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Avant-Guardian Musings

  • Fall 2025
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“Art is an outlet toward regions which are not ruled by time and space”
— Marcel Duchamp

Avant-Guardian Musings is a curated space of ideas and information, resources, reviews and readings for undergraduate and graduate students studying modern and contemporary art history and visual art theory, film and photography studies, and the expanding field of visual culture and screen studies. For students currently enrolled in my courses or the field school, the blog and associated social media links also serve as a place of reflection and an extension of the ideas and visual material raised in lecture and seminar discussion.

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Blog
KPU FINE ARTS PARIS + VENICE BIENNALE FIELD SCHOOL (MAY/JUNE 2026)
KPU FINE ARTS PARIS + VENICE BIENNALE FIELD SCHOOL (MAY/JUNE 2026)
about 2 months ago
"No Fun City" Vancouver: Exploring Emotions of Detachment in Palermo, Sicily at AISU
"No Fun City" Vancouver: Exploring Emotions of Detachment in Palermo, Sicily at AISU
about 4 months ago
Making Sense of Art in the Age of Machine Learning—A Suggested Reading List
Making Sense of Art in the Age of Machine Learning—A Suggested Reading List
about 5 months ago
From the Archives | How (And Why) To Take Excellent Lecture Notes
From the Archives | How (And Why) To Take Excellent Lecture Notes
about a year ago
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
about 2 years ago

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As we start the week in a storm of activity, new beginnings, and global uncertainty, I am grounded in my word for 2026– INTENTIONAL 🩶— “done with purpose, willingness, deliberation, and consciousness.” I see this word represe
As we start the week in a storm of activity, new beginnings, and global uncertainty, I am grounded in my word for 2026– INTENTIONAL 🩶— “done with purpose, willingness, deliberation, and consciousness.” I see this word represented in the symbol of the heart, and for this reason and many others both personal and professional, I will be bringing this much needed energy to my year. The power of a yearly word is transformative. I started in 2019 and my words have guided and carried me through some important moments and life decisions. If you haven’t already, give it a try, but remember to choose very wisely ☺️ “Radiate” 2025 ✨ “Maintain” 2024 💪🏻 “Refine“ 2023 🙌🏻 “Acta non verba” 2022 🤐 “Audacious” 2021 💃🏼 “Fearless” 2020 😛 “Unapologetic” 2019 💅🏻 #happynewyear #wordoftheyear #intentional #monicavinader @monicavinader
Polar bear ride! 🐻‍❄️🏍️💨🏍️ First motorcycle outing of 2026 in the books. A balmy 4C 🥶We love you Vancouver— good to be home 💙😊Wishing everyone a very Happy New Year! 🥳 
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#happynewyear #vancouver #motorcycle #motorcyclesofinstag
Polar bear ride! 🐻‍❄️🏍️💨🏍️ First motorcycle outing of 2026 in the books. A balmy 4C 🥶We love you Vancouver— good to be home 💙😊Wishing everyone a very Happy New Year! 🥳 . . . #happynewyear #vancouver #motorcycle #motorcyclesofinstagram #motocouple #husqvarna #vitpilen401 #svartpilen401 #motogirl #motogirls
2025... where did it go?! 😂 Like a ray of light, I was very much guided by my chosen word of the year “radiate”— to shine and send out beams of energy— and this allowed for a great deal of adventure, new experiences, ideas an
2025... where did it go?! 😂 Like a ray of light, I was very much guided by my chosen word of the year “radiate”— to shine and send out beams of energy— and this allowed for a great deal of adventure, new experiences, ideas and people and opportunities to flow back into my life. Above all else, I found myself very much on the move all year! Travel took me from New York to Lausanne, Paris to Seoul, and Palermo to Maui, while my motorcycling stayed more on the road and less on the track as Brian and I balanced our time, energy, and commitments. But as always, we found every spare moment to prioritize this shared passion and we hope to find a way back to the track in 2026. Professionally, the year was... A LOT... and highlighted by many new research partnerships, conferences, workshops, writing projects, some failed plans and sharp detours, but also the planting of new seeds for future ventures. In the classroom, AI brought many new challenges and opportunities to rethink the purpose of my teaching and courses, but overall I was inspired and at times surprised by what my students were able to accomplish with the new assessment models I put into place. All of this technological change remains very much a work in progress for academics, and I prefer to remain optimistic that the artists I work with will find a way to maintain their voice and vision in it all. The historian in me knows this to be true. Personally, I connected more to my heart and intuition in 2025, listening to that inner voice to guide many key decisions. Brian and I also kept up a decent health and fitness regime that had us energized and aiming for consistency to match our midlife pace. Use it or lose it is a reality in your 50s!!! Sending wishes of peace and love and a very Happy New Year to all! May your 2026 be filled with fun, awe, purpose, and good health and much happiness. Remember to be good to yourself so you can be good to others. I’m still working carefully on my 2026 word… but whatever it is, I know it will be the right one ❤️ . . . #happynewyear #yearinreview2025 #wordoftheyear #motorcyclelife #arthistorianlife
Resting, dreaming, and plotting the year ahead 💙✨😘
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#maui #hawaii #vacationmode #newyear #planning
Resting, dreaming, and plotting the year ahead 💙✨😘 . . . #maui #hawaii #vacationmode #newyear #planning
Riding and chasing sunsets across Maui ✨💙🌺🌴🧡
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#maui #hawaii #motorcycle #motorcyclesofinstagram #motogirl #vacationmode #sunsets
Riding and chasing sunsets across Maui ✨💙🌺🌴🧡 . . . #maui #hawaii #motorcycle #motorcyclesofinstagram #motogirl #vacationmode #sunsets

