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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
"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 weeks 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 a month 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
Weekly Musings + Round Up... And A Few More Things
about 2 years ago

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Classic lines and navy blues feed my sartorial soul 💙✨
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#dopaminedressing #whatiwore #ootd #arthistorianlife #citizensofhumanity #ralphlauren  #celine
Classic lines and navy blues feed my sartorial soul 💙✨ . . . #dopaminedressing #whatiwore #ootd #arthistorianlife #citizensofhumanity #ralphlauren #celine
Perfect Vancouver day!👌🏻🍃🌊✨Autumn rides are my favourite as we take advantage of every opportunity to get out there on the Aprilias ahead of the rain and coming cold.
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#motorcycle #motorcycleofinstagram #sportbike #sportbikelife #apriliatuon
Perfect Vancouver day!👌🏻🍃🌊✨Autumn rides are my favourite as we take advantage of every opportunity to get out there on the Aprilias ahead of the rain and coming cold. . . . #motorcycle #motorcycleofinstagram #sportbike #sportbikelife #apriliatuono #apriliatuonofactory #motogirl #motogirls #vancouver
Returning home from Palermo, Sicity this week, I have been reflecting on the research I presented at a roundtable discussion at the AISU (L’Associazione promuove e diffonde lo studio della storia urbana) biennial congress centered on “The
Returning home from Palermo, Sicity this week, I have been reflecting on the research I presented at a roundtable discussion at the AISU (L’Associazione promuove e diffonde lo studio della storia urbana) biennial congress centered on “The Crossroad City.” My contribution to the presentation focused on Vancouver and my exploration of the “No Fun City” label that has emerged over the past decade or more in local discourse and popular culture. Whenever I talk to Vancouverites about this concept, there is an immediate understanding about what it is I am trying to evoke in my research. In my blog this week (link in bio), I have excerpted some parts of my talk to provide a taste of how I am connecting the emotion of detachment to this hard to language dynamic while bringing in the important element of visual representation that shapes and is shaped through the many contradictions of the city. Perhaps most striking to me as I continue probing these questions in a post-pandemic world, increasingly impacted by machine learning and democratic backsliding, is how much discussions around emotions and our collective humanity matter today more than ever. . . . #arthistory #urban #urbanemotion #architecture #palermo #vancouver
Today, I visited Sicily’s contemporary art museum in Palazzo Riso, another converted baroque palace that was heavily bombed during WWII after local fascists made it their headquarters. I love thinking how much those people would have hated the
Today, I visited Sicily’s contemporary art museum in Palazzo Riso, another converted baroque palace that was heavily bombed during WWII after local fascists made it their headquarters. I love thinking how much those people would have hated the kind of art that occupies this space and lives on its walls. This art does not celebrate beauty, nor does it tell audiences what to think, who to love, or what rules or political leaders to follow— it is art that deliberately creates questions, discomfort, and provocation while asking audiences to shape the final meaning. Even today, here in Palermo, I discovered through conversation with locals that there are many who criticize and attack the works (artworks by non-Italians, women, people of colour, gay people, and those who use unconventional materials and approaches to art-making) exhibited in the space. It appears the culture wars are again reshaping Italy as they did 80 years ago. History does not repeat itself, as the Mark Twain saying goes, but it does rhyme. Pay attention. Among the artists pictured here: Vanessa Beecroft, Regina Jose Galindo, Herman Nitsch Christian Boltanski, Cesare Viel, Sergio Zavattieri, Loredana Longo, Carla Accardi, Richard Long, William Kentridge . . . #contemporyart #arthistory #sicily #palermo #italy #artwork #artmuseum
How to describe the Palazzo Butera in Sicily? Take a baroque palace on the edge of the Mediterranean Sea, restore it with great care, and then fill it with your collection of contemporary art, antiquities, ephemera, and a sprinkle of modern and Renai
How to describe the Palazzo Butera in Sicily? Take a baroque palace on the edge of the Mediterranean Sea, restore it with great care, and then fill it with your collection of contemporary art, antiquities, ephemera, and a sprinkle of modern and Renaissance works. Add a beautiful cafe with a terrace facing the sea and invite the public to admire it all. This is the best of what a private collection can be— bravo to the curators and anyone who had a hand in planning this space. It is breathtaking! A must visit if you come to Sicily. . . . #palermo #sicily #arthistory #contemporaryart #artcollection #palazzobutera #modernart #artmuseum

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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.

