neighbor
– By Olivia Gauthier -
Diane Severin Nguyen: If Revolution Is a Sickness
– By Rachel Remick -
Titian: Women, Myth, and Power
– By Christian Kleinbub -
Michael Gitlin: Compressions
– By Robert C. Morgan -
Peter Bradley
– By David Rhodes -
Rosemary Mayer: Ways of Attaching
– By Candice Chu -
John Ferren: From Paris to Springs
– By David Ebony -
Jeff Koons. Shine
– By Natalia Gierowska -
Julian Schnabel: Self Portraits of Others
– By Phong Bui -
The Beauty of Friends Being Together
– By Phong Bui -
Patricia Miranda: Punto in Aria
– By Gaby Collins-Fernandez
Critics Page
-
This Strange Thing, the Word*
– By Trinh T. Minh-ha -
The Art of Eliminating a Nation
– By Shir Mohammad Karimi -
Sheila Pepe with Rina AC Dweck
– By Sheila Pepe and Rina AC Dweck -
Julie Mehretu with Yasi Alipour
-
Dorothea Rockburne with Yasi Alipour
-
Rirkrit Tiravanija & Tomas Vu with Yasi Alipour
-
Alteronce Gumby with Carrie Moyer
– By Carrie Moyer -
Visions of Anticolonial Futures from Worlds of the Past
– By Shaunna Rodrigues -
when they take what is—As If
– By m. nourbeSe philip -
Tectonic plates meeting
– By Weme -
Can you dig it?
– By Hunter Blu and Krista Gay -
Language Cant Solve Our Problems
– By Hunter Blu and Krista Gay
Books
-
Natashia Deón’s The Perishing & Louise Erdrich’s The Sentence
– By Yvonne C. Garrett -
Logan Berry with Kathleen Rooney
– By Kathleen Rooney -
Joshua Cohen’s The Netanyahus
– By Greg Cwik -
Marcus Pactor’s Begat Who Begat Who Begat & Marc Anthony Richardson’s Messiahs
– By John Domini -
Phillip Lopate with Samuele F.S. Pardini
-
Jay Caspian Kangs The Loneliest Americans
– By Rhoda Feng -
Stephanie Gangi’s Carry the Dog
– By Carissa Chesanek
Music
-
Maurice Louca and His Texture-Distressed Microtonal Comprovisations
– By Martin Longley -
Rhythmic Conclave
– By Scott Gutterman -
Diary of a Mad Composer
– By George Grella
Dance
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Puffballs, Storm Clouds, and Goodbyes
– By Susan Yung -
Subtle Moments on the Roof
– By Noa Weiss -
Pour; When the ice melts, will we drink water?; and Unrelated
– By Didier Morelli
Film
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The 59th New York Film Festival
– By Laura Valenza -
The Endless Hunger of Shiva Baby
– By Anandi Mishra -
Laura Dern, “A Woman in Trouble”
– By Harrison Blackman
Theater
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The Unsinkable Dramatizations of Titanic
– By Judith C. Lovell -
“We Can’t Lose the Funk”: Roger Q. Mason’s Mission to Protect Black TGNC Playwrights When Commercial Theaters Come Calling
– By Marcus Scott
Fiction
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Market Basket
– By Tassity Johnson
Poetry
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SHOE
– By Salette TavaresTranslated by Kristofer Jens Petersen-Overton & Isabel Sobral Campos -
five
– By Charles North -
five
– By Carolyn Ferrucci -
from Revolutionary Letters
– By Diane di Prima -
two
– By Ryan Murphy -
five
– By Matt Reeck -
from O.B.B.
– by Paolo Javier, with artist Alexander Tarampi
Art Books
-
Sirkhane Darkroom’s i saw the air fly
– By Maymanah Farhat -
Allen Frame’s Fever
– By Megan N. Liberty -
Nigel Poor’s The San Quentin Project
– By Sarah Moroz -
Jim Jarmusch’s Some Collages
– By Jennie Waldow -
Clifton Meador’s Control Mechanism
– By Lily Majteles
In Memoriam
Field Notes
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Capitalism and the Climate Apocalypse
– By Peter St. Clair -
Can the Pandemic Really Change our World?
– By Ana V. Diez Roux -
COVID, Arts Funding, and the Gig Economy
– By Gordon Beeferman and David Friend -
Why Are All Cops Bastards?
– By Serge Quaddruppani and Jérôme Floch, translated from the French by Janet Koenig
The Miraculous
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76. (The Brooklyn Museum)
– By Raphael Rubinstein -
77. (249 Lafayette Street, 57th Street)
– By Raphael Rubinstein -
78. (416 East 55th Street)
– By Raphael Rubinstein -
79. (Brooklyn Navy Yard, Columbia County)
– -
80. (Brighton Beach; Plainfield, New Jersey; 11 West 53rd Street)
– By Raphael Rubinstein