Spot 1: Documentary After Truth
Amber Esseiva: Call and Response
Zora J. Murff: Documenting the Shadow Empire
Dark Study: on Emily Jacir, Forensic Architecture, and fugitive documentary
The Perpetual Almost
Spot 2: Looking back and Looking forward
End of Year Letter: 2024 -> 2025
‘Tis the season for taking stock of what we’ve accomplished in 2024, and for looking forward to what the future holds. On behalf of everyone at Art Papers, I want to thank the individuals and foundations who rallied to support our mission this past year.
Spot 3: From the Archives
Jill Magid: Between Words and Deeds
Fausto had tried to speak, but was denied. Instead he fired a gun into the air. Both men reached for the heavens — figuratively (Faust) and literally (Fausto), and both fell, with tragic consequences.
Interview with Carrie Mae Weems
Spiritual Migrations
Spot 4: NO PLACE LIKE HOME
Balconism
Constant Dullaart advocates for intelligent communication, adapted for the state of privacy in the digital age.
New Territories of Queer Separatism
Radical communities update—and revindicate—off-the-grid feminist movements of the 1970s.
Total Reset
Ideas for affordable housing from the Institute for Public Architecture.
Architectural Camouflage and the Class Dynamics of Housing
Gabriel Cira reveals how confounding façades can also reinforce the dominant narrative by masking economic differences to favor a mirage of homogeneity. Photos by Pat Falco.
Spot 5: Art Isn’t Neutral
What do we want from each other after we have told our stories
Jemma Desai’s essay “What do we want from each other after we have told our stories,” whispers abolition and points to the question: What if we say no?
Art Isn’t Neutral
Sara Wintz, Carin Kuoni and Laura Raicovich discuss the impossibility of neutrality
Where is the Art World Left?
Where is the artworld “Left” in the age of “trickle-down,” homelessness, the rise of the Aryan Nation and corporate art coma: a dehumanization of art and artist into a common denominator of profit?
The New Exclusionism
Catchwords like “diversity,” “transculturalism,” “pluralism” cause my antennae to go up, and warning bells of skepticism to go off in my head. Not about these ideas per se, you understand, but about the way they are being implemented in our free-enterprise society in the 1980’s.
Spot 6: ‘Tis The Season
The Possibility of an Airport
On the seductive paradigm of Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International
Michael Rakowitz:
A Desert Home Companion
In an effort to suture the communicative divide between Middle Eastern and American cultures, an artist nourishes discourse through the palate, and the tongue.
Spot 7: Georgia on my Mind
Amanda Grae Platner: It’s Still Not Me, It’s You
In It’s Still Not Me, It’s You at Atlanta’s Echo Contemporary Art, Platner’s self-portraits and installations invite the viewer into her world. She coaxes empathy through a variety of strategies, some that are playful and interactive, others that involve showing pain.