Curated by studio artist / writer / DJ Dennis Kane

Adam Pendleton

re contextualizing language and history

Untitled (WE ARE NOT), 2021, Silkscreen ink on canvas

This week’s art selection features the work of Adam Pendleton. Adam’s work uses text and images to examine the glut of codes we negotiate and the hierarchies of power embedded in them.

Adam Pendleton is a conceptual artist (whose) work centers on an engagement with language, in both the figurative and literal senses, and the recontextualization of history through appropriated imagery to establish alternative interpretations of the present and, as the artist has explained, “a future dynamic where new historical narratives and meanings can exist.”
— Galerie Eva Prenhauser

Photo Credit:

Pace Gallery, Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Adam Pendleton: These Things We’ve Done Together

Elephant Art, Pope L. and Adam Pendleton, Art Can Mobilize Your Body

Idea Stream, Adam Pendleton’s “Black Dada” at MOCA

Art Forum, The Parallax View: The Art of Adam Pendleton

Moma, History Is Never Finished: An Interview with Adam Pendleton

Galerie Eva Prenhauser, Adam Pendleton

Portrait Credit: New York Times, Adam Pendleton is Rethinking the Museum

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Christian Boltanski

meditations on memory

This week’s art post features the work of French conceptual artist Christian Boltanski (1944-2021). Boltanski’s work has a contemplative, poetic, ethnological quality. Absence, the remains and impact of war, the silenced subject, and the power of memory all are investigated, as is a quiet celebration of the dignity and poetics inherent in the mundane.

His work was rich in visual and aural impact, and open-ended in its invitation to the viewer to contemplate the past and partake in the present moment — for what has been lost and what endures.
— Merrian Goodman Gallery

Photo Credit:

MetaLocus, BOLTANSKI AT IVAM: DÉPART - ARRIVÉE

Jupiter Art, CHRISTIAN BOLTANSKI:THEATRE D'OMBRES

Art Dex, Memory and Mortality: Christian Boltanski

Art Review, The Spectres of Christian Boltanski

Nowness Asia, Everyone and No One, The Art of Christian Boltanski

Merrian Goodman Gallery, Depart-Arrive

Merrian Goodman Gallery, Christian Boltanski Selected Works

Portrait Credit: Art Dex, Memory and Mortality: Christian Boltanski

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Shirin Aliabadi

iranian subversion

This week’s art post features the work of Shirin Aliabadi (1973-2018). Aliabadi’s work focused on Iranian women and their unique relationship to Western culture. Not singularly a critique of Western capitalism, the work explores secular transgression, body image and female identity under a repressive religious regime.

Miss Hybrid, 2008
Shirin will always be remembered for her kind soul, the depth of her work and the mark she left on the world. The female protagonists of her best-known series presented themselves as a radical counter-design to the officially propagated image of women, and displayed a young generation’s ways of breaking free from regulations.”
— Third Space Gallery, Dubai

Photo Credit:

Universes Art, Operation Supermarket

Phillips.com, Shirin Aliabadi

Art Fund, Shirin Aliabadi

Aperture, She captured the modern face of Iran

Portrait: The Art Newspaper, Shirin Aliabadi, known for depicting rebellious Iranian women, has died

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Annette Lemieux

ideological minimalism

This week’s art post features the great work of Annette Lemieux. She works in a variety of media and works in a theater of memory, examining aporias in accepted, dominant narratives. Check her work at her website.

She’s looked at archetypical images from art — 20th century art history, but also film — and edited them and tweaked them to give them new meaning, whether that’s cheeky or critical, She’s always taking something from the world and turning it on its head to give it new meaning.
— Al Miner, Boston Museum of Fine Arts

Photo Credit:

Mitchell Inns & Nash, Annette Lemieux

Whitney Museum, Annette Lemieux

Quote and Portrait Credit: WBUR, Annette Lemieux, Whose Art Addresses History And Politics, Wins MFA’s $10K Prize

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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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