Spot 1: HORROR AFTER HORROR

HORROR AFTER HORROR

Horror After Horror

This issue, Horror After Horror, explores a range of interpretations and evocations of Horror as a medium of displacement through which to process extreme feelings and cultural conflicts. The title alludes both to the relentlessness of horrific events unfolding on a global scale and to the anticipation and unthinkability of what could come next.

Type:
Letters
Source:
Fall 2025
Credit:
Re'al Christian + Sarah Higgins

Listen to Our Muertos—Emperatriz Plácido San Martín

Emperatriz Plácido San Martín is an artist, activist, writer, and tattooist based in Lima, Peru and Brussels, Belgium. She works across word and image,...
Type:
Interviews
Source:
Fall 2025
Credit:
Interview / Camila Palomino

Plantation Horror

Plantations, as we understand them, declined after Emancipation. But the plantation of the American South has endured in the cultural imagination because of its ability to relentlessly innovate. The Southern plantation—as a place, and as an idea—has become decoupled from its violent past, making it easier to commodify for public consumption.

Type:
Features
Source:
Fall 2025
Credit:
Text / Frances Cathryn

Spot 2: 1990 ARCHIVE FEATURE “ON CRITICISM”

1990 ARCHIVE FEATURE “ON CRITICISM”

SPECIAL 1990 ISSUE ON CRITICISM

In this archival spotlight collection, we’re looking back at ART PAPERS Vol. 14 No. 6 from November/December 1990. This special...
Type:
Collections

Criticism and Theory

This essay was originally published in ART PAPERS November/Decmber 1990, Vol 14, Issue 6. In the 1970s, as wave after...
Type:
Features
Source:
November/December 1990
Credit:
Text / John Johnston

The Criticism of Quality and the Quality of Criticism

This essay was originally published in ART PAPERS November/Decmber 1990, Vol 14, Issue 6. The New York Times headline was...
Type:
Features
Source:
November/Decmber 1990
Credit:
Text / Patrice Koelsch

The Role of Art Criticism in the Community

This essay was originally published in ART PAPERS November/Decmber 1990, Vol 14, Issue 6. It was the scariest morning of...
Type:
Features
Source:
November/December 1990
Credit:
Text/ Doug Sadownick

Spot 3: IT’S ALIVE

IT’S ALIVE

TJ Shin: Unbecoming Human

Los Angeles–based artist TJ Shin’s work centers on living processes. It explores the felt experience of postcoloniality through intimate sensorial...
Type:
Interviews
Source:
Fall 2022
Credit:
Interview / Re’al Christian

I Will Not Be Purified

Anyone who has ever been life-threateningly ill will know the desperation it breeds. You’ll try anything. You’ll do anything. And when treatments fail, and doctors—shockingly unskilled in empathy—shrug and suggest this means you will die, you start looking anywhere for help.

Type:
Features
Source:
Fall 2021
Credit:
Text / Sophie Strand

Parasite

Everyone has parasites. If you’ve ever eaten food, drunk water, had sex, or spent time in a forest, someone else...
Type:
Glossary
Source:
Winter 2022/23
Credit:
Text / Elvia Wilk

Symbionts: Contemporary Artists and the Biosphere

Each collaborative entity mobilizes its own kind of micro-performance, but together they maintain a coherence through the way we simultaneously apprehend them in the sensorium. As such, the materials feel less instrumentalized by aesthetics and more mysterious.

Type:
Reviews
Source:
February 1, 2023
Location:
Cambridge, MA
Credit:
Text / Laurel V. McLaughlin

Spot 4: QUEER VOICES

QUEER VOICES

Make Me Feel Mighty Real: Drag/Tech and the Queer Avatar

Tay was born a teenage girl chatbot on March 23, 2016. Her parents, a crew of Microsoft employees, designed her as...
Type:
Reviews
Source:
April 19, 2023
Location:
Los Angeles, CA
Credit:
Text / Patty Gone

