A Study in Form (Chapter One)

May 3–Jun 3, 2023
55 Delancey St, New York

A Study in Form is a two-part exhibition curated by Arden Wohl that touches upon various intersections, relationships, dialogues, and companionships between poetry and art; poets and artists. A range of generations, disciplines, and perspectives come together to push beyond the boundary of the visual artifact as an end point of the artwork. Chapter One is accompanied by a newsprint zine including new works from poets that connect directly to selected artworks on view May 3–June 3, 2023. A Study in Form (Chapter Two) will follow in early 2024 with an artist list to be announced, accompanied by the release of a new publication from James Fuentes Press that serves as both an extension and archive of the project.

Chapter One presents artworks by Marcel Broodthaers, Cecily Brown, Jessica Dickinson, Tara Donovan, Jonah Freeman, Steffani Jemison, Melissa Joseph, Leelee Kimmel, Alison Knowles & Rirkrit Tiravanija, Megan Lang, Joe Lewis, Nate Lowman, Mary Manning, Brice Marden, Rosemary Mayer, Jack Pierson, Robert Rauschenberg, Jessi Reaves, Josh Smith, Martine Syms, Danh Võ, and Jonas Wood; alongside new poetry from Alexandra Butler, Kyle Dacuyan, Kay Gabriel, Patricia Spears Jones, Mary Reilly, and David Rimanelli.

DOWNLOAD ZINE


The ecosystem of the creative individual is a hard one to quantify or categorize. Sometimes groups emerge in well-defined movements with easily transmittable names—impressionists, minimalists, feminists—though most often, these descriptive nouns and adjectives only accrue long after the fact. (Alexandra Kollontai and Sheryl Sandberg both belong to the greater history of feminism, for example, but they might be perplexed to find themselves in the same boat.) Often, these names are not self-applied and function more as a marketing device than a useful and plausible heuristic for what is happening in any given historical moment. With any group, there is an individual effort to identify shared characteristics. What is that moment today, and is the situation of culture just as important as the solitary act of creation?