Adrian Ghenie, Untitled  (2019). Ghenie, a Berlin-based contemporary Romanian artist, has created several evocative portraits of Donald Trump. His practice has been described by Ocula as “partly figurative, partially abstract, richly textured painti…

Adrian Ghenie, Untitled (2019). Ghenie, a Berlin-based contemporary Romanian artist, has created several evocative portraits of Donald Trump. His practice has been described by Ocula as “partly figurative, partially abstract, richly textured paintings that grapple with deep, dark personal and historical states of mind.”

Weekly Round Up... And A Few More Things

January 10, 2021

As I write this post, the visual evidence of the Trump-fueled insurrection at the US Capitol on January 6th continues to pour in and shape the conversation around both the seriousness and severity of the event, but also about how to “read” what actually happened. As with many of you, my first real apprehension of the day’s events happened once I turned on my television and opened my social media feeds in order to take in the motion pictures, stream of photographs, and media accounts that were often happening live and in real-time.

We all of course take for granted that these images will exist and be forever available to us. More importantly, we are conditioned to trust and take filmed and photographed documents at face value, and as factual evidence. Going back in the history of photography, I often lecture about the 1871 Paris Commune—a revolutionary government that ruled after a four month siege and violent insurrection—and the important role of photographers in communicating the scale of death and destruction. As a relatively new and still-evolving medium, the photograph had a power to undermine and displace textual or artistic representations of that fraught historical moment. The images were also impossible to control, at least at first, and the photographs of real people lying dead in Paris streets were largely shown as unromanticized images of raw carnage. The photographs were also quickly distributed around the world, taking on new meanings and political and symbolic associations at times far removed from the original events. But in later years, many of the photographs would disappear and be banned from sale and forbidden from public view or archiving in France.

Architecture and art critic Michael Kimmelman tweeting on the Trump Insurrection this past week.

Architecture and art critic Michael Kimmelman tweeting on the Trump Insurrection this past week.

As someone who studies failed revolutions and insurrections, especially within the context of art movements, I can’t help wondering how our current moment parallels something of what was seem with the advent of politized photographs during the late 19th century. At once a medium associated with unquestionable truth, but also one open to wide distribution, manipulation, and erasure, the photograph of 1871 has many similarities to social media platforms today. There will no doubt be a much needed reckoning about the role of openly accessed social media and the fractured news environment when this episode of history is finally written. Architecture and art critic Michael Kimmelman was quick to respond and point out on Twitter how the preservation of the markers of the January 6th event—even at the level of damaged and defaced monuments and statues—needs to be maintained in order to preserve the evidence of the moment, while countering the impulse to “move on” and forget the reality of what took place. How will this avalanche of evidence— from social media posts, images, videos, to the actual physical evidence of mass violence— be collected, documented, and archived?

A number of the articles in my round up this week speak directly to this idea. Moreover, it will be important to pay attention to how artists, art critics, and art historians respond to and represent the Trump-fuelled insurrection in the weeks, months, and years to come.

A few more things before the round up:

A book for our moment, Hal Foster’s essays speak to “a world where truth is cast in doubt and shame” and asks what artists, art critics, and art historians are left to do.

A book for our moment, Hal Foster’s essays speak to “a world where truth is cast in doubt and shame” and asks what artists, art critics, and art historians are left to do.

  • During these precarious Trump years, art historian, theorist, and critic Hal Foster has spent a great deal of time and energy writing about how to demystify the current global political climate from within the framework of the art world. His recently published book of essays What Comes After Farce? Art Criticism At A Time of Debacle (Verso, 2020) was a book that I finally had a chance to read more thoroughly over the Christmas break as I worked on some new writing projects, and it is a book that I recommend widely to anyone, and especially artists, who wants a sense of what the future of a post-Trumpian era art world might look like.  

  • Speaking of insurrection and civil unrest, the 2019 BBC adaptation of Les Miserables is debuting in Canada on the CBC tonight. Starring Dominic West (who I just finished watching through a 2020 binge of five seasons of The Wire), Lily Collins (Emily In Paris—and yes, I watched that too), and the amazing Olivia Colman (The Crown and Fleabag), the eight-part mini series could not have debuted at a more perfect moment, and promises to continue conversations around the history of revolutions, formations of democracy, and class warfare. DVR is set.

