Issue 06: Timestamp
Winter 2021
$18.00
In “Time Stamp,” we sought to capture all the unraveling, uncertainty, learning, and vulnerability of the moment. Looking back, 2020 was more than the year of the pandemic: it was a year of experimentation, community growth, protest against racial injustice, and democratic demonstration. Throughout its pages, this issue contains subtle demarcations of time. The following writings offer a glimpse back at how its uneven progression shapes our understanding of the world around us. We hope that readers will simply be invited to listen and learn.
Cover: Cicely Carew, For what is bitter and what is sweet is all for my growing, 2020.Subscribe and Save
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In this Issue
Title
Author
Category
Link
Letter from the Editor
Jameson Johnson
Letter
Letter from the Editor
Nakia Hill
Letter
To be a Painting: Cicely Carew on What is Bitter and What is Sweet
Mallory A. Ruymann
Conversation
READ
Cristi Rinklin’s Recent Paintings Speak of Solitude, Anxiety, and Hope
Martina Tanga
Conversation
Tiny Art for Uncertain Futures: A Conversation with Eben Haines of Shelter in Place Gallery
Jameson Johnson
Conversation
READ
Change With(out) a Revolution: Where Institutions Fail Us
Jenna Crowder
Critical Perspective
How Cemeteries Are Being Transformed Into Sites for Public Art
Olivia Deng
Critical Perspective
Dislodging the Cultural Infrastructure of Indigenous Peoples’ Dispossession
Erin Genia, Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate
Critical Perspective
READ
To the Thirteenth Floor: Thoughts on Plastics, Proximity, and Presence
Leah Triplett Harrington
Feature
Stay Safe, Stay Home: Road Text in a Time of Contagion
Alex Lukas
Artist Project
Blutopia
Shaka Dendy
Artist Project
Subversive Celebration: Photography of Black Joy and Healing in a Summer of Reckoning
Jonathan Rowe
Revel in Black Excellence
READ
Making Space for Gen Z: The Impact of Young Voices in Community Art Initiatives
Asiyah Herrera
Revel in Black Excellence
READ
Embodying Art: The Black, Immigrant, and Queer Body on Display slandie prinston Revel in Black Excellence
slandie prinston
Revel in Black Excellence
On Armor and Empowerment with Perla Mabel
Lex Weaver
Revel in Black Excellence
Uprooting Truths and Painting them Boldly: In Conversation with Destiny Palmer
Elizabeth TiBlanc
Revel in Black Excellence
Astro Returns to the Galaxies
Nakia Hill
Revel in Black Excellence
Wayfinding Exhibition Expands the Critical Possibilities of Historic Maps as Artists Mine Archives at the Addison Gallery
Shana Dumont Garr
Review
READ
A Dance Between Past and Present: Chantal Zakari’s “A Work in Progress” at Kingston Gallery
Karolina Hac
Review
READ
Sensing Growth in the Cracks: Beatrice Modisett at Montserrat College of Art Galleries
Lydia Gordon
Review
READ