Spot 1: Documentary After Truth

Documentary After Truth

Dark Study: on Emily Jacir, Forensic Architecture, and fugitive documentary

Fugitivity, as it relates to Black study, has been a mode of contesting misrecognition through a lens of narrative darkness....
Type:
Features
Source:
Fall 2024
Credit:
Text / Re'al Christian

Auscultation

Artifact Auscultation: A Speculative Examination for Mati Diop’s Dahomey Auscultation, n., the action of listening to sounds from the heart,...
Type:
Glossary

Jen Everett: Kinship, Interiority & the Black Femme Gaze

Outside Jen Everett’s studio, balmy air collects against warm St. Louis bricks, but my summer sweat is instantly soothed as...
Type:
Features
Source:
Fall 2024
Credit:
Text / Tomi Seyi Laja

Magdalena Suarez Frimkess—The Finest Disregard

Even her utilitarian tableware—tortilla plates and coffee mugs—appear sculptural, not functional. Whereas many ceramicists, including her husband, take great pains to rid their work of evidence of their physicality, eradicating touch, pressure, emotion, and kinetic energy, Magdalena’s sculptures quiver with her presence. Fingerprints, pinch marks, patchwork, the spontaneity and surety of her brushstrokes altogether engender a perceptible alive-ness.

Type:
Reviews
Source:
Fall 2024
Location:
Los Angeles, CA
Credit:
Text / Tara Anna Dalbow

Spot 2: RECENTLY ON ARTPAPERS.ORG

Teaching Between Worlds

“It becomes more and more difficult in the given academic structures to figure out how to make these kinds of spaces of inquiry. But I’m still having a blast, and my students are still stabbing me through the heart and the eyes every day.”

Type:
Interviews
Credit:
Participants:
Angela Dufresne (RISD), Gordon Hall (Vassar), Arnold J. Kemp (SAIC), Aki Sasamoto (Yale), Nato Thompson (ALT ART SCHOOL), Rodrigo Valenzuela (UCLA), and Michael Jones McKean, moderator, (VCU)

Fall Exhibitions at SCAD Museum of Art

SCAD Museum of Art’s fall exhibitions engage ideas of sensory activation, retrospection, glitches, material, and myth. Each exhibition stands alone,...
Type:
Reviews
Credit:
Text / Samaira Wilson

End of Year Letter: 2024 -> 2025

‘Tis the season for taking stock of what we’ve accomplished in 2024, and for looking forward to what the future holds. On behalf of everyone at Art Papers, I want to thank the individuals and foundations who rallied to support our mission this past year.

Type:
Atlanta, Letters
Location:
Atlanta
Credit:
Text / Sarah Higgins

Spot 3: The sky is falling, the wind is calling

The sky is falling, the wind is calling

Imagination Dead Imagine

Without a Future, We Can Be Forever

Type:
Features
Source:
Spring 2024
Credit:
Text / Gean Moreno + Stephanie Wakefield

Anastasia Samoylova: FloodZone

A bicycle-helmeted boy, shoulders drawn in slightly, stands on a ramp at the entrance of a parking garage. He is...
Type:
Reviews
Source:
February 26, 2020
Location:
Tampa, FL
Credit:
Text / Danny Olda

Karen Holmberg: Archaeology in an Emergency

In Part One of this two-part conversation, Will Corwin and Karen Holmberg discuss her fascination with volcanoes, her discovery of mysterious “spider vulva” petroglyphs, and consider whether these images can still speak to us.

Type:
Interviews
Source:
June 8, 2021
Credit:
Interview / Will Corwin

Because the Sky Will Be Filled With Sulfur—Jeremy Bolen

It is with grace that Jeremy Bolen’s exhibition Because the Sky Will Be Filled With Sulfur tackles the immense amount...
Type:
Atlanta, Reviews
Source:
August, 3rd, 2022
Location:
Atlanta, GA
Credit:
Text / Noah Reyes

Spot 4: FROM THE ARCHIVES

FROM THE ARCHIVES

Sheila Pree Bright’s Suburbia: Where Nothing Is Ever Wanting

This essay was originally published in ART PAPERS July/August 2007, Vol 31, issue 4. For the past two years, Sheila...
Type:
Atlanta, Features
Source:
July/August 2007
Credit:
Text / Susan Richmond

Interview with Judy Pfaff

This interview was originally published in ART PAPERS November/December 1987, Vol. 11, issue 6. Known primarily for her elaborate installations,...
Type:
Interviews
Source:
November/December 1987
Credit:
Interview / Virginia Warren Smith

Jill Magid: Between Words and Deeds

Fausto had tried to speak, but was denied. Instead he fired a gun into the air. Both men reached for the heavens — figuratively (Faust) and literally (Fausto), and both fell, with tragic consequences.

