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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.

Lee Krasner, Self-Portrait (1931-33). A rare representational work by an artist known for their pioneering influence on the Abstract Expressionist movement. My photograph capturing this stunning painting at the 2019 Barbican Krasner retrospective.

Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things

January 29, 2023

This past week, I took extra time to discuss the importance of International Holocaust Remembrance Day with many of my art history students. With the uptick of antisemitism in recent years, I have felt a more urgent need to contextualize Jewish voices and histories in my courses. This also comes with a more personal recognition and associated shame that I have had growing up in a family and cultural context (child of Hungarian immigrants) where antisemitism and Holocaust denialism was sadly rampant, normalized, and encouraged— look no further than Viktor Orban’s Hungary for evidence. Thankfully, my education and exposure to the truth of history has provided an escape from that hateful thinking, and today much of my research is driven by a compassionate commitment to understanding persecuted peoples and marginalized subcultures (especially of artists and art movements).

A well-timed opportunity arose in my modern and contemporary art history course, where we had reached discussion about the immediate post-WWII era and the effect on artists of circulating photography of concentration camp survivors and emerging news and realization of the full extent of the Holocaust. In the aftermath of WWII, artists around the world struggled with how to make representational art in the wake of the Holocaust, and many art movements tied to abstraction, expressionism, and existentialism provided outlets of exploration and experimentation. Still, art historians have continued to write the period from a limited perspective, often minimizing the efforts of Jewish artists, and especially those who were also women. Lee Krasner, wife of famed “drip painter” Jackson Pollock, is the prime example of this art historical oversight, and I have worked to integrate discussion of her practice and influence on Pollock and the Abstract Expressionist movement into my courses. Importantly, and with much significance in today’s political climate, I discuss how Krasner, the daughter of Ukrainian-Jewish immigrants who had sought to escape antisemitic persecution during the Russo-Japanese War, created astonishing works of art establishing the scale and “all-over” abstract gesture that directly influenced Pollock’s famous works.

“‘I was a woman, Jewish, a widow, a damn good painter, thank you, and a little too independent…’”
— Lee Krasner
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Still, Krasner could never (back then or even today) become the poster child of the most famous of all American art movements. Both her Jewish identity and sex make that impossible. But in recent years, a concerted attempt to correct the record has taken hold. In 2019, while co-leading the London and Venice Biennale field school, we visited the much overdue Lee Krasner retrospective at the Barbican (see my photographs above) where her significance and influence was finally being acknowledged, along with the importance of her Jewish identity. This exhibition, an important move and corrective by the art world in the right direction.

For more information towards understanding the significant contribution of Jewish artists to modern and contemporary art— many who lost relatives or their own lives in the Holocaust— I recommend visiting The Art Story websites database. In particular, take a deep dive into the practices of Diane Arbus, Robert Capa, Eva Hesse, John Heartfield, Allan Kaprow, Barbara Kruger, Barnett Newman, Mark Rothko, Carolee Schneemann, Tristan Tzara, and Hannah Wilke. You will come away inspired and enlightened!

Enjoy the weekly links… click on text links below or explore the same links visually in the accompanying image grid.

  • "Iranian artists submit work anonymously for online exhibition on death of Mahsa Amini"

  • "Anime broadens its reach — at conventions, at theaters, and streaming at home"

  • "Words, Words, Words: What does the advent of ChatGPT mean for already beleaguered teachers?"

  • "ChatGPT May Well Rewrite the Rules of the Art World. But Art Also Shows Us the Limits of What A.I. Can Do"

  • "Canada chooses Kapwani Kiwanga for its 2024 Venice Biennale pavilion"

  • "Venice Biennale 2024: all the national pavilions, artists and curators announced so far"

  • "Yayoi Kusama and Louis Vuitton: the enduring allure of art and luxury"

  • "Artists Have Long Held Day Jobs to Make Ends Meet. A New Exhibition Makes the Case That Side Gigs Also Fuel Creativity"

  • "What Does TikTok’s “Corecore” Have to Do With Dada?"

