2016 Spring Exhibitions: Chapter 2
Hessel Museum of Art
The Center for Curatorial Studies presents exhibitions and projects curated by second-year students in its graduate program in curatorial studies and contemporary art. The students have organized these exhibition and projects as part of the requirements for the master of arts degree.
Student-curated exhibitions at CCS Bard are made possible with support from the Rebecca and Martin Eisenberg Student Exhibition Fund; the Mitzi and Warren Eisenberg Family Foundation; the Audrey and Sydney Irmas Charitable Foundation; the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation; the Board of Governors of the Center for Curatorial Studies; the CCS Bard Arts Council; and by the Center’s Patrons, Supporters, and Friends.
Mother lode examines the corporeal delivery and embodiment of language, as well as its visual properties in order to undermine its discursive construction. In reviewing this materiality of language, the exhibition draws out affective potentials to rethink and create new relationships between individuals and their environment.
We Are All Traitors explores the cunning construction of artistic subjectivity in the work of American artist Bunny Rogers and German artist Cosima von Bonin.
Technical images have come to increasingly assume the role of carrying information once transferred by symbolic texts, signaling a shift into an era written in code that is not immediately seen. Praising the Surface concentrates on the seemingly incorporeal surface of images. The exhibition gathers a group of textile, digital and sculptural image works in order to decode the technical image and assert that the technical demands its own adequate consciousness.
How is information carried along? Some like to imagine an infrastructure that calculates and passes numbers and vowels smoothly along, speaking for us, as for the messy, earthy order of things. Third Nature upends familiar plot lines endemic to current obsessions with immaterial flows, instead privileging other logics and syntaxes to chronicle the constant morphing of matter and energy into structures of power.
Spooky Action gathers a sequence of artworks that, in various and sometimes conflicting ways, propose operations of instantaneous relation. As its title suggests, the exhibition poses the curatorial as a space for the opening up of unexpected interactions and strange proximities- happenings difficultly reconciled with the laws of the universe as we know them.
Abstract Sex* explores the expansion and dispersion of sex in material, biochemical, and technological formations, positing a mode of post-sex arising from the destabilization of the categories of gender and humanity.
- after Luciana Parisi
Overburden explores a group of artworks and their relationship to their contextual conditions. Works are dense composites that osmose or absorb contexts and information. Through the use of abstraction, texture, stillness, and displacements artists work at the interstices and paradoxes of institutional realms.
what is left of what has left is a 12’’ vinyl record mix of works by artists, DJs, and musicians. Acting as a site for voices, ideas and propositions, the album, and its accompanying listening room, present a sampling of disparate modalities of sonic lineages and experiences from within the contemporary African diaspora.