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- Whitney Biennial 2022 : quiet as it's kept / by Whitney Biennial(2022 :New York, N.Y.),issuing body.; Alvarado, Lisa,1982-artist.(CARDINAL)856638; Ancart, Harold,1980-artist.(CARDINAL)856637; Arreola, Mónica,1976-artist.(CARDINAL)856636; Baroja, Gabriel Almeida,organizer.(CARDINAL)856634; Breslin, David,curator,organizer,contributor.(CARDINAL)300081; Chambers-Letson, Joshua Takano,contributor.(CARDINAL)855515; Edwards, Adrienne(Art critic),contributor.(CARDINAL)782756; Edwards, Adrienne(Art critic),curator,organizer,contributor.(CARDINAL)782756; Everett, Percival,contributor.(CARDINAL)343923; Hopkins, Candice,contributor.(CARDINAL)357448; Jackson, Zakiyyah Iman,contributor.(CARDINAL)856618; Kross, Margaret,organizer.(CARDINAL)856617; Lerner, Ben,1979-contributor.(CARDINAL)466743; Venegas, Jovanna,contributor.; Weinberg, Adam D.,writer of foreword.(CARDINAL)172857; White, Simone,1972-contributor.(CARDINAL)856604; Yun, So-yŏng,1965-contributor.(CARDINAL)863391; Whitney Museum of American Art,publisher,host institution.(CARDINAL)139816;
Includes bibliographical references.This landmark volume accompanies the 2022 Whitney Biennial. Each of the Biennial's participants is represented by a selected exhibition history, a bibliography, and imagery complemented by a personal statement or interview that foregrounds the artist's own voice. Essays by the curators and other contributors elucidate themes of the exhibition and discuss the participants. The 2022 Biennial's two curators, David Breslin and Adrienne Edwards, are known for their close collaboration with living artists. Coming after several years of seismic upheaval in and beyond the cultural, social, and political landscapes, this catalogue will offer a new take on the storied institution of the Biennial while continuing to serve--as previous editions have--as an invaluable resource on present-day trends in contemporary art in the United States. --"Whitney Biennial 2022, quiet as it's kept" : April 6-September 5, 2022, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, New York, United States.
- Subjects: Essays.; Exhibition catalogs.; Illustrated works.; Whitney Museum of American Art; Whitney Biennial (2022 : New York, N.Y.); Art, American; Art, Modern;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- Saturation : race, art, and the circulation of value / by Tourmaline,contributor.; Alsultany, Evelyn,contributor.; Antwi, Phanuel,contributor.; Brielmaier, Isolde,1971-contributor.; Burton, Johanna,writer of preface.; Chambers-Letson, Joshua Takano,contributor.; Chuh, Kandice,1968-contributor.; Cobb, Jasmine Nichole,contributor.; Cox, Aimee Meredith,1971-contributor.; Fung, Richard,contributor.; Gibson, Jeffrey,1972-contributor.; Giraud, Tiyé,contributor.; Gonzalez, Anita,contributor.; Gopinath, Gayatri,1969-contributor.; Haley, Sarah,contributor.; Hamraie, Aimi,contributor.; Hopkins, Candice,contributor.; Houston-Jones, Ishmael,contributor.; Ibarra, Xandra,contributor.; Johnson, Jasmine,contributor.; Khoshgozaran, Gelare,contributor.; Kim, Byron,contributor.; King, Homay,1972-contributor.; Kuppers, Petra,contributor.; Kwon, Marci,contributor.; Lê, Việt,contributor.; Lamar, M.,contributor.; Lax, Thomas J.,contributor.; Lemon, Ralph,contributor.; Lin, Candice,contributor.; Lowe, Lisa,contributor.; Madison, D. Soyini,contributor.; Montez, Ricardo,1975-contributor.; Murray, Derek Conrad,contributor.; Musser, Amber Jamilla,contributor.; O'Grady, Lorraine,contributor.; Ochieng' Nyongó, Tavia Amolo,contributor.; Pérez, Roy,contributor.; Phillips, Lisa,1954-writer of foreword.; Prosser, Jay,contributor.; Ramos, Iván A.,contributor.; Rifkin, Mark,1974-contributor.; Robinson, Dylan,contributor.; Sandahl, Carrie,1968-contributor.; Schulman, Sarah,1958-contributor.; Silva, Denise Ferreira da,contributor.; Snorton, C. Riley,editor,contributor.; Spillers, Hortense J.,contributor.; Takemoto, T. T.,contributor.; Vazquez, Alexandra T.,1976-contributor.; Yapp, Hentyle,1980-editor,contributor.; MIT Press,publisher.;
Includes bibliographical references and index."The art world is white. In this volume, contributors from different disciplines and backgrounds discuss race, diversity, and inclusion through the lens of "saturation," in art and across institutions written large. The concept of saturation stems from color theory-for Isaac Newton, the centrality of the color white to his visual theory parallels an understanding of race as its periphery in Western thought. From visual saturation to oversaturation of the bodies of minorities as they have to navigate and exist within institutions, this volume employs saturation as a rubric to ask different questions and to push us to demand more from the ways institutions normatively function and how race has come to be imagined and understood. The essays and conversations are the result of a shared curiosity over why changes in representational practices (some at very early stages of saturation and others leading to oversaturation) have not led to any substantive structural change. Much of this book contends with political economy and racial capital to help grapple with institutional critique. Because of the need to center these questions in time and space, the book is organized in two major sections: 1) The Saturation of Institutional Life: Race, Globality, and the Art Market; and 2) Methods of Racial Matter and Saturation Points. This is the forth volume in the New Museum Critical Anthologies in Art and Culture series. It includes Sarah Haley's essay on the relationship between carceral landscapes and the gendered dimensions of racial capitalism, a conversation between philosophers Denise Ferreira da Silva and Phanuel Antwi moderated by coeditor C. Riley Snorton, about modes for thinking race transnationally and in terms of structures-material, poetic, and affective. In artist Candice Lin's chapter on aesthetics of colonization, she discusses how histories of colonial violence inform her artistic practice. Sarah Schulman highlights the dynamics of navigating the publishing industry as it relates to areas considered "niche" like sexuality, race, and gender. Performance and movement theorist Jasmine Elizabeth Johnson examines the corporeal, visual, and institutional structures that delimit the legibility of the black body, and artist Byron Kim contemplates his practices and methods as they relate to formalism that simultaneously is and is not "about" race"--
- Subjects: Art and race.; Art and society.;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Results 1 to 2 of 2