Publications: 2006 to 2010

2006-2010         2001-2005         1996-2000         1991-1995         1986-1990         1980-1985
 
 

Matthew Day Jackson:  The Immeasurable Distance

2009, MIT List Visual Arts Center and Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston

 

The Immeasurable Distance is a solo exhibition that includes work based on Matthew Day Jackson’s residency at MIT. His research and experiences at MIT are manifested in sculptures, paintings, objects, videos, photos, and books. Playing with themes as large as technology, nature, and God, Jackson analyzes and comments on today’s culture and the influence scientific discoveries have had on our decision-making as a society. This exhibition catalogue features essays by curator Bill Arning, science and technology curator of the MIT Museum, Deborah Douglas, author and MIT professor David Mindell, systems administrator for the MIT Lincoln Laboratory Tom Morton, and a comic strip by illustrator David Tompkins.

 

$20

ISBN: 978-1933619217
99 pages, color

 
 

Melanie Smith: Spiral City & Other Vicarious Pleasures

2006, A&R Press

 

English-born Melanie Smith has lived and worked in Mexico City for nearly two decades. Her work reflects the social, economic, and aesthetic patterns of the city and how these patterns translate to an artistic form. Spiral City & Other Vicarious Pleasures features paintings, photography, and video works by Melanie Smith as well as collaborations with other artists. Smith uses colors, textures, materials, and found objects from the urban environment in examining the complex and chaotic visual elements that compose the megalopolis that is Mexico City. This exhibition catalogue features text by curator Cuauhtemoc Medina, as well as contributions by Essex University art history professor Dawn Ades, author and Royal College of Art professor David Batchelor, and Mexican artist Eduardo Abaroa.

 

$40

ISBN: 978-968-9056-07-2
208 pages, color

 
 

Davis, Cherubini: in Contention

2009, MIT List Visual Arts Center

 

Davis, Cherubini: in Contention focuses on the relationship that exists in artistic collaboration. Nicole Cherubini and Taylor Davis, both established artists, come together to create and share authorship of single sculptures. This exhibition catalogue documents their unique creative process and the dialogue that exists between these two artists’ understanding their own work when compared to the other’s efforts. This catalogue features an essay by curator Bill Arning and a preface by List Center director Jane Farver.

 

$15
ISBN: 978-0-938437-71-2
43 pages, color

   
 

Adel Abdessemed: Situation and Practice

2008, MIT List Visual Arts Center

 

Adel Abdessemed: Situation and Practice features a collection of Abdessemed’s previous street “acts” as well as several works created specifically for this exhibition. Abdessemed works in video, animation, performance, and installation, taking on topics such as religion, sexuality, and more recently, global violence. While many consider his pieces performative, Abdessemed refers to his work simply as “acts” acknowledging the political implications of the term. This exhibition catalogue includes essays by List Visual Arts Center director Jane Farver; professor, author, and editor Tom McDonough; art critic, columnist, teacher, and curator Pier Luigi Tazzi; and an interview with MIT professor of Linguistics (Emeritus) Linguistic Theory, Syntax, Semantics, Philosophy of Language, Noam Chomsky, conducted by Adel Abdessemed.

 

$40
ISBN: 978-0-938437-70-4
128 pages, color photos and illustration

 
 

Chantal Akerman: Moving Through Time and Space

2008, Blaffer Gallery, Art Museum of the University of Houston; MIT List Visual Arts Center; Miami Art Museum; Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis

 

 

Filmmaker and video artist Chantal Akerman in Moving Through Time and Space, presents five pieces that underscore her ability to blur the line between what we consider to be factual and what we consider to be fantasy. Organized in collaboration with the Blaffer Gallery, the Miami Art Museum, and the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis, the exhibition features Akerman's  first museum installation De l’autre côté (From the Other Side) and her most recent installation, Les Femmes d’Anvers en Novembre (Women of Antwerp in November). This exhibition catalogue includes essays by MIT List Visual Arts Center curator Bill Arning; the Miami Art Museum executive director and chief curator Rina Carvajal; writer, editor, and independent curator Klaus Ottmann; the Blaffer Gallery director Claudia Schmuckli; and director of the Parrish Art Museum, Terrie Sultan.