"Print, Frame, and Hang This Image in the National Portrait Gallery"
"Print, Frame, and Hang This Image in the National Portrait Gallery"

vulture.com

"Donald Trump’s Last Picture Show"
"Donald Trump’s Last Picture Show"

nytimes.com

"Worst Revolution Ever"
"Worst Revolution Ever"

theatlantic.com

"A Public Vulva Sculpture in Brazil Protests Violence Against Women"
"A Public Vulva Sculpture in Brazil Protests Violence Against Women"

hyperallergic.com

"The Blockbuster Avant-Garde"
"The Blockbuster Avant-Garde"

artnews.com

"How To Channel Boredom"
"How To Channel Boredom"

psyche.co

"The Art World Gets Woke"
"The Art World Gets Woke"

artillerymag.com

"“When did Video Become Art?” an online lecture hosted by the Whitney Museum of American Art"
"“When did Video Become Art?” an online lecture hosted by the Whitney Museum of American Art"

flashart.com

"Queen of Kitsch, Frida Kahlo"
"Queen of Kitsch, Frida Kahlo"

thecritic.co.uk

"Why Are Botched Art Restorations So Captivating?"
"Why Are Botched Art Restorations So Captivating?"

elephant.art

"Print, Frame, and Hang This Image in the National Portrait Gallery" "Donald Trump’s Last Picture Show" "Worst Revolution Ever" "A Public Vulva Sculpture in Brazil Protests Violence Against Women" "The Blockbuster Avant-Garde" "How To Channel Boredom" "The Art World Gets Woke" "“When did Video Become Art?” an online lecture hosted by the Whitney Museum of American Art" "Queen of Kitsch, Frida Kahlo" "Why Are Botched Art Restorations So Captivating?"
  • Print, Frame, and Hang This Image in the National Portrait Gallery

  • Donald Trump’s Last Picture Show

  • Worst Revolution Ever

  • A Public Vulva Sculpture in Brazil Protests Violence Against Women

  • The Blockbuster Avant-Garde

  • How To Channel Boredom

  • The Art World Gets Woke

  • “When did Video Become Art?” an online lecture hosted by the Whitney Museum of American Art

  • Queen of Kitsch, Frida Kahlo

  • Why Are Botched Art Restorations So Captivating?

Comment
Ed Ruscha, Start Over Please (2015)

Ed Ruscha, Start Over Please (2015)

Weekly Round Up... And A Few More Things

January 03, 2021

What is your word for 2021? That is the question I usually ask friends, students, and colleagues this time of year. Instead of making resolutions, I find that searching for and choosing one word can be an incredibly powerful way of setting your tone and intention for the year.

Perhaps not surprisingly, I am also very drawn to conceptual and word art, the kind that has been popularized by artists such as Ed Ruscha since the 1960s. Ruscha understood the power of semiotics and the way we connect words, images, and ideas into rich landscapes of thought and action. Ruscha’s many paintings of single words and short phrases are provocative and compelling in ways that are not always easy to understand or unpack (see gallery below). Still, as Ruscha explains, when the right word is apprehended, there is a knowing: “Words have temperatures to me. When they reach a certain point and become hot words, then they appeal to me…Sometimes I have a dream that if a word gets too hot and too appealing, it will boil apart, and I won’t be able to read or think of it. Usually I catch them before they get too hot.”

For the record, my 2020 word was “FEARLESS” and little did I know how much that word would resonate and find new kinds of importance during the global pandemic. And my 2021 word? I have chosen “AUDACIOUS” Yeah, I know… watch out world!

Edward Ruscha, OOF 1962 .jpg
Ed-Ruscha-Pay-Nothing-Until-April-2003-Acrylic-paint-on-canvas-1527-x-1525-cm.jpg
ruscha_quit.jpg
ed-ruscha-ripe.jpg

A few more things before the round up:

  • Ever since I was a kid, I have enjoyed buying books or desk calendars that provide a once a day reading or short fix. There is something grounding in the ritual of reading a body of work one day at a time over the year. I haven’t done this in a while, so a few weeks ago I went searching and picked up Ryan Holiday’s The Daily Stoic: 365 Mediations on Wisdom, Perseverance, and the Art of Living as my 2021 companion. When I was in my first year of university, I was enrolled in a special Classical Studies themed seminar through UBC’s Arts One Program and read copious amounts of ancient philosophy. Much of what I learned was intensive and quite overwhelming to take in as an 18 year old, but I never forgot the power of stoicism and its call for self-control and resiliency. I figured this would be an important set of ideas to revisit in 2021, and I look forward to gaining daily insights this year.  