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© Dorothy Barenscott, Avant-Guardian Musings, and dorothybarenscott.com, 2010-2023. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Dorothy Barenscott, Avant-Guardian Musings, and dorothybarenscott.com with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

Dana Claxton, Paint Up #1 (2010) in the permanent collection of the Audain Art Museum in Whistler, B.C. I will be offering a 6-week online course in Contemporary Indigenous Art History this summer and will be discussing Claxton’s practice, along wit…

Dana Claxton, Paint Up #1 (2010) in the permanent collection of the Audain Art Museum in Whistler, B.C. I will be offering a 6-week online course in Contemporary Indigenous Art History this summer and will be discussing Claxton’s practice, along with other important First Nations women artists, as part of the course content.

Weekly Round Up... And A Few More Things

March 14, 2021

Grading… grading…. grading. I am in the thick of midterm and project evaluations, so I will keep this week’s musing short and sweet ahead of the links.

Summer course registration opens tomorrow at my university, and I wanted to share a very special online course that I developed, first offered, and worked the kinks out of last summer—a contemporary art history course focused on Indigenous art. This is a topic often overlooked in the consideration of First Nations cultural production, and while many universities and art history programs offer much needed courses in the history and development of Indigenous art of the last century and earlier (especially focused around the Northwest Coast), very few of them tackle First Nations art production of the recent past, or at least, not as the primary focus for an entire course.

ARTH 2124: CONTEMPORARY INDIGENOUS ART

ONLINE via Kwantlen Polytechnic University, May 10- June 21, with weekly one-hour synchronous Zoom sessions on Wednesdays 4-5pm

Instructor: Dr. Dorothy Barenscott

What are the current critical issues in contemporary Indigenous art and visual culture from across the settler- colonial areas of North America, and especially within Canada and our local communities? This course investigates how Indigenous arts in Canada are understood in the specific places and contexts in which they are made, and will further explore how Western art history and museum exhibitions have attempted (often very problematically) to provide meaning for the relationship between "historic" and "contemporary" understandings of Indigenous art. This course will rely heavily on content derived from first-hand accounts of contemporary Indigenous art production from First Nations artists, producers, and curators working primarily in Canada, together with providing a strong foundation in recent histories redressing what has often remained absent, silenced, or forgotten in the retelling of the Indigenous experience.

Image taken by @dbarenscott at Audain Art Museum in Whistler, BC. Featured artworks by Brian Jungen, Dana Claxton, and Shawn Hunt

Image taken by @dbarenscott at Audain Art Museum in Whistler, BC. Featured artworks by Brian Jungen, Dana Claxton, and Shawn Hunt

A few more things before the round up

  • Beeple, Beeple, Beeple. I have been asked by so many people in the past few weeks on my take about NFT crypto art and the big $69 million dollar Christie’s sale of Beeple (aka artist Mike Winkelmann). I promise to get back to you on this with a future musing/post, and have provided many links in this week’s round up for your interest and education. Stay tuned!

  • Now that the sun is out and spring is almost here, I would be remiss not to mention the value of forest bathing, what the Japanese call shinrin-yoku, and hanami, the ancient tradition of enjoying the cherry blossoms. A few years ago, I traveled to Japan in mid-March to early April to experience the blossoms, and I have always associated this time of year with taking a complete day away from work a few days a month to get out into nature. I include a video here to get you started and understand the benefits.

"Beeple JPEG Fetches $69 Million at Christie’s Auction"
"Beeple JPEG Fetches $69 Million at Christie’s Auction"

artforum.com

"NFT art: the bizarre world where burning a Banksy can make it more valuable"
"NFT art: the bizarre world where burning a Banksy can make it more valuable"

theconversation.com

"‘This Is Going to Be a Billion-Dollar Piece Someday’: The Buyer of the $69 Million Beeple NFT on Why It’s the Greatest Artwork in a Generation"
"‘This Is Going to Be a Billion-Dollar Piece Someday’: The Buyer of the $69 Million Beeple NFT on Why It’s the Greatest Artwork in a Generation"

artnet.com

"How Camming and Filmmaking Influence Each Other"
"How Camming and Filmmaking Influence Each Other"

hyperallergic.com

"How to Put Out Democracy’s Dumpster Fire"
"How to Put Out Democracy’s Dumpster Fire"

theatlantic.com

"Subverting Society’s Twisted Consumption of Breasts"
"Subverting Society’s Twisted Consumption of Breasts"

