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Thursday, December 19, 2019

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Afrotectopia
BERKELEY, CALIF.

Still Motion

24 Frames, the last work by Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami (1940–2016), is a series of shorts where one still image slowly changes into another. It’s a hypnotic suspension of photography and cinema.

Saturday, December 21, 4:00pm
Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive






Burnaway



  • Good Hair: Akosua Adoma Owusu at the CAC, New Orleans
    December 11, 2019
    Kristina Kay Robinson explores the "cinematic third space" developed by Ghanaian-American filmmaker Akosua Adoma Owusu in works on view in New Orleans.... Read More >

Closing Soon

  • Saturday, December 21: Sally Mann: "Remembered Light & Landscapes" @ Jackson Fine Art, Atlanta
  • Sunday, December 22: Bryan Graf and Emma McMillan @ Atlanta Contemporary, Atlanta
  • Sat., January 4: "VanDer Beek + VanDer Beek" @ Black Mountain College Museum, Asheville
  • Sun., January 5: "Great Force" @ Institute for Contemporary Art at VCU, Richmond
  • Sunday, January 5: John Akomfrah: "Tropikos" @ Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk
  • Saturday, January 8: Cosmo Whyte: "Beneath Its Tongue, The Fish Rolls The Hook To Sharpen Its Cadence" @ MOCA GA, Atlanta

    Most Recent



    NEWS

    News-in-Brief: December 18, 2019

     Dec 18, 2019  0
    In Burnaway’s latest news roundup, NADA makes its third annual gift to PAMM, the High Museum closes its Sally Mann exhibition six weeks early, and more.

    NEWS

    Letter from the Editor: 2019 in Review

     Dec 17, 2019  0
    Burnaway editor Logan Lockner takes a look back at the past year and offers a glimpse of what 2020 holds for the magazine.

    ART REVIEW, FEATURE

    Good Hair: Akosua Adoma Owusu at the CAC, New Orleans

     Dec 11, 2019  0
    Kristina Kay Robinson explores the “cinematic third space” developed by Ghanaian-American filmmaker Akosua Adoma Owusu in works on view in New Orleans.

    FEATURE

    Obstructing Speculative Futures in Little Haiti

     Dec 8, 2019  0
    As Art Week Miami comes to a close, Jameson Paige visits an installation in Little Haiti meant to highlight the perpetually unresolved relationships between art and gentrification.

    CALL FOR ARTISTS

    Call for Artists: December 2019 and Beyond

     Dec 3, 2019  0
    Burnaway’s monthly listing of residency deadlines, calls for submissions, and other artist opportunities for December 2019.

    FEATURE

    Today, Your Native Hosts

     Nov 28, 2019  0
    On this forty-ninth annual National Day of Mourning, Jasmine Amussen considers the work of Native artist Hock E Aye VI, or Edgar Heap of Birds.
    See All




















    NEW YORK

    Community Education

    From January 6 to 17, the School of Afrotectopia is holding two weeks of free evening courses on art, design, technology, and black culture. Applications are open now; preference is given to participants of African descent.

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    OPEN CALL

    Poetry of the Archive

    The Amsterdam-based One Minutes Foundation supports the production and preservation of video art. Their current open call, “everything happened so much,” is organized by artist Jesse Darling, who invites prospective participants “to think through the possibilities of the video-poem, as true and accurate and real as any other form of storytelling, or perhaps, right now, even more so.”

    [APPLY]





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    Brad Troemel red pills the art world 📳🃏


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    A.i.A. | The Program <theprogram@artinamericamag.com> Anular subscrição

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    FEATURED STORY
    Memelord as critic


    WHAT WE’RE READING
    Bad painting on Instagram, how to make a deepfake, a new tool for digital publishing, a virtual studio visit

    ON THE PROGRAM
    Experimental film shorts in Berkeley, classes on tech and black culture in New York, an open call for minute-long video art
    In 2011 Brad Troemel self-published Peer Pressure, a collection of essays on art and social media. I read most of them. They were poorly argued, half-baked, unedited. He made a book for the sake of making a book. It was a way to inflate his CV, motivated by the same logic as his 2010 project Joyce Jordan, a platform for mutual promotion. Joyce was a fictional artist, and if you put her in a group show, “she” would add it to her online CV, incrementally improving the your Google results. In 2014 I wrote an essay for A.i.A. about Troemel and the Jogging, a Tumblr-based art collective he cofounded, and had this to say about his theoretical writing: “Meaning matters little to him; the production of texts is about building and reinforcing authority.”

    But Troemel has renounced the pursuit of the art world’s standard signs of success, and his writing has become more direct and honest. He no longer puts it in long-winded essays but in memes and the captions beneath them on Instagram—more appropriate channels for his anarchic energy. On our website, Travis Diehl argues that Troemel’s Instagram account is an idiosyncratic and novel form of criticism, saying that “his shitposting is also part of a sincere attempt to forge a new sort of relationship to art-making and its infrastructure, beyond a stratifying gallery system, that makes a direct connection to an audience on social media.”
    —Brian Droitcour
    FEATURED STORY
    Memelord as Critic: Brad Troemel Takes the Red Pill (and So Can You)
    In the last year, his critique has matured into a sophisticated theory of art’s social impact by satirizing its trends, institutions, platforms, motivations, and, especially, its hypocrisies and pretensions. —Travis Diehl
    READ MORE ⇨
    FROM THE ARCHIVE
    A hair straightener with a piece of bacon cooking on it, set atop some colorful, floral fabric.
    Young Incorporated Artists 

    What K-Hole and the Jogging produce looks less like art than an aggressively hip viral marketing campaign for the means of distributed power.

    —Brian Droitcour

    READ MORE ⇨
    White guy with ear protection on, spikes stick up on top of his head. There are two balloons hanging on the wall at the same height as his face.
    Avant-Garde Populism

    Instagram is where Jan Hakon Erichsen finds his most consistent, engaged audience. Every post gets hundreds, sometimes thousands, of comments: unending LMAOs, triple crying-laughing emojis, users tagging friends, and the occasional “I don’t get it.”

    —Sean J Patrick Carney

    READ MORE ⇨
    WHAT WE'RE READING
    Anna Elise Johnson discusses paintings by Robin F. Williams in a reflection on how Instagram influences tastes and fashions: “In the era of Instagram STARtists, the criteria by which we evaluate painting—whether good or bad—can collide with how we gauge a successful post.” ⇨ [CARLA]

    A reporter walks through the process of using neural networks to create a deepfake video. His verdict: it’s expensive, and the results look clumsy. ➡ [ARS TECHNICA]

    Triple Canopy introduces B-ber, a new, flexible tool for distributing publications on e-readers, browsers, and elsewhere: “Now the challenge is to consider multiple modes of viewing and reading at once—to recognize that no single channel provides the ultimate experience of a publication, and that each format has affordances and limitations.” ⇨ [TRIPLE CANOPY]

    Company gallery partners with Google to document a 360-degree view of Mary Beth Edelson’s studio as part of the Feminist Institute Digital Exhibit project. ➡ [GOOGLE ARTS & CULTURE]
    Links? Events? Tips?
    Write to us: theprogram@artinamericamag.com
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