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Conversations · Exhibition-Related

Contemporary Art: 1989 to the Present: A Roundtable Discussion

Moderated by Alexander Dumbadze and Suzanne Hudson

One of the great challenges for anyone engaged with contemporary art is how to make sense of its immediate prehistory and implications. The recently published anthology Contemporary Art: 1989 to the Present (edited by Alexander Dumbadze and Suzanne Hudson, Wiley-Blackwell, 2013) brings together newly commissioned essays by fifty leading voices in contemporary art to thematically and polemically assess art and its contexts of the late twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Rather than imposing a single story, the book generates a picture of a heterogeneous whole by incorporating specific positions founded upon disparate practices, locations, and philosophies.

This conversation at the New Museum between the editors and several of the volume’s authors will further pursue the book’s spirit of inquiry. Building upon the investigatory nature of “NYC 1993: Experimental Jet Set, Trash and No Star,” as well as the New Museum’s own institutional history, this program asks what is at stake in historicizing the art and theory of the recent past; what can be gained from this endeavor; what are the potential pitfalls and complications of this activity; and, most importantly, how it is possible to put forward a working definition of contemporary art?

Alexander Dumbadze is Associate Professor of Art History at George Washington University. He is the author of Bas Jan Ader: Death Is Elsewhere (University of Chicago Press, forthcoming 2013). He was recently a Visiting Professor of Art History at the Université Paris 8, and is a recipient of a Creative Capital Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant.

Suzanne Hudson is Assistant Professor of Modern and Contemporary Art at the University of Southern California. Her writing has appeared in Parkett, Flash Art, Art Journal, and October, and she is a regular contributor to Artforum. She is the author of Robert Ryman: Used Paint (MIT Press, 2009) and is currently at work on a manuscript on art and spirituality in 1960s America.

Liam Gillick is an artist based in London and New York. He has exhibited widely and represented Germany for the 53rd Venice Biennale in 2009. His numerous writings, which include Proxemics: Selected Writings 1988–2006 (2006) and a critical reader titled Meaning Liam Gillick (2009), function in parallel to his artwork.

João Ribas is Curator at the MIT List Visual Arts Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and was previously Curator at the Drawing Center in New York. His writing has appeared in numerous publications, and he is the recipient of four consecutive AICA Awards (2008–11) and an Emily Hall Tremaine Exhibition Award (2010).

Katy Siegel is a Professor of Art History at Hunter College, the City University of New York, and contributing editor to Artforum. She was the Curator of “High Times, Hard Times: New York Painting, 1967–1975,” and her books include Since ’45: America and the Making of Contemporary Art (2011) and Abstract Expressionism (2011).

Irene V. Small is Assistant Professor of Art and Archaeology, Princeton University. She has contributed to journals including Artforum, Third Text, and RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics. Her forthcoming book, Hélio Oiticica: Folding the Frame, examines the emergence of a participatory art paradigm in mid-1960s Brazil.

Sponsors

Support for the exhibition is provided by the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation.

Additional funding is provided by Martin and Rebecca Eisenberg, the Fundación Almine y Bernard Ruiz-Picasso para el Arte, and the Robert Mapplethorpe Photography Fund.

The accompanying exhibition publication is made possible by the J. McSweeney and G. Mills Publications Fund at the New Museum.

This program is made possible, in part, through the support of the New York State Council on the Arts and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs.

Education and public programs are made possible by a generous grant from Goldman Sachs Gives at the recommendation of David and Hermine Heller.

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