elephant.art

"Inside Breaking’s Debut at the Olympics"
"Inside Breaking’s Debut at the Olympics"

dancemagazine.com

"Artists may have felt useless in lockdown, but we need them more than ever"
"Artists may have felt useless in lockdown, but we need them more than ever"

theguardian.com

"Beeple: We're just beginning to scratch the surface with NFTs (VIDEO)"
"Beeple: We're just beginning to scratch the surface with NFTs (VIDEO)"
"What is Crypto Art? A basic explanation (VIDEO)"
"What is Crypto Art? A basic explanation (VIDEO)"
"Beeple JPEG Fetches $69 Million at Christie’s Auction" "NFT art: the bizarre world where burning a Banksy can make it more valuable" "‘This Is Going to Be a Billion-Dollar Piece Someday’: The Buyer of the $69 Million Beeple NFT on Why It’s the Greatest Artwork in a Generation" "How Camming and Filmmaking Influence Each Other" "How to Put Out Democracy’s Dumpster Fire" "Subverting Society’s Twisted Consumption of Breasts" "Inside Breaking’s Debut at the Olympics" "Artists may have felt useless in lockdown, but we need them more than ever" "Beeple: We're just beginning to scratch the surface with NFTs (VIDEO)" "What is Crypto Art? A basic explanation (VIDEO)"
  • Beeple JPEG Fetches $69 Million at Christie’s Auction

  • NFT art: the bizarre world where burning a Banksy can make it more valuable

  • ‘This Is Going to Be a Billion-Dollar Piece Someday’: The Buyer of the $69 Million Beeple NFT on Why It’s the Greatest Artwork in a Generation

  • How Camming and Filmmaking Influence Each Other

  • How to Put Out Democracy’s Dumpster Fire

  • Subverting Society’s Twisted Consumption of Breasts

  • Inside Breaking’s Debut at the Olympics

  • Artists may have felt useless in lockdown, but we need them more than ever

  • Beeple: We're just beginning to scratch the surface with NFTs (VIDEO)

  • What is Crypto Art? A basic explanation (VIDEO)

 

 

Comment
Maya Lin, Wave Field (2008). March is Women’s History Month and tomorrow (March 8th) is International Women’s Day. I will be featuring women artists this month and cannot think of a more inviting work to kick us off as Springtime approaches.

Maya Lin, Wave Field (2008). March is Women’s History Month and tomorrow (March 8th) is International Women’s Day. I will be featuring women artists this month and cannot think of a more inviting work to kick us off as Springtime approaches.

Weekly Round Up... And A Few More Things

March 07, 2021

I have thought a great deal about how this past year of Covid time has made us all acutely aware of the weather and our natural environment. As we all know, our mood and disposition on any given day or time of the year is significantly impacted by the weather, the light, the temperature, and our access to the outdoors. Before the pandemic, the weather was not on my radar, at least not as much as it is now. I took for granted, for example, that I could escape the cold of winter by planning a vacation getaway, or if need be, spend a rainy day indoors with friends, or go to the movies, the gym, a group yoga class, or a museum. But as we all collectively avoid spending time indoors with groups, our immediate outdoors becomes our “playground”— nature controls much more of how we get to enjoy our socially distanced lives.

In the morning, I know I am not alone in immediately checking the weather forecast. We check to see what kind of temperature to expect, and to see how that weather may shape/alter/interfere with our plans and limited range of activities. In my world, if it is over 6C and not raining, I will go motorbiking. If the weather proves clearer in the morning, that is when I will plan my run. If the day looks like it may be cooler, I will bundle up and walk, etc.. etc.. I’ve even postponed a Zoom class when it was an especially sunny day. “Get out and enjoy this day.. we may not see the sun again for a while” I’ve found myself saying.

I found this deliberate arrangement of natural objects along the English Bay seawall close to home while on a morning run. There were a dozen or more of these “sculptures” placed anonymously by someone (I would call them an artist) and were successf…

I found this deliberate arrangement of natural objects along the English Bay seawall close to home while on a morning run. There were a dozen or more of these “sculptures” placed anonymously by someone (I would call them an artist) and were successful in capturing the attention of passers by and creating a dialogue with the surrounding environment.

Land artists and earth artists have always worked to draw our attention back to the natural environment we inhabit, and I have a new appreciation for how the movement negotiates and frames the sometimes difficult to describe changes and contingencies that shape our human condition (whether we like it or not). This past week, I happened upon some small land art objects on the seawall while on a morning run. There were probably a dozen or more of these works placed with care along the wall, presumably by an artist or other creative soul, and I was struck by how many people stopped (including me) to engage with and examine the arrangements. Importantly, the objects were all taken from the immediate environment, but in their re-ordering, the mini sculptures took on new meanings and reinvigorated the connection of the audience to the natural world around them.

