Curated by studio artist / writer / DJ Dennis Kane

Charles Gaines

aesthetics, politics and philosophy

This week’s art selection features the work on noted conceptual artist and teacher Charles Gaines. Gainses’s work engages formulas that interrogate relationships between objective and subjective realms. Using many forms - photography, musical composition, sculpture, video, etc. - Gaines examines identity and power and the fault lines of capital’s utopia. His is some of the most engaged and ambitious work being made today.

His work belongs to a branch of conceptual art concerned with processes and systems. The aim was to remove subjectivity from art by following self-determined rules and procedures. His breakthrough came in 1973, with his “Regression” series, in which he wrote sequential numbers in the squares of a hand-drawn grid to generate an amorphous form that grows from drawing to drawing, each generating the next. ‘One of the joys was the fact that I could experience things that I couldn’t predict, that I couldn’t anticipate.’
— Johnathon Griffin

Photo Credit:

Colossal,Through Monumental Sculpture of Moving Chains, Artist Charles Gaines Confronts the Enduring Legacy of American Slavery

Paula Cooper Gallery, Charles Gaines

ARTFORUM, Differing Equations: The Art of Charles Gaines

LA Times, How the dense grids of artist Charles Gaines took the ego out of art, Carolina A. Miranda

Jonathon Griffin, Charles Gaines

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Jennifer Bolande

post conceptual objects and images

For our Wednesday art post, Dennis Kane features one of his favorite artists Jennifer Bolande. Her work uses photography/ sculpture to create quietly arresting moments that examine instances around the periphery of thought. She indexes and points to fault lines of power and ideological habit. Check more of her work at her website.

Coincident with Bolande’s conscious deployment of dichotomies is an intense concentration on the meeting places between objects, the points where two differences border and thus define themselves.

Bolande pays an almost surrealist attention to loci of simultaneous meeting and division as sites for potential transformation
— Paula Marincola, Art Forum

Photo Credit: jbolande.com

Quotation Credit: Art Forum, Something to Do with Jennifer Bolande, January 1989

Portrait Credit: Jennifer Bolande, Chambre D'amis

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