  • Over the holidays, I decided it was finally time to find a pandemic hobby and I turned my attention to knitting. In the past, I have been known to crochet and even do some macrame and needle point, but I was drawn to the challenge of knitting for the therapeutic benefits (getting out of my head), the aesthetics and design aspects of the finished products, and also by the challenge of trying increasingly more difficult projects and patterns. I started very easy with a scarf knitting kit from Wool and the Gang using chunky wool and large needles, and have now graduated to some smaller needles and more intricate techniques using patterns found via the online Ravelry community. I am definitely hooked and can understand why so many people become obsessed with the craft.

"The Year Without Art, 2020"
"The Year Without Art, 2020"

hyperallergic.com

"Can Jeff Koons Teach Me to Paint?"
"Can Jeff Koons Teach Me to Paint?"

nytimes.com

"The Year TV Leaped Into the Future"
"The Year TV Leaped Into the Future"

protocol.com

"documenta announces a new visual identity for the 15th edition"
"documenta announces a new visual identity for the 15th edition"

flashart.com

"Barbara Rose, Impassioned Critic Who Reshaped Art History, Has Died at 84"
"Barbara Rose, Impassioned Critic Who Reshaped Art History, Has Died at 84"

artnews.com

"These Are the 22 Art Projects That Social Media Went Bananas Over in 2020"
"These Are the 22 Art Projects That Social Media Went Bananas Over in 2020"

artnet.com

"Bob Ross May Have Been the Most Popular Artist of 2020. Here’s Why."
"Bob Ross May Have Been the Most Popular Artist of 2020. Here’s Why."

artnet.com

"Art-World Experts on How the Art Market Will Change in 2021"
"Art-World Experts on How the Art Market Will Change in 2021"

artsy.net

"Major museum openings and expansions in 2021"
"Major museum openings and expansions in 2021"

artnewspaper.com

"Hito Steyerl at K21"
"Hito Steyerl at K21"

contemporaryartdaily.com

"The Year Without Art, 2020" "Can Jeff Koons Teach Me to Paint?" "The Year TV Leaped Into the Future" "documenta announces a new visual identity for the 15th edition" "Barbara Rose, Impassioned Critic Who Reshaped Art History, Has Died at 84" "These Are the 22 Art Projects That Social Media Went Bananas Over in 2020" "Bob Ross May Have Been the Most Popular Artist of 2020. Here’s Why." "Art-World Experts on How the Art Market Will Change in 2021" "Major museum openings and expansions in 2021" "Hito Steyerl at K21"
  • The Year Without Art, 2020

  • Can Jeff Koons Teach Me to Paint?

  • The Year TV Leaped Into the Future

  • documenta announces a new visual identity for the 15th edition

  • Barbara Rose, Impassioned Critic Who Reshaped Art History, Has Died at 84

  • These Are the 22 Art Projects That Social Media Went Bananas Over in 2020

  • Bob Ross May Have Been the Most Popular Artist of 2020. Here’s Why.

  • Art-World Experts on How the Art Market Will Change in 2021

  • Major museum openings and expansions in 2021

  • Hito Steyerl at K21

Comment
Arthur Leipzig, Children Looking At Christmas Toys (1944). Something about this photo speaks to me about what it feels like leaving 2020 and beginning 2021.

Arthur Leipzig, Children Looking At Christmas Toys (1944). Something about this photo speaks to me about what it feels like leaving 2020 and beginning 2021.

Weekly Round Up... And A Few More Things

December 20, 2020

Scanning through artworks in the MoMA’s collection under the search term “Christmas” for this post, I was immediately drawn to one photograph by Arthur Leipzig that features little kids looking through a toy store window. I was drawn in the way that French literary theorist Roland Barthes talks about when describing the essential element of a successful photograph. The image had a punctum. As Barthes explains, “The punctum of a photograph is that accident which pricks me (but also bruises me, is poignant to me)” and it is an element that you cannot stop looking at, an almost indescribable alignment of signs that makes you keep looking, and looking, and looking. For me, this photograph perfectly encapsulates the conflicting emotions of coming to the end of this annus horribilis and looking ahead, with trepidation, to 2021.

