Spot 1: FIRE ECOLOGY
FIRE ECOLOGY
Fire Ecology is a three-year, multi-part project that spans public programs, publishing, and archival initiatives. It adopts the metaphor of Fire Ecology—the practice of maintain ecosystem health by using controlled fires to burn old growth, thereby fertilizing the soil, and clearing space for new growth to thrive.
Spot 2: LATEST ON ARTPAPERS.ORG
Alex Tatarsky: Power|Play
We Say What Black This Is
The 2025 Mississippi Invitational: Call Home
The 2025 Mississippi Invitational, curated by TK Smith and dubbed Call Home, opens with a title wall graphic that incorporates a landline phone dangling, as if abandoned by its user. The white handset—hanging loosely by an orange spiral cord, forever suspended somewhere between connection and disconnection, sets a quietly poignant tone for the exhibition. It also poses a question: Do you make the call?
Interview with Sam Gilliam
Spot 3: FOOD FOR THOUGHT

Dark Study: on Emily Jacir, Forensic Architecture, and fugitive documentary
Not The Only One (N’TOO)
Larping Adulthood: Freeville to Midlands
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.”
Spot 4: AT THE EDGE OF THE EROTIC

Tiona Nekkia McClodden at Kunsthalle Basel
Binge Watch—On Performances of Excessive Eating
“The act of binging is one of abjection. It demonstrates the power of something inanimate, or no longer animate, over human beings—in this case, food. The abject manifests viscerally as squirming, belching, or vomiting. Such images threaten the common belief that eating is pleasurable, a notion that begins in infancy.”
Insurrectional Evolution: The Cronenbergian Revisited
Film critic Nathan Lee explores the insurrectional body in David Cronenberg’s “Crimes of the Future” and asks “What do we mean when we speak of the ‘Cronenbergian’?”
Consider the Hot Dog: Ivy Haldeman on an American Icon
Haldeman’s paintings capture the way quotidian images inform how we fashion ourselves, how we move about the world. They ask, “How do we wear ourselves into becoming ourselves? And what do things, such as inanimate objects and advertisements, demand from us?
Spot 5: We didn’t cross the border, the border crossed us

Tania El Khoury: Where No Walls Remain
Anna Gallagher-Ross discusses interactivity and borders as social and political constructs with Tania El Khoury.
harder / border
People who cross a border, or break through a barrier, often feel that they carry the other side within them—as one lived reality nested inside another. Selected poems from Sudanese-American author Safia Elhillo capture the poignant complexities of this condition.
Against Confinement—On Mohamed Bourouissa’s Frames of Relation
In this expansive appraisal of the artist’s work, Bailey makes a case for the emancipatory power of images.
Ricardo Dominguez: Charting Virtual and Real Borders
Electronic activism and performance art, and how artists might respond to the increasingly bordered conditions of our world.
Spot 6: RADIATION PREOCCUPATION

Chernobyl
The Energy Paradox
Japanese artists’ and cultural workers’ strategies for response to the Fukushima disaster.
Because the Sky Will Be Filled With Sulfur—Jeremy Bolen
Arata Isozaki, Re-Ruined Hiroshima, Photomontage, 1968
Spot 7: SOUTHERN COMFORT