  • "The Academic Career Is Broken"

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Winter 2019
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Joseph Beuys, Chinese Hare Sugar (1979) in the Tate Modern Collection.

Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things

January 22, 2023

I often wonder what artists, critics, and art historians like me would have said if told twenty years ago that AI (artificial intelligence) would prove one of the most threatening technologies to both the art world and academia. Maybe you noticed somewhere around late November and through December all of the crazy AI-generated self-portraits on Instagram? Or perhaps you have caught wind of the cheating scandals and other academic integrity violations citing the use of sophisticated chatbot generators that helps students create text and even entire essays based on short prompts. Over the winter break, I had several conversations with artists (emerging and established), studio art instructors, and fellow academics about their own frustrations, worries, and fears about AI image generators like Jasper and Lensa and the growing popularity of ChatGPT. Overwhelmingly the concerns revolve around how to identify “real” versus “AI-generated” content coupled with how to prevent and discourage using these technologies. In this week’s selection of art world news links, you will see these conversations bubbling up in many different directions, and I too will be taking some time to muse about the ramifications of AI moving ahead into 2023.

Enjoy exploring the links and thinking about how AI will likely shake your world in 2023 and beyond.

Incidentally, as we celebrate the lunar new year and the Year of the Rabbit, I thought it fitting to begin my year’s musings by selecting a Joseph Beuys work Chinese Hare Sugar (1979) as my feature image for the weekly roundup. A performance artist, teacher, and art theorist, Beuys sought to broaden the definition of art through several “actions” including How to Explain Pictures to a Dead Hare (1965) and its affiliated art projects (including the one I selected here) that explore references to rabbits (hares) and sugar (honey) as a means to understanding the unique aspects of living and activated knowing. This, perhaps an antidote to the “evils” or “soullessness” of AI. As Beuys explained back in 1971:

For me the Hare is a symbol of incarnation, which the hare really enacts- something a human can only do in imagination. It burrows, building itself a home in the earth. Thus it incarnates itself in the earth: that alone is important. So it seems to me. Honey on my head of course has to do with thought. While humans do not have the ability to produce honey, they do have the ability to think, to produce ideas. Therefore the stale and morbid nature of thought is once again made living. Honey is an undoubtedly living substance- human thoughts can also become alive. On the other hand intellectualizing can be deadly to thought: one can talk one's mind to death in politics or in academia.

  • "Getty is suing a popular AI image generator for copyright infringement"

  • "Artists file class-action lawsuit against AI image generator companies"

  • "What’s in Store for NFTs in 2023?"

  • "Can Instagram‘s Algorithm Curate an Exhibition Better Than a Human?" 

  • "Making Art for the Age of Screens"

  • "Viral TikTok Joke About the Mona Lisa Being Stolen Generates Mass Confusion"

  • "Can Art History Be Taught Without Someone Becoming Angry?"

  • "Alarmed by A.I. Chatbots, Universities Start Revamping How They Teach"

  • "What Rights Do Artists Have When Their Work Is Destroyed?"

  • "Is this by Rothko or a robot? We ask the experts to tell the difference between human and AI art"

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Louise Lawler, Splash (2006) a work that will be featured at one of my top ten exhibitions, taking place in London at the Tate Modern as part of "Capturing the Moment: A Journey Through 100 Years of Painting and Photography” June 14-Jan 28, 2024

Top 10 Modern and Contemporary Art Exhibitions Worth Visiting In 2023

January 08, 2023

Happy New Year and welcome to a 2023 that appears (fingers crossed) promising for art lovers and travelers. I am also coming out of something of a blogging hibernation to breathe life back into my weekly round-up after a 2022 that had my time and attention focused on other priorities and without the same energy and optimism for the often-depressing state of the art world. But in recent months, with the successful planning and recruitment of excited students signing up to join the Paris Field School I will be co-running in June, along with finding something to a closer to a “new normal” in the balance of post-pandemic teaching and research, I am finding myself itching and excited to reconnect with those who find these kinds of posts of interest.  