In one of my classes this week, I have challenged students to go out in their own backyard and create such a small land art intervention. The video below, created with land artist Andy Goldsworthy, is part of an art assignment I am using for the activity. I am looking forward to seeing what they all come up with, and I too will be taking more opportunities to appreciate how thoroughly connected we all are to our natural environment. As Goldworth states, “We often forget that WE ARE NATURE. Nature is not something separate from us. So when we say that we have lost our connection to nature, we’ve lost our connection to ourselves.” I hope you too may be inspired to make your own land art work in the coming weeks and months as we enter a new season. You never know who’s eyes you may be opening, and who’s day you may be making a little brighter.

 

"Remembrance of Revolutions Past"
"Remembrance of Revolutions Past"

bookforum.com

"Andi Schmied’s Billionaire-Espionage Art Project"
"Andi Schmied’s Billionaire-Espionage Art Project"

newyorker.com

"How Crypto-art Might Offer Artists Increased Autonomy"
"How Crypto-art Might Offer Artists Increased Autonomy"

hyperallergic.com

"This Ain’t No Disco"
"This Ain’t No Disco"

nybooks.com

"How Music Steered the Art of Jean-Michel Basquiat"
"How Music Steered the Art of Jean-Michel Basquiat"

hyperallergic.com

"What Galleries Learned About Selling Art Online This Year"
"What Galleries Learned About Selling Art Online This Year"

artnet.com

"What Will We Want When We Can Travel Again?"
"What Will We Want When We Can Travel Again?"

theatlantic.com

"Banksy reveals that Reading Prison graffiti is his—with a little help from Bob Ross"
"Banksy reveals that Reading Prison graffiti is his—with a little help from Bob Ross"

theartnewspaper.com

"The Met x Wikipedia Virtual Edit Meet-up: Women's History Month (VIDEO)"
"The Met x Wikipedia Virtual Edit Meet-up: Women's History Month (VIDEO)"

themet

"The Bauhaus painting made to defy the Nazis | Oskar Schlemmer's Bauhaus Stairway | UNIQLO ARTSPEAKS (VIDEO"
"The Bauhaus painting made to defy the Nazis | Oskar Schlemmer's Bauhaus Stairway | UNIQLO ARTSPEAKS (VIDEO"

moma

"Remembrance of Revolutions Past" "Andi Schmied’s Billionaire-Espionage Art Project" "How Crypto-art Might Offer Artists Increased Autonomy" "This Ain’t No Disco" "How Music Steered the Art of Jean-Michel Basquiat" "What Galleries Learned About Selling Art Online This Year" "What Will We Want When We Can Travel Again?" "Banksy reveals that Reading Prison graffiti is his—with a little help from Bob Ross" "The Met x Wikipedia Virtual Edit Meet-up: Women's History Month (VIDEO)" "The Bauhaus painting made to defy the Nazis | Oskar Schlemmer's Bauhaus Stairway | UNIQLO ARTSPEAKS (VIDEO"
  • Remembrance of Revolutions Past

  • Andi Schmied’s Billionaire-Espionage Art Project

  • How Crypto-art Might Offer Artists Increased Autonomy

  • This Ain’t No Disco

  • How Music Steered the Art of Jean-Michel Basquiat

  • What Galleries Learned About Selling Art Online This Year

  • Banksy reveals that Reading Prison graffiti is his—with a little help from Bob Ross

  • What Will We Want When We Can Travel Again?

  • The Met x Wikipedia Virtual Edit Meet-up: Women's History Month (VIDEO)

  • The Bauhaus painting made to defy the Nazis | Oskar Schlemmer's Bauhaus Stairway | UNIQLO ARTSPEAKS (VIDEO)

2 Comments
On my research trip to Las Vegas back in 2019, I was captivated by this Frank Gehry building, The Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health (2010). Gehry’s birthday is today, and he is 92 years old! Photo: D. Barenscott.

On my research trip to Las Vegas back in 2019, I was captivated by this Frank Gehry building, The Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health (2010). Gehry’s birthday is today, and he is 92 years old! Photo: D. Barenscott.

Weekly Round Up… And A Few More Things

February 28, 2021

It only seems fitting that on architect Frank Gehry’s birthday I share with you writing that I recently published in the book The Politics of Spatial Transgression in the Arts (2021), edited by Gregory Blair and Noa Bronstein. The book chapter grew out of a research project that I completed as an Eadington Fellow at the Institute of Gaming Research at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas in 2019. In short, I had become intrigued while on vacation in Las Vegas with the intensification of hotel architecture and resort design and, in particular, with the high visibility of contemporary art. From Jeff Koons, to Banksy, to Damien Hirst, works of art market darlings were increasingly on public display in hotels and casinos, and I could not help but wonder… why?

The questions I ended up exploring in this chapter touch on how, and to what ends, the rebranding of Vegas via art has capitalized on current art world conditions where space, affect, embodiment, and relational aesthetics take a central focus in art production and exhibition. The connective tissue between this project and the kind of work I did in my Ph.D. dissertation— exploring identity formation and technologies of seeing in the art and architecture of late 19th century Budapest— is spatial and set around the compelling role that architecture, in tandem with visual art, plays in constructions of identity, consumerism, and “value.” I am very proud of this work and hope that this case study helps contribute in a broader way to conversations taking place in the art world today around these same ideas.

