Saturday, October 12, 2024
HomePraxis Center for AestheticsAre We Really As Great As We Think We Are?

Are We Really As Great As We Think We Are?

“If having a soul means being able to feel love and loyalty and gratitude, then animals are better off than a lot of humans.”

-James Herriot, All Creatures Great and Small

Too often, perhaps, we humans fail to consider the true order of the world. With our buildings and big ideas, sprawling cities and frenetic highways, we can be guilty of believing ours is the pinnacle way of life. In the worst instances, this can lead to the idea that animals are somehow less, somehow not as worthy of the kind of dignity and care given to our fellow human beings. Anyone who has seen the protective love of a mother of any species or witnessed animal communication without a single human word knows beyond the shadow of a doubt that animals share more of our complexity than we sometimes admit.

Khalilah Birdsong joined us to talk about her recent show, Litany, which ran until April 3 at Voltz Clarke Gallery. For the show, she drew on Audre Lorde’s poem, A Litany for Survival. Birdsong found a lot of influences between Lorde’s words and her own daily life. Some of the markings on her paintings are drawn directly from that daily life, walking through the world as a Black woman. This exhibition represents the first time Birdsong has shown the underlayers in her work. To learn more, listen to the complete interview.

Sara Stern discussed her recent installation, Study for a Scene, which was on view at Ortega y Gasset Projects through February 11. Stern tells us she is interested in setting up scenarios for herself in which she can trick herself into thinking she is preparing as one might in a rehearsal, allowing her to play a little longer. In the case of this show, she considered the study for a scene in which the glass of a window is dealing with the repercussions of mirroring the sky as a material in a built environment. To learn more, listen to the complete interview.

A few words to keep in your pocket

It is only when we are willing to reconsider our place in the world that we begin to understand it.

Outings

Join me at Yossi Milo Gallery for a group show featuring Magdalena Abakanowicz, Jennifer Bartlett, Lauren Luloff, and Rachel Mica Weiss

Interviews are available on iTunes as podcasts, and for Android, please click here. All weekly essay pieces are here in a shareable format. The full archive of interviews is here.

More books to read

Ours is a community of readers. Tell us what books you’re reading now by adding your titles to our reading list here. Explore the work of Sophie Calle here. Praxis member Sandi Ludescher has set aside fiction for a moment to explore The Painterly Print: Monotypes from the Seventeenth to the Twentieth Century, a publication from the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

Opportunities

The Hopper Prize grants artists recognition and support through bi-annual open calls judged by diverse curators. It celebrates artistic excellence across all mediums. Visit the website to learn more. The deadline for the spring grant is May 14.

 

Brainard Carey is an author, artist and educator. He is the director of Praxis Center for Aesthetics and is currently faculty at the School of Visual Arts in NYC. He has written six books for artists, most recently Making it in the Art World. He also has a new book coming out in the Spring of 2024, The Problems in the Art World: An Artist’s A-Z Action Guide, which is available for preorder.
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