Steven Nelson shares what’s on his bookshelf.
“The Cat Is My Medium”: Notes on the Writing and Art of Carolee Schneemann
By Thyrza Nichols Goodeve
For several years, Carolee Schneemann has presented an ever-evolving performative lecture about her work, starting with drawings she made at the ages of four and seven. I first saw it in 2009 at St. Mark’s Church.
Not Getting There Is Half the Fun: Holidays with Freud
By Elizabeth Legge
Elizabeth Legge reviews Sharon Kivland’s Freud on Holiday series.
Bookshelf: Megan A. Sullivan
Megan A. Sullivan shares her summer reading list in this week’s Bookshelf.
Bookshelf: Lenore Chinn
For the newest installment of Art Journal Open’s Bookshelf series, artist Lenore Chinn shares the books on her shelf.
Bookshelf: Rebecca M. Brown
For the first in Art Journal Open’s new Bookshelf series, Rebecca M. Brown shares what’s on her reading list.
Broken Dishes: Kate Gilmore in Conversation with Dina Deitsch
By Dina Deitsch
For the second installment of her conversation series, curator Dina Deitsch speaks with artist Kate Gilmore about Gilmore’s process of creating Like This, Before (2013), and the importance of breaking things and laughing about it.
In, Around, and Afterthoughts (On Participation): Photography and Agency in Martha Rosler’s Collaboration with Homeward Bound
By Adair Rounthwaite
It seems obvious to state that photographs play a central role in our ability to study participatory art. Art historians, however, have largely bracketed this as an issue that might be important for how we conceive the politics and aesthetics of participation.
Transnational Fields and the Blindness of the Archive
By Dorota Biczel
Dorota Biczel reviews Making Art Panamerican: Cultural Policy and the Cold War by Claire F. Fox.
Primal Matter: An Annotated Bibliography for Ceramics
By Brian Molanphy
This introductory selection of texts on ceramics includes books that offer general foundations as well as essays that exemplify specific investigations.
Floating Cabins and Shifting Landscapes: William Lamson in Conversation with Dina Deitsch
By Dina Deitsch
In this interview, curator Dina Deitsch and artist William Lamson discuss the slippery space of video, working with and in nature, and the poetics of floating cabins.
The New Geography: Earth Music and Land Art, Version 2.0; Comparison #3
by Mike Maizels
As the first pair of artists in this series examined the semantics of local places, and the second explored the possibility of picturing the world in totality, both artists in the final pairing investigate the question of geographic epistemology—how do the materials facts of the external world become the objects of systematic human understanding?