I invite you to read it below (click on the image of my paper below to be taken to a PDF of the paper) and note that I attempted to write the chapter with an accessibility for a wide audience, and also for those, like me, who have always been fascinated and intrigued by Las Vegas.

I am very proud to be part of this important book that allowed me to take an idea I had been working on across a number of fields—namely architecture, spatial theory, and the business of art. Being able to travel to Las Vegas and take up a fellowshi…

I am very proud to be part of this important book that allowed me to take an idea I had been working on across a number of fields—namely architecture, spatial theory, and the business of art. Being able to travel to Las Vegas and take up a fellowship to pursue this project was just icing on the cake!

To read my chapter, click on this image to access a copy.

To read my chapter, click on this image to access a copy.

A few more things before the round up

  • If like me, you find Las Vegas to be as much an idea as it is a city, I recommend you look at the classic work Learning From Las Vegas, now almost 50 years old and authored by architectural historians and postmodern critics Robert Venturi, Denise Scott Brown, and Steven Izenour. It is the definitive text arguing for the relevance and importance of Vegas’s built environment, and is also the book that inspired the title of my paper!

  • Now that we are midway through the academic semester, many of you may be finding the need to eliminate distractions and reduce the wasted screen time that is inevitable during our homebound pandemic existence. If you use Google Chrome as your browser, I recommend this list of Chrome extensions summarized in a recent Mashable article that I have suggested to a few of my students who are looking for ways to boost their productivity.

"Kenny Schachter Gets Sucked Into the Surreal NFT Vortex… and Makes a Fortune Overnight in the New Virtual Art Market"
"Kenny Schachter Gets Sucked Into the Surreal NFT Vortex… and Makes a Fortune Overnight in the New Virtual Art Market"

artnet.com

"Banksy-style NFTs have sold for $900,000—but are they the real deal and does it even matter?"
"Banksy-style NFTs have sold for $900,000—but are they the real deal and does it even matter?"

theartnewspaper.com

"The Boredom Economy"
"The Boredom Economy"

nytimes.com

"A Director Is Born: Steve McQueen on His Childhood TV Set"
"A Director Is Born: Steve McQueen on His Childhood TV Set"

vanityfair.com

"A French Appeals Court Has Found Jeff Koons Guilty of Copyright Infringement Again"
"A French Appeals Court Has Found Jeff Koons Guilty of Copyright Infringement Again"

artnet.com

"Lawrence Ferlinghetti Dies at 101: His Pictures of a Gone World Remain"
"Lawrence Ferlinghetti Dies at 101: His Pictures of a Gone World Remain"

artsjournal.com

"Most People Can’t Tell the Difference Between Art Made by Humans and by AI"
"Most People Can’t Tell the Difference Between Art Made by Humans and by AI"

artnet.com

"Can Video Games Be a Healthy Outlet for Stress Relief?"
"Can Video Games Be a Healthy Outlet for Stress Relief?"

wired.com

"The Rise and Fall of Kim Kardashian and Kanye West’s Marriage, as Told by Her Infamous Instagram Posts"
"The Rise and Fall of Kim Kardashian and Kanye West’s Marriage, as Told by Her Infamous Instagram Posts"

slate.com

"Ed Ruscha | Featuring Flea, Missy Mazzoli, Vernon Reid, and Eddie Ruscha (VIDEO"
"Ed Ruscha | Featuring Flea, Missy Mazzoli, Vernon Reid, and Eddie Ruscha (VIDEO"

gagosian

"Kenny Schachter Gets Sucked Into the Surreal NFT Vortex… and Makes a Fortune Overnight in the New Virtual Art Market" "Banksy-style NFTs have sold for $900,000—but are they the real deal and does it even matter?" "The Boredom Economy" "A Director Is Born: Steve McQueen on His Childhood TV Set" "A French Appeals Court Has Found Jeff Koons Guilty of Copyright Infringement Again" "Lawrence Ferlinghetti Dies at 101: His Pictures of a Gone World Remain" "Most People Can’t Tell the Difference Between Art Made by Humans and by AI" "Can Video Games Be a Healthy Outlet for Stress Relief?" "The Rise and Fall of Kim Kardashian and Kanye West’s Marriage, as Told by Her Infamous Instagram Posts" "Ed Ruscha | Featuring Flea, Missy Mazzoli, Vernon Reid, and Eddie Ruscha (VIDEO"
  • Kenny Schachter Gets Sucked Into the Surreal NFT Vortex… and Makes a Fortune Overnight in the New Virtual Art Market

  • Banksy-style NFTs have sold for $900,000—but are they the real deal and does it even matter?

  • The Boredom Economy

  • A Director Is Born: Steve McQueen on His Childhood TV Set

  • A French Appeals Court Has Found Jeff Koons Guilty of Copyright Infringement Again

  • Lawrence Ferlinghetti Dies at 101: His Pictures of a Gone World Remain

  • Most People Can’t Tell the Difference Between Art Made by Humans and by AI

  • Can Video Games Be a Healthy Outlet for Stress Relief?