My short read of this image? The little girl wiping away a tear in the central vertical axis of the photograph is all of us. She is isolated and almost invisible to those around her, carrying an emotional intensity that is devastating to confront, but framed in such a way as to demand all of our attention. More than just sad, this child looks exhausted, and the reflection of the house, appearing to superimpose on her body, reminds us of where we have spent so much of our time this year. To her left, an older girl stares with her mouth open. She has a look of shock, maybe a bit of surprise. It is not clear. The half-eaten apple in her hand tells us she has been well distracted from what she had been doing, and that sense of being derailed and disoriented from routine is another feeling we have lived with all year. And finally, the young boy in the right register of the photograph makes direct eye contact with us. He is holding up a hand in a half wave, a sign of greeting, hope, and yes, connection. Yet, he too, appears distant, especially as we see him through glass, the material that represents the separation we have all literally and figuratively been living with since the pandemic began. But it is this same little boy who balances and grounds the picture, letting us know that what we are looking at is not necessarily dangerous, bad, or to be feared. There is hope here, however small.

The person who captured this image, Arthur Leipzig, was a Brooklyn born photographer and photojournalist who took this picture during WWII in New York City. Having studied with famed modernist photographers Paul Strand and later mentored by Edward Steichen, Leipzig worked in a tradition of documenting the lives and struggles of people, subverting the notion of art photography as only aesthetically appealing if representing “beauty.” At the time this image was taken, in 1944, Leipzig was a young man in his mid-twenties two years into his photography career (he was born, ironically enough, the year of the Spanish Flu in 1918). Decades later in his 70s, Leipzig would reflect on his photo practice in a memoir Growing Up in New York revealing the many risks to his career and misunderstandings that came with taking these kinds of photographs. “No photograph,” he wrote “no matter how good it is, is worth hurting people.” Still, Leipzig appeared to understand that the power of a well-taken photograph was all about its unmistakable punctum, and the ability of a photographer to capture something of our unrehearsed selves.

Wishing all of you the very best of this holiday season. Stay safe, be well, and take a moment this week to celebrate the art and artists in your life that helped make 2020 a bit more bearable. Enjoy the links!

"From Graffiti to the Gallery, Futura Talks About Art (PODCAST)")"
"From Graffiti to the Gallery, Futura Talks About Art (PODCAST)")"

hyperallergic.com

"12 Writers on 20 Years of Art: Paddy Johnson on How Digital Art from 2016 Foreshadowed Our Current Crisis"
"12 Writers on 20 Years of Art: Paddy Johnson on How Digital Art from 2016 Foreshadowed Our Current Crisis"

lareviewofbooks.com

"Could Social Media Innovators Like Elsa Majimbo Help Gen Z Rewrite Cultural Norms"
"Could Social Media Innovators Like Elsa Majimbo Help Gen Z Rewrite Cultural Norms"

culturedmag.com

"What If You Could Do It All Over?"
"What If You Could Do It All Over?"

newyorker.com

"The top five Instagram posts that capture the art world in 2020"
"The top five Instagram posts that capture the art world in 2020"

theartnewspaper.com

"Steve McQueen’s Education presents a moving history lesson on racial bias"
"Steve McQueen’s Education presents a moving history lesson on racial bias"

avclub.com

Prioritizing rest over the winter break (PODCAST))
Prioritizing rest over the winter break (PODCAST))

jovanevery.com

"Why Play Is Essential to Ideas"
"Why Play Is Essential to Ideas"

nautil.us

"How TikTok changed the world in 2020"
"How TikTok changed the world in 2020"

bbc.com

Engineer, Agitator, Constructor: The Artist Reinvented | MoMA (VIDEO)
Engineer, Agitator, Constructor: The Artist Reinvented | MoMA (VIDEO)

moma.org

"From Graffiti to the Gallery, Futura Talks About Art (PODCAST)")" "12 Writers on 20 Years of Art: Paddy Johnson on How Digital Art from 2016 Foreshadowed Our Current Crisis" "Could Social Media Innovators Like Elsa Majimbo Help Gen Z Rewrite Cultural Norms" "What If You Could Do It All Over?" "The top five Instagram posts that capture the art world in 2020" "Steve McQueen’s Education presents a moving history lesson on racial bias" Prioritizing rest over the winter break (PODCAST)) "Why Play Is Essential to Ideas" "How TikTok changed the world in 2020" Engineer, Agitator, Constructor: The Artist Reinvented | MoMA (VIDEO)
  • From Graffiti to the Gallery, Futura Talks About Art (PODCAST)