The art world and art tourism, as an industry having the spent the better part of three years under a cloud of uncertainty, also appears to be awakening. With pandemic restrictions preventing large-scale exhibitions since 2020, it is heartening to see the calendars of “future exhibitions” sections of major museum and galleries advertising some fantastic shows for the year ahead. What I present here below is part of a tradition that I started back in 2011 on my website when I responded to students and blog visitors who would ask me what I would recommend as art cities and art shows to visit in the year ahead. In subsequent years, I developed the top ten selection of modern and contemporary art exhibitions in part based upon where I planned to travel, but also based upon where I would want to go if I had the time and resources. For 2023, I have already booked travel to New York and Paris and hope to make it to London in the fall (the selections for these cities below are big highlights for me), but I always have a list like this in mind when talking to artists and fellow art travellers. And yes, always a selection closer to home (I’m looking at you Vancouver). Happy exploring and best wishes for the year ahead—I hope this list whets your appetite for a return to travel and a return to experiencing art in person.

P.S. I present the exhibitions in chronological order of opening, not in any other oder of preference— they are all special and important in their own way.


NEW YORK| Meret Oppenheim, My Exhibition (Jan 1 – Mar 4)

STOCKHOLM| Moderna Museet: Laurie Anderson (Jan 4-Mar 9)

LOS ANGELES| LACMA: Coded: Art Enters the Computer Age, 1952-1982 (Feb 12-July 2)

PARIS| ORSAY: Manet/Degas (Mar 28-July23)

NEW YORK| WHITNEY: Josh Kline: Project For A New American Century (Apr 19-Aug 31)

PARIS| Foundation Louis Vuitton: BASQUIAT X WARHOL. Painting 4 Hands  (May 4-Aug 28

AMSTERDAM| Modern (May 18-Sept 24)

VANCOUVER| VAG: Fashion Fictions (May 27-Oct 9)

LONDON| Tate Modern: Capturing the Moment: A Journey Through 100 Years of Painting and Photography (June 14-Jan 28, 2024)

LONDON|Royal Academy of Arts: Marina Abramovic (Sept 23-Dec 10)

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Alex Colville, To Prince Edward Island (1965) in the collection of the National Gallery of Canada.

Birthday Thoughts: Alex Colville's To Prince Edward Island (1965)

August 24, 2022

I’ve always loved this painting. Coincidentally, Alex Colville is a Canadian modern painter with whom I share a birthday today, and the older I get, the more I appreciate this picture's wisdom and every nuance.

When I was younger, I was drawn to the pleasing symmetry of the painting's formal composition-- the strong line, cool colour palette, and contoured shapes-- and how it existed in a strange and uneasy tension with the picture’s unfolding content.

We are first presented with a woman looking through binoculars, suggesting a commanding female gaze and strong subjectivity, but then made to shift focus entirely and reconcile the ominous male figure hovering behind her. In an instance, the woman is rendered an object, both by him and ironically by us, the viewer.

Over time, I have come to see this painting less however as a statement of the woman's victimhood or the man's privileged vision. When I look at this painting today, I see a strong and determined woman who is completely aware but, importantly, equally indifferent, to the dominant vision that attempts to define who and what she is.

With middle age comes the confidence to dismiss and ignore how others wish to define you and/or who and what you should be. This shifting and unapologetic perspective-- mirrored in this extraordinary work of art-- teaches you to look straight through the judgement, ignoring society’s expectations, channeling the unflinching spirit of the powerful woman holding the binoculars.

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Detail from Everything #21 by Adrian Piper, 2010-13, consists of four blackboards, each covered with a single sentence repeated 25 times in handwritten cursive text. This powerful work, captured when I visited the 2015 Venice Biennale, has never left my thoughts.

Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things

March 13, 2022

Feeling paralyzed and not knowing what to write the past few weeks, my round up this Sunday focuses on links related to the global art community's response to the war in Europe.

Conceptual artist Adrian Piper's work has also been haunting my thoughts lately-- this image below and featured, relates to a performance art work first started in response to 9/11 attacks when she asked volunteers to temporarily tattoo the words "EVERYTHING WILL BE TAKEN AWAY" on their foreheads and document the public's response as they walked, took transit, and went about their lives in the streets of New York in the aftermath of violence.