  • The Rise and Fall of Kim Kardashian and Kanye West’s Marriage, as Told by Her Infamous Instagram Posts

  • Ed Ruscha | Featuring Flea, Missy Mazzoli, Vernon Reid, and Eddie Ruscha (VIDEO)

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Elmgreen and Dragset’s Prada Marfa (2005) is a permanent sculptural installation in the minimalist Mecca of Marfa, Texas. Image courtesy of YouTuber “Around the World With Asher” and his video Marfa Prada at Sunset

Elmgreen and Dragset’s Prada Marfa (2005) is a permanent sculptural installation in the minimalist Mecca of Marfa, Texas. Image courtesy of YouTuber “Around the World With Asher” and his video Marfa Prada at Sunset

Weekly Round Up... And A Few More Things

February 21, 2021

Minimalism has been on my mind a lot the past several weeks. It is normally this time in the spring semester when I start introducing the concepts surrounding one of the most enigmatic and difficult to apprehend post-WWII art movements in my Contemporary Art course. With a focus on form and materials, and a rejection of biography and metaphor, Minimalist art was a complete abdication of the traditions associated with the “genius artist” and the privileged art object. Instead, artists associated with the Minimalist art movement focused on challenging audiences to confront the experience of physicality, scale, materials, and light in a given space.

Right now and for the past few months, it seems that all of us are being forced into something of this position during the darkest period of the pandemic. With increasing limits on the spaces we can inhabit, and being limited to who we can interact with, we are collectively being made to look more closely to our own immediate environments. And along with looking, we are also being made far more aware of how we feel and embody the spaces we are living in.

In 2012, I visited the MUMOK Museum in Vienna, Austria to see a Dan Flavin retrospective. Room after room, and floor after floor, was filled with nothing else but Flavin’s iconic minimalist light installations, creating one of the most memorable exp…

In 2012, I visited the MUMOK Museum in Vienna, Austria to see a Dan Flavin retrospective. Room after room, and floor after floor, was filled with nothing else but Flavin’s iconic minimalist light installations, creating one of the most memorable experiences I have ever had in a vast gallery space. Photograph: D. Barenscott

Earlier this year, art critic Kyle Chayka, author of The Longing For Less: Living With Minimalism (2020) wrote an intriguing feature article for the New York Times titled “How Nothingness Became Everything We Wanted.” Therein he presents a compelling argument about how a pre-pandemic shared aesthetics of nothingness resulted in a kind of “jettisoning of possessions.” Whether it be through the popularity of lifestyle guru Marie Kondo who promoted ruthlessly reducing and then carefully arranging objects in lived spaces, or via stripped down minimalist fashion brands like Everlane, or the growth of the sensory deprivation industry and the popularity of meditation apps on our phones, there was a traceable precursor to a much more profound moment shaping our Covid and possible post-Covid world. Chayka writes:

“This obsession with absence, the intentional erasure of self and surroundings, is the apotheosis of what I’ve come to think of as a culture of negation: a body of cultural output, from material goods to entertainment franchises to lifestyle fads, that evinces a desire to reject the overstimulation that defines contemporary existence. This retreat, which took hold in the decade before the pandemic, betrays a grim undercurrent: a deepening failure of optimism in the possibilities of our future, a disillusionment that Covid-19 and its economic crisis have only intensified. It’s as if we want to get rid of everything in advance, including our expectations, so that we won’t have anything left to lose.”

While indeed grim and pessimistic in tone, what I take from Chayka’s analysis of our own 2020-2021 minimalist moment is also something productive and affirming. As with the Minimalist art movement of the 1960-70s that sought to radically redirect the energies and purpose of art making to more inclusive and democratic ends—directing audiences to confront the absence of distraction and “things” – there is an urgency and creative energy in our current circumstances. We are living with a heightened and acute sense of our space and place in the world, and this has the strong potential to recast the role and place of nothingness in our post-pandemic lives. Minimalists rejoice (maybe).

A few more things before the round up:

  • If all of this talk of Minimalism has you intrigued, I highly recommend the television show I Love Dick (on Amazon Video— see trailer below) set in the Minimalist Mecca known as Marfa, Texas. The show is based around an academic community where the main characters, a filmmaker and her husband who has taken up a research fellowship at the Marfa Institute, interact with a renowned scholar (played by Kevin Bacon) who also happens to be a minimalist artist.  

  • And speaking of space, there has been much discussion in the academic community and on academic Twitter about the very real problems with remote learning. If teaching real bodies in real space is something you want to ponder further, I recommend this Chronicle of Higher Education article, “What We’ve Lost In A Year of Virtual Teaching.”