  • 12 Writers on 20 Years of Art: Paddy Johnson on How Digital Art from 2016 Foreshadowed Our Current Crisis

  • Could Social Media Innovators Like Elsa Majimbo Help Gen Z Rewrite Cultural Norms

  • What If You Could Do It All Over?

  • The top five Instagram posts that capture the art world in 2020

  • Steve McQueen’s Education presents a moving history lesson on racial bias

  • Prioritizing rest over the winter break (PODCAST)

  • Why Play Is Essential to Ideas

  • How TikTok changed the world in 2020

  • Engineer, Agitator, Constructor: The Artist Reinvented | MoMA (VIDEO)

Comment
Edvard Munch, Self-Portrait With Spanish Flu (1918). Munch, most famous for his painting The Scream (1893) was born December 12, 1863 in Norway and painted several self-portraits when he became ill and later recovered from the Spanish Flu

Edvard Munch, Self-Portrait With Spanish Flu (1918). Munch, most famous for his painting The Scream (1893) was born December 12, 1863 in Norway and painted several self-portraits when he became ill and later recovered from the Spanish Flu

Weekly Round Up... And A Few More Things

December 13, 2020

Over the past few months, I have been thinking a lot about artists and creatives who lived through the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic, and for those who follow my round-up, you may have noticed my feature images have often been artworks directly related to this moment in history. This week’s feature artist, Edvard Munch, is perhaps the most cited of this period as he was both a survivor of the pandemic, but also an artist who continued to make art and self-portraits even as he suffered from the ravages of the deadly virus.

Edvard Munch, The Scream  (1893)

Edvard Munch, The Scream (1893)

Many people of course know Munch through his iconic modern painting The Scream (1893)—an image that ushered in the sense of anxiety and uncertainty that was felt by so many in the fin de siècle era. It is a work of art that also signaled the way Munch would help propel a methodology of painting that was more invested in emotional resonance—expressionism—and less so in mimesis— imitation. "I do not paint what I see, but what I saw” said Munch. As his career progressed into the period of great loss and despair associated with both WWI and the Spanish Flu, Munch would continue to capture the world around him through hundreds of unflinching sketches, etchings, woodcuts, and paintings. And while many critics in his day called Munch’s works unfinished, bleak, and rough, Munch drew on his own experience of documenting fragile health—he had for example painted compositions of his mother dying of tuberculosis as a teenager—as a way to capture the truth of  moments that often go undocumented or, worse, sentimentalized.

See the gallery I have assembled below for an example of some of Munch’s compositions from 1918-19 in a range of media—works that speak to us now in new ways, but with the same emotional charge as originally conceived by the artist.

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Selvportrett etter spanskesyken
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Edvard_Munch_-_Vampire_in_the_Forest_(1916-18).jpg
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A few more things before the round up:

  • For film nerds and Orson Welles fans out there, be sure to check out the movie Mank on Netflix—a biographical film directed by David Fincher (Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008); Social Network (2010); Gone Girl (2014)) about the screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz who co-wrote the screenplay for Citizen Kane (1941). Having taught Citizen Kane for many years in my film courses, I especially enjoyed all of the nuances of both the screenplay and the cinematography of Fincher’s film that mirror the original classic.

  • Speaking of excellent screenwriting and cinematography, I was finally able to watch the special episode of Euphoria that dropped earlier this week on HBO. The extended scene of Rue (played by Zendaya) and her sponsor Ali (played by Colman Domingo) discussing addiction, survival, and life’s purpose is among the most powerful scenes I have watched all year on television. A must-see series if you have not already watched, and this bonus episode was timed well for our Covid moment.

