{"id":203573,"date":"2017-07-05T09:01:17","date_gmt":"2017-07-05T13:01:17","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/staring-at-the-sondheim-baltimore-city-paper\/"},"modified":"2017-07-05T09:01:17","modified_gmt":"2017-07-05T13:01:17","slug":"staring-at-the-sondheim-baltimore-city-paper","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/nihilism\/staring-at-the-sondheim-baltimore-city-paper\/","title":{"rendered":"Staring at the Sondheim &#8211; Baltimore City Paper"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>The Sondheim finalists, reviewedand inching toward an art    practice based in resistance        by Rebekah Kirkman        <\/p>\n<p>      In a drawing      from his \"Trump Regime Studies,\" artist William Powhida      depicts a caricature-ish Steve Bannon (labeled as a \"minister      of nihilism\" and also a \"fucking sot\"), Kellyanne Conway (the \"minister of      lies\" and \"Skelator\"), Mike Pence (the \"vice-chancellor\" and      \"Walter White,\" a comparison that's far too benevolent in my      opinion), and others including of course \"the Chancellor,\"      the Donald himself (\"He IS capitalism\"). The piece      accompanies a short essay written by the artist for      Hyperallergic, in which he notes that this drawing was sold      for a couple thousand dollars to benefit a Brooklyn-based      nonprofit that helps \"emerging, under-recognized mid-career      and women artists\" in various ways, which Powhida says \"feels      like a small gesture.\"    <\/p>\n<p>      Elsewhere in the essay, Powhida admits, \"...I keep coming      back to the contradictions inherent in art, such as its      status as private property bought and sold in      marketsincluding benefit auctions. The problems of ownership      and the extreme disparity between profits from labor and      returns on capital have contributed to the social conditions      leading to Trump's election.\" Powhida's writing here focuses      on artists in general, most of whom grow to accept that they      are beholden to this hustle if they want to put their work      into the world.    <\/p>\n<p>      I keep coming back to those contradictions tooboth as a      person who makes art and as one who writes about it. There is      a Trump-shaped penumbra shrouding my critical writing      abilities that sees the whole entire \"art world\" as something      exploitative and unequal in which I sometimes don't want to      participate by even writing about it, or at least not in a      bland and uncritical and altogether cheerleader-y \"review.\"      There is a Trump-shaped ennui that (along with other factors,      such as time) winds up halting me from making art at worst or      lulls me into a complacency that keeps me from changing      course with my own work.    <\/p>\n<p>      I know I am not alone in this.    <\/p>\n<p>      I have already intimated elsewhere in City Paper that it's a      bit reckless to blame this all, this pervasive grief that I      am trusting y'all readers are feeling with us collectively,      on Trump, but it's even more foolish to pretend as if things      haven't gotten markedly worse and scarier.    <\/p>\n<p>      OK, got it, but how do we deal with it?    <\/p>\n<p>      The complexities of the art market are not so prevalent in      Baltimore as they are in New York and other cities that have      been marketed as destinations or centers for art. But maybe      we're getting there: In Baltimore, while there is much      support for art and artists, organizations also use art as a      tool for real estate speculation and development. We don't      have a huge collector base here, though we do have a few      commercial galleries with some big holdings that sell and      travel to some of the major art fairs. Most visual artists in      Baltimore can make their work in studio spaces that are      relatively cheap. And some show their work in artist-run      galleries and occasional college\/university gallery shows      and, even more rarely, in those aforementioned commercial      galleries. Some travel elsewhere to show and sell their work,      or eventually move away entirely. And we do have a lot of      funding for the arts, with the Janet & Walter Sondheim      Artscape Prize (put on by the Baltimore Office of Promotion      & the Arts, which I'll get to soon, stay with me,      please), the Baker Artist Awards, the Greater Baltimore Cultural Alliance's      Rubys Artist Projects Grants, The Contemporary's Grit Fund,      and more, plus awards from the state, like the Maryland State      Arts Council awards. These awards typically go to emerging or      somewhat established adult individuals (and sometimes      collectives), and are funded year after year by various local      and national foundations, benefactors, and supporters of the      arts.    <\/p>\n<p>      Three of this year's seven Sondheim finalists have been      finalists in previous years, too: two in 2015, and one in      2014which was also the year I started contributing to City      Paper's annual coverage of the finalist exhibition. It's an      odd feeling of dj vu, but it's not terribly surprising that      the tastes and interests of out-of-town jurorsparticularly      if they are more often than not based in New York, themselves      working within a highly competitive environmentmight      overlap. Usually established artists, critics, and curators,      the jurors are different each year, and they do often hail      from New York (some occasionally have a Baltimore\/Maryland      connection); this year all three are based in New York. The      Sondheim prize is only open to applicants in Maryland,      Washington D.C., and certain counties and cities of Virginia      and Pennsylvania. BOPA estimates that since around the      award's second year, no fewer than 300, and sometimes more      than 400 artists have applied. So far, eight of 11 winners      since the prize's inaugural year have been based in Baltimore      City. Most of the winners have been white artists. A host of      societal issues and factors keep the art world overwhelmingly      white.    <\/p>\n<p>      I'm sure it feels great to be chosen as a Sondheim finalist.      I'm sure being a semifinalist feels pretty good toosomething      for the resume and a chance to show your work in public. (The      semifinalists exhibition, by the way, is up at MICA from July      21-Aug. 6.) Hell, I bet even just getting through the      submission process alone is something you'd want to toast to.      I'm not knocking anyone for doing the work, not saying we      should get rid of the award. But back to ol' Trump. In light      of everything now, I want to imagine an art world that's less      of a capitalist nightmare and less of a hustle, that's less      dependent on an expensive and privileged art education      (disclosure: I am the recipient of one of those, as well as a      lot of debt). There has always been so much rhetoric that      artists are progressive, that they're on the vanguard, but of      what, and how, and who says?    <\/p>\n<p>      I am wondering what an art practice based in resistance (as      opposed to the shit that got us to where we are      nowcapitalism, racism, xenophobia, Islamophobia, sexism,      homophobia, transphobia, holy god, everything) would look      like, and since we do need money to do things in this world,      how that type of practice might be funded. Maybe it would      involve fewer art-objects-as-commodities, maybe everything      would be more local and more affordable. Maybe there would be      more recognition of the arts and humanities' value in society      and thus more funding for it across the board (a preemptive      RIP to the National Endowment for the Humanities and the      National Endowment for the Arts, whose deaths seem imminent      under Trump). More quality arts education in schools taught      by better-paid artists, who don't have to work three jobs in      order to maintain a studio practice that often keeps them      holed up alone. And I know y'all have better and more      creative ideas than that.    <\/p>\n<p>      When FORCE won the Sondheim last year, it was inspiring to me      that an artist\/activist group whose work aims to right a      vast, seemingly insurmountable wrong in our society (rape      culture and stigma surrounding abuse), to try to help shift      the paradigm and support survivors, would be financially      rewarded for work whose effects are tangible. Maybe the      person who wins this year's Sondheim is several steps ahead      of me and will have big, posi plans for that money. Maybe      they won't; I don't know. It isn't up to me. I'm just a      critic, spitballin' because I care about this shit, and I      love art sometimes but mostly I love it when it hits me in      the gut somehow, and when I can see it affecting other people      in that way.    <\/p>\n<p>      The winner of the 2017 Sondheim prize will be announced at 7      p.m. on July 15 at the Walters Art Museum. Jurors Ruba      Katrib, Clifford Owens, and Nat Trotman selected this year's      finalistsMequitta Ahuja, Mary Anne Arntzen, Cindy Cheng,      Sara Dittrich, Benjamin Kelley, Kyle Tata, Amy Yeewho are      all currently based in Baltimore. Trying to predict a winner      for these awards has never seemed useful or wise to me. Nor      does slapping a haphazard organizing principle onto this      particular juried show, though last year (a year out from the      Baltimore Uprising) the finalists' work was more overtly      political, more in topic than in practice, than it had been      in recent memory. This year, the work is markedly less so,      and generally less moving, with a few exceptions. As a whole,      it falls short of the idea that the Sondheim, one of the      biggest local art awards, represents what it means or what it      could mean to make art right now.    <\/p>\n<p>          Mequitta          Ahuja        <\/p>\n<p>          MaryAnne          Arntzen        <\/p>\n<p>          Cindy          Cheng        <\/p>\n<p>          Sara          Dittrich        <\/p>\n<p>          Benjamin          Kelley        <\/p>\n<p>          Kyle          Tata        <\/p>\n<p>          Amy          Yee        <\/p>\n<p>      (Reginald Thomas II\/For City      Paper)    <\/p>\n<p>      Mequitta Ahuja's paintings generously explore the selfthe      artist's self but also, in a meta way, a painting's self,      commenting on its own history, within a history. Seven      large-scale paintings (the smallest is not quite a square,      its shortest dimension almost 5 feet; the largest is also not      quite a square, its shortest dimension almost 7 feet) work in      a way that's somewhat reminiscent of Chicago painter Kerry      James Marshall's paintings.    <\/p>\n<p>      Ahuja seems to be working toward something similar as      Marshall, in terms of addressing \"the canon\" of Western art      history. Not seeing herself, a woman of color, painted by a      woman like herself represented in most art history books,      Ahuja carves out her own space. Stylistically, these      paintings are similar to the ones she showed as a Sondheim      finalist in 2015, in which she drew upon her African and      South Asian ethnicity and the globalization of art and      culture.    <\/p>\n<p>      Here, Ahuja again employs a bold palette, with methodical,      thick straps of oil paint over a coarse canvas      surfaceimagine loads of paint slathered over a rug, which I      dunno why you'd ever do that, but Ahuja makes it look so      satisfyingto construct paintings within paintings.      'Renaissance Woman' depicts a painting of the artist in a      modest white slip sitting in a typical portrait pose from      that time period. She holds a delicate chain from which      dangles a prism, projecting rainbow light all around it. The      wall label (each painting is accompanied by a short      explanatory label; Ahuja seems to want to ensure her      intentions are crystal clear) references Isaac Newton and      that this woman is like a \"lost, covered-up and recalled      black character.\" Ahuja nods to the ways that, by and large,      the scientific innovations of black and brown people are      erased by a white and Eurocentric narrative of discovery and      genius.    <\/p>\n<p>      The paintings often reference each other, borrowing each      other's compositions. In 'Sales Slip,' a figure (presumably      the artist again) lifts up a red cloth to reveal this      painting within a painting, and lets the painting lean      against her body. Her arm hangs over the edge holding what,      judging by the title, is safe to assume is a sales slip,      partially concealing the face of the painted woman, as if      taunting or shrouding; it's unclear. The painting within this      painting looks like its neighbor 'Renaissance Woman' but      perhaps an earlier or unfinished version, as if to hint at      but not overstate money's effect on art, how it changes,      directs, impedes, and motivates work all at once.    <\/p>\n<p>      Erasure, mystery, and untold or unknowable histories are a      few of the sturdy threads that Ahuja weaves, and nowhere is      that more apparent than 'Border Distilled,' an abridged      version of its neighbor 'Border'here, the environment of the      latter becomes simple geometry, hard edges and an arch, and      all that remains of the latter's seated woman are her two      bare brown feet.    <\/p>\n<p>      Another reading of Ahuja's work might find frustration in her      search for inclusion into a history she has largely been      excluded from. But through these paintings, as she invites      you into her studio, her painting's space, and the realities      directly around and inside of it, Ahuja evolves with this      history, reckoning with it, breaking down from the inside      that elusive, arbitrary position of \"genius.\"    <\/p>\n<p>      (Reginald Thomas II\/For City      Paper)    <\/p>\n<p>      A pie of variegated blue and white and purplish triangles      sits in the center of a large, shiny, black square void in      Mary Anne Arntzen's 'Spider Moon,' one of 14 paintings on      view. Five or six bright red, yellow, and blue-black thin,      nervous lines separate some of the triangles from each other;      a blurry yellow and reddish halo quivers into the surrounding      darkness.    <\/p>\n<p>      'Spider Moon's' smaller sibling, 'Aperture,' hangs across the      space among a row of paintings that are all 14 inches square.      Though 'Spider Moon' feels more person-sized and thus easier      to beckon the viewer to come get lost inside of it,      'Aperture' is the more successful painting. The unelaborate      hesitance of Arntzen's mark works better on a smaller scale;      it feels quick and uninhibited rather than belabored and      beleaguered as some of her larger paintings do.    <\/p>\n<p>      Fence-like, ribbony shapes and interlocking, overlapping      noodles and chutes abound in Arntzen's compositions, which      are at times uneven. The color palettes are occasionally      draba mustard yellow angular boomerang shape overlaps a      similar grass-green shape, among green stripes on a fiery red      background and a from-the-tube yellow in 'Boomerang.' In her      statement, the artist intellectualizes a fairly rote,      by-the-book painter's process within her paintings (\"every      mark is placed in response to the one before\" and culminates      in a space that's \"ambiguous\" and hops between \"abstract form      and illusionism\") while also referencing freehand geometry      and quilt squares.    <\/p>\n<p>      Some sickly color relationships distract from more      interesting and sturdy compositions and shapes, like in 'Poor      Men Want to Be Rich, Rich Men Want to Be King' whose dynamic,      balled-up brush strokes, bound by a spiral and a fury of thin      stripes are beset by harsh yellows and sad beiges and a      chalky orange, a dash of green and a couple purple triangles.      