"Pussy Riot’s Nadya Tolokonnikova: ‘You cannot play nice with Putin. He is insane. He might open fire on his own people’"
"Pussy Riot’s Nadya Tolokonnikova: ‘You cannot play nice with Putin. He is insane. He might open fire on his own people’"

theguardian.com

"Why We Need a Post-Colonial Lens to Look at Ukraine and Russia"
"Why We Need a Post-Colonial Lens to Look at Ukraine and Russia"

artnet.com

"Why We Need a Post-Colonial Lens to Look at Ukraine and Russia"
"Why We Need a Post-Colonial Lens to Look at Ukraine and Russia"

hyperallergic.com

"Russian Yachts Are Held in Harbors. What About Art in Secretive Free Ports?"
"Russian Yachts Are Held in Harbors. What About Art in Secretive Free Ports?"

bloomberg.com

"Three Years Ago, I Had Dinner With Vladimir Putin. What He Told Me Makes Me Fearful for Ukraine’s Cultural Heritage"
"Three Years Ago, I Had Dinner With Vladimir Putin. What He Told Me Makes Me Fearful for Ukraine’s Cultural Heritage"

artnet.com

"Venice Biennale Organizers Commit to Staging the Ukrainian Pavilion as Planned"
"Venice Biennale Organizers Commit to Staging the Ukrainian Pavilion as Planned"

artnews.com

"12 essential books on Ukraine, Russia and Putin"
"12 essential books on Ukraine, Russia and Putin"

latimes.com

"Ukrainian Artists Are Building Anti-Tank Obstacles"
"Ukrainian Artists Are Building Anti-Tank Obstacles"

hyperallergic.com

"Calling For “No-Fly Zone” Over Ukraine, Artists Launch Hundreds of Paper Planes at Guggenheim Museum"
"Calling For “No-Fly Zone” Over Ukraine, Artists Launch Hundreds of Paper Planes at Guggenheim Museum"

hyperallergic.com

"Here's how you can help the Ukraine aid effort by buying art"
"Here's how you can help the Ukraine aid effort by buying art"

theartnewspaper.com

"Pussy Riot’s Nadya Tolokonnikova: ‘You cannot play nice with Putin. He is insane. He might open fire on his own people’" "Why We Need a Post-Colonial Lens to Look at Ukraine and Russia" "Why We Need a Post-Colonial Lens to Look at Ukraine and Russia" "Russian Yachts Are Held in Harbors. What About Art in Secretive Free Ports?" "Three Years Ago, I Had Dinner With Vladimir Putin. What He Told Me Makes Me Fearful for Ukraine’s Cultural Heritage" "Venice Biennale Organizers Commit to Staging the Ukrainian Pavilion as Planned" "12 essential books on Ukraine, Russia and Putin" "Ukrainian Artists Are Building Anti-Tank Obstacles" "Calling For “No-Fly Zone” Over Ukraine, Artists Launch Hundreds of Paper Planes at Guggenheim Museum" "Here's how you can help the Ukraine aid effort by buying art"
  • Pussy Riot’s Nadya Tolokonnikova: ‘You cannot play nice with Putin. He is insane. He might open fire on his own people’

  • I Grew Up Behind the Iron Curtain. Isolating Russia’s Art and Artists Will Not Help Us Achieve Peace

  • Why We Need a Post-Colonial Lens to Look at Ukraine and Russia

  • Russian Yachts Are Held in Harbors. What About Art in Secretive Free Ports?

  • Three Years Ago, I Had Dinner With Vladimir Putin. What He Told Me Makes Me Fearful for Ukraine’s Cultural Heritage

  • Venice Biennale Organizers Commit to Staging the Ukrainian Pavilion as Planned

  • 12 essential books on Ukraine, Russia and Putin

  • Ukrainian Artists Are Building Anti-Tank Obstacles

  • Calling For “No-Fly Zone” Over Ukraine, Artists Launch Hundreds of Paper Planes at Guggenheim Museum

  • Here's how you can help the Ukraine aid effort by buying art

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© Dorothy Barenscott, 2010-2025