"Jason Farago on “Gerhard Richter: Painting After All”"
"Jason Farago on “Gerhard Richter: Painting After All”"

artforum.com

"Pantone Picks Two Colors of the Year for 2021"
"Pantone Picks Two Colors of the Year for 2021"

nytimes.com

"Artists’ homemade Christmas cards – in pictures"
"Artists’ homemade Christmas cards – in pictures"

theguardian.com

"George Condo’s Cutism"
"George Condo’s Cutism"

hyperallergic.com

"The Ph.D. Isn’t Working Right Now"
"The Ph.D. Isn’t Working Right Now"

chronicle.com

"Quarantine Brain: Nothing made sense this year — unless you were on the internet."
"Quarantine Brain: Nothing made sense this year — unless you were on the internet."

vulture.com

"Satirical Corporate Website Brands Ecofascism"
"Satirical Corporate Website Brands Ecofascism"

hyperallergic.com

"Here and Now: Baserange’s Marie-Louise Mogensen Believes Fashion Has to Invest in Uncertainty"
"Here and Now: Baserange’s Marie-Louise Mogensen Believes Fashion Has to Invest in Uncertainty"

culturedmag.com

"Two new books have different takes on the question: just what is Islamic Art?"
"Two new books have different takes on the question: just what is Islamic Art?"

theartnewspaper.com

"Seeing grief and longing in art | Senga Nengudi’s "R.S.V.P. I" (VIDEO)"
"Seeing grief and longing in art | Senga Nengudi’s "R.S.V.P. I" (VIDEO)"

moma.org

"Jason Farago on “Gerhard Richter: Painting After All”" "Pantone Picks Two Colors of the Year for 2021" "Artists’ homemade Christmas cards – in pictures" "George Condo’s Cutism" "The Ph.D. Isn’t Working Right Now" "Quarantine Brain: Nothing made sense this year — unless you were on the internet." "Satirical Corporate Website Brands Ecofascism" "Here and Now: Baserange’s Marie-Louise Mogensen Believes Fashion Has to Invest in Uncertainty" "Two new books have different takes on the question: just what is Islamic Art?" "Seeing grief and longing in art | Senga Nengudi’s "R.S.V.P. I" (VIDEO)"
  • Jason Farago on “Gerhard Richter: Painting After All”

  • Pantone Picks Two Colors of the Year for 2021

  • Artists’ homemade Christmas cards – in pictures

  • George Condo’s Cutism

  • The Ph.D. Isn’t Working Right Now

  • Quarantine Brain: Nothing made sense this year — unless you were on the internet.

  • Satirical Corporate Website Brands Ecofascism

  • Here and Now: Baserange’s Marie-Louise Mogensen Believes Fashion Has to Invest in Uncertainty

  • Two new books have different takes on the question: just what is Islamic Art?

  • Seeing grief and longing in art | Senga Nengudi’s "R.S.V.P. I" (VIDEO)

Comment
Wassily Kandinsky, In Grey (1918-19). Kandinsky, whose birthday was this past week on December 4 (1866-1944) made this composition during the height of the Spanish Flu pandemic. At that time, he was helping to organize the Institute of Artistic Cult…

Wassily Kandinsky, In Grey (1918-19). Kandinsky, whose birthday was this past week on December 4 (1866-1944) made this composition during the height of the Spanish Flu pandemic. At that time, he was helping to organize the Institute of Artistic Culture in Moscow in the wake of the Russian Revolution, and only a year later, Kandinsky would depart for Germany and begin teaching at the Bauhaus School.

Weekly Round Up... And A Few More Things

December 06, 2020

My focus this week has been on getting my students and myself to end of this unusual and difficult semester. With final exams just around the corner, the end is somewhat in sight, but only distantly. As such, I will keep my preamble to the round up this week brief, but I did want to follow up on one interesting bit of research that popped up in connection to my discussion about the future of movie theatres in the wake of the global pandemic.

Shortly after I made my post last week, I was curious about how movie theatre owners fared during the 1918 Spanish Flu. From my own understanding of film history at this time, this would have corresponded with the beginnings of the film industry on the West Coast in the wake of the dismantling of the Motion Pictures Patent Company on the East Coast, which had kept monopoly control of the film industry in New York until a group of independent film producers and theatre owners sued the MPPC and moved themselves to California to establish what we know today as “Hollywood.” I found this interesting article in the Hollywood Reporter discussing the threat of the 1918 pandemic to the film industry and then searched a bit more and uncovered this fascinating ad from November 1918.

Charlie Chaplin film promoted in Moving Picture World in November, 1918, at the height of the Spanish Flu pandemic.