Choreographies of the Impossible, the 35th Bienal de São Paulo

Inhabian, Filipina goddess of wind, blows air up a wooden Marilyn Monroe’s skirt. Mickey Mouse dons a Darth Vader-style helmet,...
Type:
Reviews
Source:
May 10, 2024
Location:
São Paulo, Brazil
Credit:
Text / Patty Gone

Christian Walker

Active in Boston and Atlanta from the mid-1970s to the mid-1990s, Christian Walker was a path-making Black gay artist, critic,...
Type:
Collections
Source:
ART PAPERS Archives

Representing Lesbian Subjectivities

ART PAPERS November/December 1994—Representing Lesbian Subjectivities—guest edited by artist Patricia Cronin, features essays originally written for Representing Lesbian Subjectivity, a...
Type:
Collections
Source:
ART PAPERS Archives
Credit:
Jillian McManemin

Spot 5: ENTOMOPHOBIA

ENTOMOPHOBIA

Xandra Ibarra: Endurance and Excess

Alexis Wilkinson and Xandra Ibarra discuss cockroach consciousness.

Type:
Interviews
Source:
Spring/Summer 2019
Location:
New York, New York
Credit:
Text / Alexis Wilkinson

An Eye for An Eye — Bambitchell’s Bugs and Beasts Before the Law

Bugs and Beasts works to remind viewers that such stories aren’t simply dusty curiosities from the footnotes of history books, but practices that fundamentally shaped how we came to understand the intersections between performance, punishment, and the social and legal limits of personhood. 

Type:
Features
Source:
Fall 2021
Location:
Seattle, WA
Credit:
Text / Daniella Sanader

Of Oysters, Roaches, and New Pessimism in Hong Kong

It’s all very Videodrome. That body horror manifests in phone-breath-bed 3 (2023), a sculpture presented in its own small room. A silicone face emerges out of a Perspex panel, where, lower down, a silicone slab forms a womblike concave depression. The panel hovers over the form of a hospital bed with the support of gray plastic piping, whose mattress is a screen-skin painting with creased dermal folds framing silicone protrusions that swell from the flatness.

Type:
Reviews
Source:
June 29, 2023
Location:
Hong Kong
Credit:
Text / Stephanie Bailey

Spot 6: RADIATION PREOCCUPATION

RADIATION PREOCCUPATION

Chernobyl

“What is the cost of lies?” HBO’s miniseries Chernobyl opens with this dark rumination of dying Soviet chemist Valery Legasav’s....
Type:
Reviews
Source:
Spring/Summer 2019
Credit:
Text / EC Flamming

The Energy Paradox

Japanese artists’ and cultural workers’ strategies for response to the Fukushima disaster.

Type:
Features
Source:
Spring/Summer 2019
Location:
Tokyo, Japan
Credit:
Text / Jason Waite

Because the Sky Will Be Filled With Sulfur—Jeremy Bolen

It is with grace that Jeremy Bolen’s exhibition Because the Sky Will Be Filled With Sulfur tackles the immense amount...
Type:
Atlanta, Reviews
Source:
August, 3rd, 2022
Location:
Atlanta, GA
Credit:
Text / Noah Reyes

Arata Isozaki, Re-Ruined Hiroshima, Photomontage, 1968

Repeated throughout his career and intoned almost like a dirge, the potent phrase “The city of the future lies in...
Type:
Reviews
Source:
Fall 2023
Credit:
Text / Nicholas Risteen

Spot 7: FROM THE GLOSSARY

FROM THE GLOSSARY

anxiety

On fear, inhibition, and “freedom.”

Type:
Glossary
Source:
July/August 2016
Credit:
Text / Kimberly Drew

Environment

The poet Theognis, back around the sixth century BCE, celebrated the octopus for its “ingenuity” in mimicking “the color of...
Type:
Glossary
Source:
Fall 2023
Credit:
Text / Drew Zeiba

Athleticism

The Athleticism of Rest I descended from a plane out of Chicago, still steamy from the hotbeds of a world premiere...
Type:
Glossary
Source:
Summer 2023
Credit:
Text / Jerron Herman

Auscultation

Artifact Auscultation: A Speculative Examination for Mati Diop’s Dahomey Auscultation, n., the action of listening to sounds from the heart,...
Type:
Glossary