"The Meaning of #FreeBritney "
"The Meaning of #FreeBritney "

elephant.art

"Martin Scorsese pens lengthy essay denouncing the treatment of films as "content""
"Martin Scorsese pens lengthy essay denouncing the treatment of films as "content""

avclub.com

"Christie’s Hopes to Open a New Frontier of the Art Market "
"Christie’s Hopes to Open a New Frontier of the Art Market "

artnet.com

"The Last City of the 20th Century"
"The Last City of the 20th Century"

slate.com

"‘White Supremacy Has to Be Undone’: The First Indigenous Leader of a Public Art Gallery in Canada on Decolonizing Museums"
"‘White Supremacy Has to Be Undone’: The First Indigenous Leader of a Public Art Gallery in Canada on Decolonizing Museums"

srtnet.com

"4 Work-From-Home Tech Tricks I Learned From Twitch Streamers"
"4 Work-From-Home Tech Tricks I Learned From Twitch Streamers"

wired.com

"Writer's blockdown: after a year inside, novelists are struggling to write"
"Writer's blockdown: after a year inside, novelists are struggling to write"

theguardian.com

"“I Hate Everything Equally”: Mu Pan’s Ironic Art"
"“I Hate Everything Equally”: Mu Pan’s Ironic Art"

lareviewofbooks.org

"Maren Hassinger on "Untitled" (1972/2020) (VIDEO)"
"Maren Hassinger on "Untitled" (1972/2020) (VIDEO)"

guggenheim

"How art speaks to anxiety | Joan Mitchell's Ladybug | UNIQLO ArtSpeaks (VIDEO)"
"How art speaks to anxiety | Joan Mitchell's Ladybug | UNIQLO ArtSpeaks (VIDEO)"

moma.org

"The Meaning of #FreeBritney " "Martin Scorsese pens lengthy essay denouncing the treatment of films as "content"" "Christie’s Hopes to Open a New Frontier of the Art Market " "The Last City of the 20th Century" "‘White Supremacy Has to Be Undone’: The First Indigenous Leader of a Public Art Gallery in Canada on Decolonizing Museums" "4 Work-From-Home Tech Tricks I Learned From Twitch Streamers" "Writer's blockdown: after a year inside, novelists are struggling to write" "“I Hate Everything Equally”: Mu Pan’s Ironic Art" "Maren Hassinger on "Untitled" (1972/2020) (VIDEO)" "How art speaks to anxiety | Joan Mitchell's Ladybug | UNIQLO ArtSpeaks (VIDEO)"
  • The Meaning of #FreeBritney 

  • Martin Scorsese pens lengthy essay denouncing the treatment of films as "content"

  • Christie’s Hopes to Open a New Frontier of the Art Market

  • The Last City of the 20th Century

  • ‘White Supremacy Has to Be Undone’: The First Indigenous Leader of a Public Art Gallery in Canada on Decolonizing Museums

  • 4 Work-From-Home Tech Tricks I Learned From Twitch Streamers

  • Writer's blockdown: after a year inside, novelists are struggling to write

  • “I Hate Everything Equally”: Mu Pan’s Ironic Art

  • Maren Hassinger on "Untitled" (1972/2020) (VIDEO)

  • How art speaks to anxiety | Joan Mitchell's Ladybug | UNIQLO ArtSpeaks (VIDEO)

Comment
For the last five years, I have spent the week of Valentine’s Day somewhere in the world enjoying art and architecture with the one I love most. While I remained close to home this year, we still found art works in some unexpected places in our own …

For the last five years, I have spent the week of Valentine’s Day somewhere in the world enjoying art and architecture with the one I love most. While I remained close to home this year, we still found art works in some unexpected places in our own urban backyard. Featured here is a city-sponsored First Nations work in Downtown Vancouver from the utility box art wrap project.

Weekly Round Up... And A Few More Things

February 14, 2021

Earlier this week I posted a #throwbackthursday photograph on Instagram (see below) from the final trip I took a year ago this week before the global pandemic shut down international travel. It was a photograph of me posed in front of Gustave Caillebotte's Paris Street, Rainy Day (1877) taken on February 14, 2020 by my husband Brian at the Art Institute of Chicago. My comment read in part that I had not stopped thinking about how I will never again take for granted the privilege of traveling to explore art and architecture in the world's great museums, galleries, and cities. As I went on to explain, travelling for research is the main reason I became an art historian, and that passion would evolve into leading students on international trips to the great art cities of the world, sharing with others in the adventure, discovery, and sheer joy of exploring and beholding art and visual culture in all kinds of contexts.

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At the time Brian shot that photo of me in Chicago, I of course had no idea that this would be the last trip I would take anywhere outside of Canada. I also could not have foreseen the last of my regular February travels with my husband. For the past decade or more several important conferences in my field, that happily correspond with Valentine’s Day, have taken place in the middle part of February. That means that on almost any given recent Valentine’s Day week (going back many years), I would be spending the time of year most closely associated with love, doing what I love most, with the one I love most! I closed my Instagram post mentioning how I remain in gratitude for the thousands of photographs I have of days spent doing the thing that makes me happiest and feeling closest to whole. This realization has since really hit me and so I decided to dig up and share a small sample of my last five years of Valentine’s Days weeks.