Charlie Chaplin film promoted in Moving Picture World in November, 1918, at the height of the Spanish Flu pandemic.

Featuring Charlie Chaplin and the promotion of his latest film, Shoulder Arms, the ad was placed in Moving Picture World Magazine by one of the largest movie theatres in New York at the time, The Strand, thanking people for “taking their lives in their hands” to pack the venue to see the film. Notice how at the bottom of the page, there is the clear instruction to “Avoid Crowds” as directed by the New York Board of Health, but then the contradictory message to support Chaplin and his film. Indeed, the more I have read about and researched this period of history, the more I am realizing how much of what we are collectively experiencing is neither unique nor surprising. The good news of course is that the film industry survived the 1918 pandemic, but the sad news is that many died needlessly because of failure to understand or take seriously how the virus was spread and how deadly it would prove to be (in fact, the death rate in New York caused by the pandemic following in the weeks after this ad was placed were record breaking). All of this to say, stay safe, wear a mask, social distance, and maybe avoid movie theatres for a while longer.

  

"30 Years of the Guerrilla Girls’ Art and Advocacy"
"30 Years of the Guerrilla Girls’ Art and Advocacy"

hyperallergic.com

"‘This Planet is Our Spaceship’: An Interview with Cauleen Smith"
"‘This Planet is Our Spaceship’: An Interview with Cauleen Smith"

nybooks.com

"“Emily in Paris” and the Rise of Ambient TV"
"“Emily in Paris” and the Rise of Ambient TV"

newyorker.com

"Mr. Brainwash and 6 Other People Who Definitely, as Far as We Can Tell, Are Probably Not Banksy"
"Mr. Brainwash and 6 Other People Who Definitely, as Far as We Can Tell, Are Probably Not Banksy"

artnet.com

"Pandemic blues? Online art therapy might help you work through your feelings"
"Pandemic blues? Online art therapy might help you work through your feelings"

cbc.ca

"Stunt artists who claim they're behind the alien monoliths sell new ones for $45,000"
"Stunt artists who claim they're behind the alien monoliths sell new ones for $45,000"

mashable.com

"Daily Newspapers Are Meticulously Cut into Lace Collages by Artist Myriam Dion"
"Daily Newspapers Are Meticulously Cut into Lace Collages by Artist Myriam Dion"

thisiscolossal.com

"Hollywood’s Obituary, the Sequel. Now Streaming"
"Hollywood’s Obituary, the Sequel. Now Streaming"

nytimes.com

"This Issue: Sovereignty"
"This Issue: Sovereignty"

canadianart.ca

Ready to Stop Digging? Changing Your Relationship To Academia (PODCAST)
Ready to Stop Digging? Changing Your Relationship To Academia (PODCAST)

theprofessorisin.com

"30 Years of the Guerrilla Girls’ Art and Advocacy" "‘This Planet is Our Spaceship’: An Interview with Cauleen Smith" "“Emily in Paris” and the Rise of Ambient TV" "Mr. Brainwash and 6 Other People Who Definitely, as Far as We Can Tell, Are Probably Not Banksy" "Pandemic blues? Online art therapy might help you work through your feelings" "Stunt artists who claim they're behind the alien monoliths sell new ones for $45,000" "Daily Newspapers Are Meticulously Cut into Lace Collages by Artist Myriam Dion" "Hollywood’s Obituary, the Sequel. Now Streaming" "This Issue: Sovereignty" Ready to Stop Digging? Changing Your Relationship To Academia (PODCAST)
  • 30 Years of the Guerrilla Girls’ Art and Advocacy

  • ‘This Planet is Our Spaceship’: An Interview with Cauleen Smith

  • “Emily in Paris” and the Rise of Ambient TV

  • Mr. Brainwash and 6 Other People Who Definitely, as Far as We Can Tell, Are Probably Not Banksy

  • Pandemic blues? Online art therapy might help you work through your feelings

  • Stunt artists who claim they're behind the alien monoliths sell new ones for $45,000

  • Daily Newspapers Are Meticulously Cut into Lace Collages by Artist Myriam Dion

  • Hollywood’s Obituary, the Sequel. Now Streaming

  • This Issue: Sovereignty

  • Ready to Stop Digging? Changing Your Relationship To Academia (PODCAST)

 

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© Dorothy Barenscott, 2010-2025