Others work quite well, like how 'Ritual Magic's' overall      harmonious but hot shades of red and violet wind around each      other and make me think of a heating element. But it looks      more like a screen, a sort-of-window or frame structure,      whose view is obstructed by a continuous line that wraps      tightly around it. Arntzen's openness to her process,      content, and where a mark and a movement will lead her      results in an arrangement of work that feels chaotic but      constrained.    <\/p>\n<p>      (Reginald Thomas II\/For City      Paper)    <\/p>\n<p>      There is no other finalist this year who offers more visual      rewards in their work than Cindy Cheng. Here, I'll list some      notes I took while tiptoeing around the artist's visual      jungle gyms: hamster tubes; special rocks; a carpeted,      glitched-out table; koi pond accoutrements; clay donuts; a      big bone\/a little bone; ping pong ball; kinda like a toe      separator but for some creature with like 20 toes at least;      tiny blue dot (hello, wink, Carl Sagan?); things that recall      marbles and mancala and Cracker Barrel games.    <\/p>\n<p>      Though each of the three expansive sculptural pieces is      overwhelming in its own way with so many tiny components and      Easter eggs, a variety of handmade ceramic and wooden      portions and structures along with found\/readymade objects      and possibly discarded materials, you should try to get up      close to her drawings that are framed and hung on the walls      too. The five drawings, from a series called 'Souvenir Room,'      are delicate graphite and charcoal renderings of spaces with      collaged elements. Some of them feel like galleries, which      makes their titles all the more amusing'Souvenir Room #9'      features a bewildering play of light and shadow across a      high-ceilinged space in which multi-leveled and occasionally      translucent plinths display blobby masses; a \"Snake\" (the      game I played on my sister's Nokia cellphone in the early      2000s)-shaped window in the space is what's letting all that      light in, I think, and outside something's oozing down      whatever building we're inside of.    <\/p>\n<p>      The titles of the sculptures provide tangential hints to the      visual poetry she offers: 'Untitled (Straight and Narrow)'      guides your eye toward the four distinct upright sections of      the piece and the oblique and oblong objects within them,      while the title 'Signal\/Lookout' makes me see the objects on      this semi-collapsed, carpeted table as alien aquatic elements      and strange swimming pools.    <\/p>\n<p>      Or that's how I'm seeing it. Cheng really has you frowning      and incredulous throughout; there's so much room for      narratives and associative logic it can be maddeningin a      pleasant wayif you're the type of person who feels like they      need to understand every damn detail. Though she gives you so      much to pore over, she still builds up a boundary of      formalism so that you may never know the exact referent for      that ceramic thing that looks like a giant stick of incense,      for the vaguely topographic map made of foam, for the egg      crate foam, for the ceramic cone atop what looks like a bed      of mangrove roots.    <\/p>\n<p>      (Reginald Thomas II\/For City      Paper)    <\/p>\n<p>      Wherever you're standing while looking at the Sondheim      finalist exhibition, you might be startled by an      unpredictable, strange drum rhythm. It stops for long,      intermittent pauses, and then starts again, a      pitter-pattering. That's coming from Sara Dittrich's      'Going\/Staying (Walters Art Museum),' a kick drum outfitted      with \"various electrical components\" that create a rhythm      corresponding to the artist's footsteps (and stops) as she      walked through the museum. The piece builds more anxiety on      top of my already anxious homeostasis, which I weirdly      enjoykeeping my toes on their toes, as it werea heightened      state of awareness or consciousness. It's unclear why the      steps were recorded at the Walters; it could have easily been      anywhere else, and maybe that's where we're supposed to take      it next, finding a way \"into\" all of the spaces we navigate,      and what effects that attention brings.    <\/p>\n<p>      Dittrich's other works on display here mirror that presence      and absence and awkwardness in the body. In the middle of her      portion of the gallery, large, white, goofy-looking (but also      Goofy-looking) celluclay-sculpted hands and feet sit on low      plinths, the tools of a performance that is documented by way      of 20 photographs, hung in a neat row on the wall to the      left. In this series, titled 'Arrhythmia of the Body,' the      artist swishes and sways and flails her arms and lunges left      and right in her cumbersome hands and feet. Most often      whatever is in motion is blurry.    <\/p>\n<p>      Across from those photos is 'Variations on Listening #5,' a      large square white canvas painted the same shade and slightly      dimpled texture as the wall it hangs on. On the canvas, rows      of tiny white polymer clay ears form a nearly perfect ring      with a hole in the middle. We can intuitively understand the      circle\/ring as something that finds focus (like a lens), that      locates a center, that places us right here, right now. Here,      \"listening\" is looking too; our senses blur into one another      just as the textures of the piece start to blend into the      wall behind it. And then the kick drum steps start up again,      jolting us back out.    <\/p>\n<p>      (Reginald Thomas II\/For City      Paper)    <\/p>\n<p>      Benjamin Kelley's display contains a stark three pieces that      ruminate on time, discovery, futility, the body, and labor,      and pretty much any other relative offshoot of those notions      you might think of if you sit with them and let yourself      wonder.    <\/p>\n<p>      Though still somewhat murky, Kelley's explorations of objects      and their preservation offer a clearer narrative possibility      than the works he presented as a Sondheim finalist in 2015,      which were intriguing but frustratingly obtuse. Here, in his      piece 'Residual Evolutions,' a long, clear acrylic tube      mounted to the wall contains a skillfully carved wooden      skeleton of a right hand (plus part of the radius and ulna),      a thin, long, flaky\/corroded, tapering Tower of Babel-like      structure, and the right-hand glove of astronaut Bonnie      Dunbar's space suit. Kelley's statement notes that this suit      was worn in the 1995 STS-71 Atlantis mission, which was the      first space shuttle mission to dock with Mir, the Russian      Space Station.    <\/p>\n<p>      Cut into the gallery wall nearby is the piece 'Antlophobic      Hymn,' a small display whose design looks straight out of      \"Star Trek,\" featuring two bolted portholes, one holding a      temperature and humidity logger (such as you might find on      the walls around any museum) that glows blue, the other with      a pocket-sized journal with a series of dates and \"weather      conditions and temperatures\" from 1843-'44 which Kelley says      belonged to an unknown author from an unknown location.      Antlophobia, by the way, is a fear of floods; in his      statement Kelley alludes to the front page in this journal,      in which the author wrote about a flood that destroyed their      town and swept away a bridge, a mill, houses, and other      structures. It is an abstracted exercise in empathysince the      author and place are unknown, this recording of data has      become utterly useless to us today. Except for the dates and      times, the handwriting is truly hard to read; it's unclear      what the author was actually trying to keep track of, and all      I can extract from it now is a neurotic dedication.    <\/p>\n<p>      Finally, hanging high across from the long tube piece is 'The      Healer,' the dark blue lab coat belonging to the Walters'      conservator Pamela Betts. Kelley's statement points to      specific moments in time about different components in each      of these works all to say ultimately that here, \"within the      confines of the museum, the objects become relics.\" That's      all, and we're left to ponder who decides what objects are      worth preserving, and who's doing the work to preserve them,      and what is left or written out.    <\/p>\n<p>      (Reginald Thomas II\/For City      Paper)    <\/p>\n<p>      To my own horror, I find myself drawn to an image with a red,      white, and blue color scheme first. It's titled      '52001633_8_Bank of America.' But maybe it's less the colors      and more the off-kilter zig-zag through which the colors      shine; the rest of the composition is black. Oh, and there's      the enticing mystery of the image itselflong, slightly wavy      hair, maybe the hint of the person's face before the rest of      it is obscured into darkness. The person is not the point.    <\/p>\n<p>      Each of Kyle Tata's pieces employ certain tactics of      advertisinga face, a hand grazing a surface, stand-ins for      some kind of desirelayered and disrupted by the zig-zagging,      blocked and dotted patterns found inside of security tint      envelopes. There are a couple other Bank of America-related      prints using those colors, as well as M&T Bank (whose      charity foundation, incidentally, sponsors the $2,500      honorarium each of the non-winning finalists receive) and      PNC.    <\/p>\n<p>      With its focus on the banks' branding, pattern repetition and      obfuscation, and people whose identities remain untouchable      and nonspecific, this body of work is more cohesive than what      Tata showed as a 2014 Sondheim finalist. Though it's still so      formalist it almost hurts, he more or less owns up to that in      his short statement while also alluding to a vague,      underlying vein of consumerism and data and what those things      might mean for us. The C-prints are beautiful in composition      and color, and Tata transforms something as banal as a      teller's metal coin tray into a playful exercise emulating      maybe some elements of a Barbara Kasten piece and a Mies van      der Rohe building.    <\/p>\n<p>      Perhaps purposefully, I keep getting stuck on the surface      here: the hot\/cool glowing and colorful light, the sharp      contrast, the magentas, the geometries, the wiggly shadows,      and the security envelope patterns (that also resemble bus      seat patterns to me). But the import of Tata's subject matter      stays muddled, and I want it to say more.    <\/p>\n<p>      (Reginald Thomas II\/For City      Paper)    <\/p>\n<p>      On one of my visits to the Walters to see the Sondheim show,      as I was looking at one of Amy Yee's other works on display,      a woman walked through and apparently touched one of the      tissues that peek out of 72 \"off-brand Kleenex\" boxes within      the piece 'The Field (Expanded).' The square boxesprinted      with what looks like a stock photo of tall grass, with a very      subtle Giant logo in the cornerare set onto six simple,      staggered wooden risers, like a choir. I had my back turned      but I overheard the museum guard awkwardly telling the woman,      \"Yeah, everything in this space is actually art, so . . . \"      It ultimately wasn't a big deal, which was cool, and I got      where the woman was coming from. I wanted to touch them too.    <\/p>\n<p>      The title of that piece riffs on Rosalind Krauss' influential      1979 essay 'Sculpture in the Expanded Field,' in which the      critic mapped sculpture's shift towards postmodernism as it      had moved distinctly away from the monumental, from being      held up on a pedestal, and so on, and became more enmeshed      literally into the earth or the world more generally around      it. Here though, Yee brings back the pedestal and, in a way,      a ritualthe display feels church-like, but also like a      grocery store endcap. We are meant to revere art, yet art      remains a commodity, with no signs of turning back. So what      is the difference?    <\/p>\n<p>      Each of Yee's works in the show feels like a component of      some larger whole yet to be developeda selection of      head-scratchers. But as she says in her statement, she's      \"interested in the failure of art,\" and how the artist plays      god, but all of her attempts wind up as petty simulacra and      remain so. Like how that lady was reprimanded just for      touching (maybe not even taking) a tissue. A to-scale photo      transfer of a light switch, titled 'Wall Art,' on a wall      almost goes unnoticed. Six laptop-screen-sized inkjet prints      of screenshots of last year's Olympics in Rio, mostly of      in-between moments where there is no action, where the track      or field or winner's stand are empty, are beautiful      compositions. In 'A Far-Off Country,' a silent video of a      flagprinted with a cloudy blue skybillows in the wind      against a cloudy blue sky, and that's all we're allowed to      see of this mystery country. The clouds on the flag look like      they're upside down, too: What kind of lazy jerks or creative      geniuses let that go? Yee seems to want us to shoulder some      of that weight, to do most of the work and the mental      gymnastics to figure it out.    <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>See the original post: <\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/www.citypaper.com\/news\/features\/bcpnews-staring-at-the-sondheim-20170704-htmlstory.html\" title=\"Staring at the Sondheim - Baltimore City Paper\">Staring at the Sondheim - Baltimore City Paper<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> The Sondheim finalists, reviewedand inching toward an art practice based in resistance by Rebekah Kirkman In a drawing from his \"Trump Regime Studies,\" artist William Powhida depicts a caricature-ish Steve Bannon (labeled as a \"minister of nihilism\" and also a \"fucking sot\"), Kellyanne Conway (the \"minister of lies\" and \"Skelator\"), Mike Pence (the \"vice-chancellor\" and \"Walter White,\" a comparison that's far too benevolent in my opinion), and others including of course \"the Chancellor,\" the Donald himself (\"He IS capitalism\"). The piece accompanies a short essay written by the artist for Hyperallergic, in which he notes that this drawing was sold for a couple thousand dollars to benefit a Brooklyn-based nonprofit that helps \"emerging, under-recognized mid-career and women artists\" in various ways, which Powhida says \"feels like a small gesture.\" Elsewhere in the essay, Powhida admits, \"...I keep coming back to the contradictions inherent in art, such as its status as private property bought and sold in marketsincluding benefit auctions. The problems of ownership and the extreme disparity between profits from labor and returns on capital have contributed to the social conditions leading to Trump's election.\" Powhida's writing here focuses on artists in general, most of whom grow to accept that they are beholden to this hustle if they want to put their work into the world.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/nihilism\/staring-at-the-sondheim-baltimore-city-paper\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":5,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187716],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-203573","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-nihilism"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/203573"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=203573"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/203573\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=203573"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=203573"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=203573"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}