Type:
Interviews
Credit:
Interview / Noah Simblist

Spot 5: Art Isn’t Neutral

Art Isn’t Neutral

What do we want from each other after we have told our stories

Jemma Desai’s essay “What do we want from each other after we have told our stories,” whispers abolition and points to the question: What if we say no?

Type:
Features
Source:
Spring 2022
Credit:
Text / Jemma Desai

Art Isn’t Neutral

Sara Wintz, Carin Kuoni and Laura Raicovich discuss the impossibility of neutrality

Type:
Interviews
Source:
Fall 2019
Location:
New York
Credit:
Interview / Sara Wintz

Where is the Art World Left?

Where is the artworld “Left” in the age of “trickle-down,” homelessness, the rise of the Aryan Nation and corporate art coma: a dehumanization of art and artist into a common denominator of profit?

Source:
July/August 1988
Credit:
Text / Howardena Pindell

The New Exclusionism

Catchwords like “diversity,” “transculturalism,” “pluralism” cause my antennae to go up, and warning bells of skepticism to go off in my head. Not about these ideas per se, you understand, but about the way they are being implemented in our free-enterprise society in the 1980’s.

Source:
July/August 1988
Credit:
Text / Lowery Sims

Spot 6: Painter’s Painter

Painter’s Painter

Katharina Grosse: Lush Irreverence

This interview was originally published in ART PAPERS September/October 2008, Vol. 32, issue 5. Katharina Grosse arrived on the international...
Type:
Interviews
Source:
Summer 2024
Credit:
Text + Interview / Cash (Melissa) Ragona

Jonathan Lasker: Visible Thoughts

This feature was originally published in ART PAPERS September/October 2001, Vol. 25, issue 5. A painter of remarkable consistency, Jonathan...
Type:
Interviews
Source:
September/October 2001
Credit:
Interview / David Ryan

Nicole Eisenman: Fantastic Worlds

Yeah, there’s definitely a lot of self-portraiture. Even the work that doesn’t look like self-portraiture is self-portraiture. My father is a psychiatrist, and a part of our dialogue together is analyzing the inner lives of various artists, how their unconscious thoughts show up in their work. Those conversations taught me to look at my work in the same way. It’s similar to analyzing a dream. It’s so interesting to me.

Type:
Interviews
Source:
July/August 2000
Credit:
Interview / Rebecca Dimling Cochran

Spot 7: Georgia on my Mind

Georgia on my Mind

Amanda Grae Platner: It’s Still Not Me, It’s You

In It’s Still Not Me, It’s You at Atlanta’s Echo Contemporary Art, Platner’s self-portraits and installations invite the viewer into her world. She coaxes empathy through a variety of strategies, some that are playful and interactive, others that involve showing pain.

Type:
Atlanta, Reviews
Source:
April 29, 2024
Location:
Atlanta, GA
Credit:
Text / EC Flamming

Bump and Grind / Search and Destroy

This artist project originally appeared in ART PAPERS July/August 1992. Christian Walker was an Atlanta-based artist.
Type:
Atlanta, Projects
Source:
July/August 1992
Credit:
Project/ Christian Walker

Let It Flow—Hannah Palmer’s Reimagined Atlanta

The quest that led Atlanta-based writer and urban designer Hannah Palmer to create Ghost Pools last summer in Atlanta was...
Type:
Atlanta, Reviews
Source:
December 12, 2023
Location:
Atlanta, GA
Credit:
Text / Cathy Byrd

The Eyes Were Always on Us

The Eyes Were Always on Us opened March 23 at the United Talent Agency’s new Atlanta gallery on Peachtree Street—a...
Type:
Atlanta, Reviews
Source:
April 19, 2023
Location:
Atlanta, GA
Credit:
Text / Y. Malik Jalal