In the gallery below, you will see five sets of three images—let’s call it the “Art Lovers” series— corresponding to trips made over Valentine’s Day week from 2016-2020. From top to bottom, you will find photographs from 2020 in Chicago; 2019 in New York City; 2018 in Los Angeles; 2017 in New York City; and 2016 in London, UK. Each photograph holds a special memory related to artists, art works, architecture, and visual culture I hold dear, and several feature my husband Brian—my forever travel partner—who happens to love art almost as much as me, and also has a keen eye for photography. Enjoy!


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A Few More Things Before The Round Up:

  • Speaking of art and love, I have found that spending so much time working remotely from home has had me looking at the art on my walls with renewed attention. Like many of you, the urge to redecorate has taken hold, and I have found that simply reframing some of my older art works has been the refresher my home has needed. Needless to say the metaphor of “reframing” is powerful on many levels and can provide a much needed boost in unexpected ways.

  • And speaking of finding ways to cope and find a way through the difficulties of the pandemic, I want to recommend an excellent book I just finished up on the role of stress-reduction in maintaining mental and physical health—Melanie Greenberg’s The Stress-Proof Brain: Master Your Emotional Response to Stress Using Mindfulness and Neuroplasticity (2017).

"The Art Angle Podcast: 5 Steamy, Whirlwind Romances That Changed Art History (PODCAST)"
"The Art Angle Podcast: 5 Steamy, Whirlwind Romances That Changed Art History (PODCAST)"

artnet.com

"No great women artists? How Linda Nochlin tore apart the art historical narrative 50 years ago"
"No great women artists? How Linda Nochlin tore apart the art historical narrative 50 years ago"

theartnewspaper.com

"Stan Douglas Painstakingly Recreates A Reimagined Life of New York's Original Penn Station"
"Stan Douglas Painstakingly Recreates A Reimagined Life of New York's Original Penn Station"

designnboom.com

"Once Overlooked, Black Abstract Painters Are Finally Given Their Due"
"Once Overlooked, Black Abstract Painters Are Finally Given Their Due"

nytimes.com

"Need Some Hugspiration? Here Are 4 of Art History’s Most Romantic Embraces"
"Need Some Hugspiration? Here Are 4 of Art History’s Most Romantic Embraces"

artnet.com

"Pussy Riot: Russian protests are 'battle for hearts and minds'"
"Pussy Riot: Russian protests are 'battle for hearts and minds'"

bbc.com

"Keith Haring’s Lines of Desire"
"Keith Haring’s Lines of Desire"

hyperallergic.com

"A 25-Year-Old PhD Student Just Convinced Lego to Mass-Produce Van Gogh’s ‘Starry Night’"
"A 25-Year-Old PhD Student Just Convinced Lego to Mass-Produce Van Gogh’s ‘Starry Night’"

artnet.com

"Who Should Create Trump’s Doomed Presidential Portrait?"
"Who Should Create Trump’s Doomed Presidential Portrait?"

hyperallergic.com

"Food, Culture, and What’s Next: Marcus Samuelsson and Adam D. Weinberg in Conversation" (VIDEO)
"Food, Culture, and What’s Next: Marcus Samuelsson and Adam D. Weinberg in Conversation" (VIDEO)

whitneymuseum

"The Art Angle Podcast: 5 Steamy, Whirlwind Romances That Changed Art History (PODCAST)" "No great women artists? How Linda Nochlin tore apart the art historical narrative 50 years ago" "Stan Douglas Painstakingly Recreates A Reimagined Life of New York's Original Penn Station" "Once Overlooked, Black Abstract Painters Are Finally Given Their Due" "Need Some Hugspiration? Here Are 4 of Art History’s Most Romantic Embraces" "Pussy Riot: Russian protests are 'battle for hearts and minds'" "Keith Haring’s Lines of Desire" "A 25-Year-Old PhD Student Just Convinced Lego to Mass-Produce Van Gogh’s ‘Starry Night’" "Who Should Create Trump’s Doomed Presidential Portrait?" "Food, Culture, and What’s Next: Marcus Samuelsson and Adam D. Weinberg in Conversation" (VIDEO)
  • The Art Angle Podcast: 5 Steamy, Whirlwind Romances That Changed Art History (PODCAST)

  • No great women artists? How Linda Nochlin tore apart the art historical narrative 50 years ago

  • Stan Douglas Painstakingly Recreates A Reimagined Life of New York's Original Penn Station

  • Once Overlooked, Black Abstract Painters Are Finally Given Their Due

  • Need Some Hugspiration? Here Are 4 of Art History’s Most Romantic Embraces

  • Pussy Riot: Russian protests are 'battle for hearts and minds'

  • Keith Haring’s Lines of Desire

  • A 25-Year-Old PhD Student Just Convinced Lego to Mass-Produce Van Gogh’s ‘Starry Night’

  • Who Should Create Trump’s Doomed Presidential Portrait?

  • Food, Culture, and What’s Next: Marcus Samuelsson and Adam D. Weinberg in Conversation (VIDEO)

 

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© Dorothy Barenscott, 2010-2025