 

$25
ISBN: 978-0-9778028-5-2
72 pages, color

 
 

David Claerbout: The Shape of Time
2008, Published by JRPRingier


The video artist David Claerbout explores time as a material through the intersection of still and moving images, challenging traditional practices by using as his unit of currency the pixel rather than the shot. Some of his works evolve from found photographs that he converts to digital images and then merges with moving footage in order to introduce time; in other works, he uses digital video footage of the changing of natural light over time to investigate what time is. This exhibition catalogue documents Claerbout’s work in great detail, from planning drawings and photographs through photographs of the works in installation. It also includes an interview of the artist by Christine Van Assche, New Media Curator at the Centre Pompidou, Paris, as well as writings by Dirk Snauwaert, Françoise Parfait, and Raymond Bellour, and a biography and a bibliography.

$40
ISBN 978-3-905829-38-9
160 pages, color and b/w illustrations

     
 

Sounding the Subject/Video Trajectories:

Selections from the Pamela and Richard

Kramlich Collection and the New Art Trust

2007, MIT List Visual Arts Center

Sounding the Subject/Video Trajectories features works drawn from the collections of Pamela and Richard Kramlich and the New Art Trust. Sounding the Subject considers the use of sound, the human voice, and theatrical performances by artists Eija-Liisa Ahtila, Stan Douglas, David Hammons, Nam June Paik, and Pipilotti Rist. This exhibition was organized by guest curators Daniel Birnbaum, Rector of the Städelschule Art Academy and Director of the Portikus Gallery in Frankfurt–am-Main, Germany, and Mechtild Widrich, Ph.D. candidate, MIT’s History, Theory, and Criticism program.


The exhibition's theme continues in a library-format exhibition, Video Trajectories, that features works by artists that were created from the 1960s to the early 2000s. Video Trajectories was organized by guest curator Caroline A. Jones, MIT Professor, MIT's History, Theory, and Criticism program. Video Trajectories presents time-based media works by Marina Abramovic/Ulay, Vito Acconci, Doug Aitkin, Allora & Calzadilla, John Baldessari, Dara Birnbaum, Dan Graham, Gary Hill, Joan Jonas, Paul McCarthy and Mike Kelley, Mariko Mori, Bruce Nauman, Nam June Paik, Pipilotti Rist, Richard Serra and Carlotta Fay Schoolman, Bill Viola, and Jane and Louise Wilson. This 80-page catalogue publication features essays by curators Daniel Birnbaum, Mechtild Widrich, and Caroline A. Jones, and introductions by Pamela and Richard Kramlich and List Center Director Jane Farver.

 

$25

ISBN-13: 978-0-938437-68-2,  ISBN-10: 0-938437-68-2
80 pages, color and b/w illustrations
 
 

Cameron Jamie Exhibition Catalogue

2007 Published for the Walker Art Center

Cameron Jamie's work — a blend of video, sound, performance, photography and drawing — confronts the dysfunction of European and American society. His critical gaze often focuses on ritualistic practices in popular culture such as hot dog eating contests and backyard wrestling. Taking suburban phenomena of this sort as his primary material, Jamie explores the dark underbelly of the American dream in drawings, film and performance. This artist-designed exhibition catalogue features more than 60 works in various media, illuminating the artist's process with selections from his personal archive of clippings and ephemera, as well as raw sketches for his projects. An essay by exhibition curator Philippe Vergne, a forward by Walker director Kathy Halbreich and a reprint of a poem by Charles Bukowski selected by the artist provide context for this first large-scale, museum presentation of Jamie's work.

$35

ISBN-10: 0935640878,  ISBN-13: 978-0-935640-87-8
8.5 x 10.5 inches, 176 pages, 178 color and 73 b/w images
 
 

Sensorium: Embodied Experience, Technology, and Contemporary Art

2006, the MIT Press, co-published with the
MIT List Visual Arts Center, edited by Caroline A. Jones


