In Print: The Southwest

The history of the Southwest is long and vexed. Many think of America as developing from east to west, from the original 13 colonies to settlements made in the name of Manifest Destiny. But the West in all its richness was there, of course, long before it was “discovered” by venturers from elsewhere. The region has been home to a palimpsest of cultures, but the gruesome theft of land from Indigenous people remains a defining trauma. The southernmost parts of the Southwest at one time belonged to Mexico; today that area is embroiled in battles over immigration, and scarred by a former president’s xenophobic desire to build a wall. Plagued by drought, the entire Southwest tolls the ominous bell of climate change.

All of this is evident from the sky. As Jackson Arn writes in this issue, in a fascinating piece about aerial photography of the region, the idea of the Southwest “has always been as much God’s-eye as ground-level.” In these pages, you will find meditations on all kinds of art produced in—or about—the Southwest, as well as accounts of how the region has been represented. In postwar art history, the Southwest is synonymous with Land art, but, as Sean J Patrick Carney writes in his kaleidoscopic consideration of Walter De Maria’s Lightning Field, that art has more fraught intersections with seamy aspects of American culture than some might think.

Listen beautiful relax classics on our Youtube channel.

If borders seem to disappear in the air, they also blur on the ground, a phenomenon that Nadia Rivera Fellah explores in her essay dealing with photographs and other artworks related to cross-border migrant communities. The art of that locale records history in different ways, from a collaborative installation that evokes the radiation poisoning experienced by Navajo mine workers to renderings of Pueblo people by Rose B. Simpson that, as writer Lou Cornum puts it, “feel like an Indigenous retelling of Mad Max.” I hope you come away from this issue with a deeper understanding of a complex and captivating place.

Sarah Douglas, Editor in Chief

A painting dominated by hot pink washes. Gestural brush strokes show figures that are faintly visible. One, in the foreground, is more details than the rest and appears lounging; there are 2-5 more, it's hard to tell. Most of the lines are renderede in burgundy but there are also purples and yellows, too.
Kylie Manning: Now and Then, 2022, oil on linen, 72by 96 inches.

DEPARTMENTS

NEW TALENT: CHARISSE PEARLINA WESTON
by Chris Murtha

Using panes and slumped glass, the sculptor examines the fraught relationship between transparency and Blackness.

SIGHTLINES
Novelist Sam Lipsyte tells us what’s on his mind.

THE EXCHANGE: BIOGEOLOGY
by Nina Canell with Sophie Roosth

An artist and an anthropologist discuss biomineralization, timescales, and the definition of life.

HARD TRUTHS: FIRE SAFETY
by Chen & Lampert

Artist-curators Howie Chen and Andrew Lampert advise readers on the perils of listening to art advisers and navigating NFT regret.

CRITICAL EYE: HUNGRY LISTENING
by Amalie Dublon

Mariah Carey’s 1997 hit “Honey” is rife with critically rich issues of pleasure and debilitating need.

ONE WORK: EXPANDED EXPANSION
by Cassie Packard

An Eva Hesse sculpture from 1969 combines a large accordion format with pioneering use of materials like latex and polyester resin.

PROFILE: JUMANA MANNA
by Kaleem Hawa

A video artist and sculptor honors Palestinian peasant politics.

BOOK REVIEW
Lucy Ives on Julia Voss’s Hilma af Klint: A Biography and the artist’s multivolume catalogue raisonné.

Installation view shows a glowing orange desert scene projected on a freestanding wall with a metal armature angled toward a set of bleachers. There are two speakers under the bleachers and two hanging from the ceiling.
Lucy Raven: Demolition of a Wall (Album 2), 2022, video with quadrophonic sound.

FEATURES

Listen beautiful relax classics on our Youtube channel.

AT HOME IN THE BORDERLAND
by Nadiah Rivera Fellah

Artists such as Louis Carlos Bernal, Ronny Quevedo, Amalia Mesa-Bains, and Laura Aguilar capture the tension between migrant domesticity and personal nonconformity.

GOD’S-EYE VIEWS
by Jackson Arn

Aerial photography captures the Southwest’s natural splendor, explosive urban development, and military secrets.

LIGHTNING IN A BOTTLE
by Sean J Patrick Carney 

A visit to Walter De Maria’s Lightning Field prompts reflections on con games in the American West, old and new.

SHOCK WAVES & WET CONCRETE
Interview with Lucy Raven

The Arizona native talks about growing up in the Southwest and her work related to the region. A special pull-out print accompanies the article.

FROM THE GROUND UP
by Elizabeth S. Hawley

Diné women artists often draw upon cultural tradition to address today’s ecological crises.

SCRIPTS FOR THE LAND 
by Erica DiBenedetto and Kelly Montana

The paintings of activist and pedagogue Felice Lucero are rich with allusion to Pueblo history and rapport with the earth.

DROUGHTCORE
by Lou Cornum

Rose B. Simpson’s figurative ceramics and automotive sculptures express Native American resistance to cultural erasure and environmental emergency.

Two people, older olive-skinned men, are standing on a wooden structure with a mountain, water, and building in the background. One is dressed in a green robe that is possibly religious; the other has on a red windbreker.
Jumana Manna: Wild Relatives, 2018, video, 1 hour, 4 minutes.

REVIEWS

Isaac Julien  
Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia
Alexander R. Bigman  

Tala Madani 
Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles
Annabel Osberg 

Zoe Leonard 
Hauser & Wirth, New York 
Louis Bury

Jorge Tacla  
Cristin Tierney, New York 
Ara H. Merjian 

Cannupa Hanska Luger 
Center for Craft, Asheville, North Carolina 
Robert Alan Grand

Kylie Manning 
Pace, Los Angeles 
Tyler Malone 

Kaari Upson  
Sprüth Magers, Los Angeles 
Liz Hirsch 

Rosa Barba  
Esther Schipper, Berlin 
Emily Watlington

Source: artnews.com

No votes yet.
Please wait...
Loading...