The relationship between the body and electronic technology, extensively theorized through the 1980s and 1990s, has reached a new technosensual comfort zone in the early twenty-first century. In Sensorium, contemporary artists and writers explore the implications of the techno-human interface. Ten artists, chosen by an international team of curators, offer their own edgy investigations of embodied technology and the technologized body. These range from Matthieu Briand's experiment in "controlled schizophrenia" and Janet Cardiff and Georges Bures Miller's uneasy psychological soundscapes to Bruce Nauman's uncanny night visions and François Roche's destabilized architecture. A 260-page catalogue contains a main essay by Caroline A. Jones; essays on the artists by Bill Arning, Jane Farver, Yuko Hasegawa, and Marjory Jacobson; and an Abecedarius (from "Air" to "Zoon") that offers an extensive rethinking of the body's relations with technology. Abecedarius entries are by Bill Arning, Caroline Bassett, Michael Bull, Zeynep Çelik, Constance Classen, Jonathan Crary, Chris Csikszentmihàlyi, Mark Doty, Joseph Dumit, Michel Foucault, Peter Galison, Donna Haraway , Martin Jay, Amelia Jones, , Hiroko Kikuchi, Stephen M. Kosslyn, Bruno Latour, Thomas Y. Levin, Peter Lunenfeld, William J. Mitchell, Yvonne Rainer, Barbara Maria Stafford, Neal Stephenson, Michael Swanwick /William Gibson, Sherry Turkle, and Stephen Wilson.

$30

ISBN-13: 978-0-262-10117-2,  ISBN-10: 0-262-10117-3
color and b/w illustrations
 
 

9 Evenings Reconsidered:
Art, Theatre, and Engineering, 1966

2006, MIT List Visual Arts Center

In 1966, a Bell Laboratories physicist brought a group of avant-garde artists together with 10 open-minded members of the science and technology fields for 9 Evenings: Theatre and Engineering, a series of investigatory Happenings which took place at the 69th Regiment Armory and were duly noted by critics Lucy Lippard and Brian O'Doherty. The resulting seminal performances included John Cage's Variations VII, in which 30 photocells were mounted around the performance space, activating a variety of sound sources — including a blender, 20 radio channels and two Geiger counters — as the performers moved around. An 88-page exhibition catalogue includes original essays by Clarisse Bardiot (researcher at Daniel Langlois Foundation), Michelle Kuo (Harvard PhD. candidate), and Catherine Morris (exhibition curator). It also includes reprinted reviews of the original performances 9 Evenings: Theatre and Engineering by Lucy Lippard and Brian O'Doherty, and an interview with Herb Schneider (engineer).

$25

ISBN: 978-0-938437-69-7
color and b/w illustrations
 
 

America Starts Here: Kate Ericson and Mel Ziegler

No Longer Available at the List Visual Arts Center.
Please contact the MIT Press
2006, Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum
and Art Gallery at Skidmore College,
MIT List Visual Arts Center, MIT Press


During their decade-long collaboration (1985-1995), Kate Ericson and Mel Ziegler produced some of the most influential conceptual art projects of the time. Among their witty and stimulating installations and outdoor projects was Camouflaged History, a house painted in a U.S. Army-designed camouflage pattern using 72 commercial paint colors included in the municipally-approved "authentic colors" of historic Charleston, South Carolina. The commercial name of each paint, commemorating an aspect of the city's history, is also painted on the house, revealing and illuminating the lingering Civil War-era past of the region. Like the Earthwork pioneers, Ericson and Ziegler took the whole country as their working space; but rather than impose a conspicuous work of art upon a site or situation, they devised projects that altered sites subtly, creating a patchwork of poetic narratives and histories to be excavated. A 216-page exhibition catalogue including descriptions of all Ericson and Ziegler projects as well as photographs and installation views of their exhibitions and previously unpublished and never-before-exhibited plans and drawings from their archives. The catalogue contains essays by exhibition curators Bill Arning and Ian Berry, an interview with Ziegler, and an extensive biography and bibliography. In addition, curators who originally commissioned Ericson and Ziegler's public works-Judith Hoos Fox, Kathy Goncharov, Mary Jane Jacob, Patricia Phillips, Lane Relyea, Ned Rifkin, Valerie Smith, and Judith Tannenbaum-provide texts about their experiences of working with the artists.

$40

ISBN-13: 978-0-262-01228-7,  ISBN-10: 0-262-01228-6
color
 

 

 

Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
   1 212-2-2009
Artist Talk with Sung Hwan Kim

Gallery Talk by LVAC Director Jane Farver
3 4 512-5-2009
Gallery Talk by LVAC Curator João Ribas
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 1612-16-2009
Gallery Talk by LVAC Educator Mark Linga
1712-17-2009
LVAC Film Night: Decasia
18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31