What I did in the studio today.
Thinking about commodities of the everyday, what it really means to dematerialize and if some people exist better IRL as garments.
So thankful for my models Ali & Sam.
Jules of Nature
Cosmic Funnies
Sade Olutola
i don't do bad sauce passes

Origami Around
$LAYYYTER
Sweet Seals For You, Always

JBB: An Artblog!
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
noise dept.
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

No title available
YOU ARE THE REASON
AnasAbdin
Peter Solarz

Product Placement
trying on a metaphor
Show & Tell
hello vonnie

★
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Russia
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from Australia

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Italy

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from Romania
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
@colon-y
What I did in the studio today.
Thinking about commodities of the everyday, what it really means to dematerialize and if some people exist better IRL as garments.
So thankful for my models Ali & Sam.
Contemporary Art’s fantasy that its consequences are only for our interpretation requires a suspension of disbelief tantamount to that required by the most absurd Hollywood movies. Meanwhile, Contemporary Art continues to prototype the exploitation of immaterial labor whilst selling critique as an elitist commodity that provides easy listening for the failed political Left. And the romantic myth worth dispelling here is that art originates in its initial purity, only to be corrupted by its market. One need only look at how innovations in Tuscan banking begat the Italian renaissance to understand how art has always been prefigured by its market. We tend to get the art that new markets need and by 2006, Contemporary Art had become a very sophisticated system of value creation with the turbo-charged art system that emerged during the preceding financial boom requiring artists to provide – at its peak – around $60 billion a year (according to artnet.com) worth of window-dressing for art’s three main economic functions: -the acquiring of status -the cleansing of conscience and -and the sheltering of tax And it may once have seemed as though Contemporary Art would continue its biennializing expansion forever, as sure as the neoliberal certainty that the era of big government was over. Contemporary Art was seen at the time as a universal, non-specific non-genre, just as it’s neoliberal world was sold as the product of non-ideological, pragmatic economic strategies. But, as the consequences of 2007’s US subprime mortgage crisis unfolded into a global recession, the world’s strongest new super-economies (and eventually the US itself) grew through massive state intervention as the economic rationale for the neoliberal project collapsed, leaving only a diminished quasi-religious belief in markets in its place. But looking outside the envelope of this consumption bubble we could see that both Contemporary Art and neoliberalism perpetuated a very particular (and pretty much identical) type of subjectivity – both interpellating the viewer / consumer / citizen as a liberated, autonomous individual. And it’s exactly this Kantian subjectivity that we artists have become experts in producing by addressing our viewers through work that’s for interpretation, with space for the viewer to be free to experience art on their own individual terms. Kant’s paradigm that reality can only be correlated to our experience of it has produced a myth (with no scientific basis) that mankind is ontologically distinct to all that is not mankind, with our cognition privileged over the interdependencies and contingencies of a world that is not actually dependent on us. This myth is replicated in Contemporary Art’s architecture of spectatorship, organized with us at its center, and requiring us to complete its reality.
Christopher Kulendran Thomas, “ART & COMMERCE: Ecology Beyond Spectatorship” (via ejanefoto)
May 17th. WAIT opens. New Media Survey. I curated it. Check the link.
Opening reception from 6:30 to 8:30pm. Featuring Soundsets on Project 4’s outdoor terrace: DC sound artist Exaktly at 7pm, followed by an ambient sound performance by chukwumaa. Project 4 is pleased to present WAIT, a new media exhibition presenting video, sound, installation and performance works by artists chukwumaa, Larry Cook, E. Jane and Tiona McClodden. The exhibition is conceived and curated by E. Jane. The concept of the show reflects the new media artist’s challenge of capturing viewer attention and focus in a highly saturated, over-stimulating digital landscape. With constant and instantaneous consumption of images, video and sound across platforms that are fully embedded into daily life, a new framework is steering our perceptions of our world and our selves. From viral sound bytes to fleeting Snapchats, the scanning/filtering/processing of media has reached a rapid-fire pace. For artists working in this realm, a collective aim is for viewer access at a deeper level. E. Jane asks, “How do we get an audience to wait and enter the work?”
Did a set for Utrecht Art Supply’s Blick Madness event. Was fun!
chukwumaa
Sketches for Rope
Ultrachrome pigment print.
Three editions of 6.
6” x 4”, 2011
My work in general always tends to address and explore the interactions and dissonances between the Individual and the Group (or Community, if you will).
Specifically at play in ‘Sketches for Rope’ are ideas about the kinds of difficulties the individual in a consumer-based culture must contend with. They at times engage in their own agency through control of their financial situation and personhood, but succumb to total obscuration and inundation at other points.
In ‘Sampson’, the actor, better yet, the acted-upon, experiences no such balance. They have thoroughly submitted to the weakening/manipulation of their own identity and image to be more readily accepted into a community that exposes very specific standards for appearance. The question here is if the sitter has chosen voluntarily to assimilate in this way or if it has been forced upon them. Is it possible for both to be taking place concurrently?
This is the sound piece from my current show, From Ode to Elegy, at Pleasant Plains workshop in Washington, DC. The show will be up until November 30th. This piece is an audio self-portrait that was installed next to the 19 prints from the show. The piece was constructed from a walk I took using the route I would normally take to photograph the series, (already posted -Georgia Ave. Raw recording) from Irving to Kennedy and back, traveling via the 70 bus to get up the hill. I took that recording and then made samples, and turned the samples into an abstract composition of my experience in the space. It’s technically an audio self-portrait. Please listen to it via headphones or good speakers. Do not simply play via computer speakers, especially macbook speakers. I repeat DO NOT PLAY VIA MACBOOK SPEAKERS. This is also the first of many SCRAAATCH pieces.
Photos from a studio session by @antoineraps
Photo: Image from FAUST WALK performance by Wilmer Wilson IV, images by E. Jane forthcoming.
FAUSTGATE by Wilmer Wilson IV + chukwumaa (pdf)
On 16 September 2013, the tragic Navy Yard shooting incident occurred in Washington, DC; simultaneously, Wilmer Wilson IV staged “FAUST WALKS,” a performance that involved fellow artists E. Jane and chukwumaa. In the fallout of both the performance and shooting, the three artists were accosted by police officers on an anonymous tip by a concerned Georgetowner. Very soon after, Eames Armstrong’s new critical platform, PERI0D launched by publishing Jane’s response and recounting of the day’s events. This in turn led to coverage in the Washington City Paper by arts editor Ally Schweitzer. Below, Wilson and chukwumaa discuss the event and ensuing situations.
On the Performance + Shooting
WILMER: At about 10:15 am on the day of the performance, I learned via Twitter that a shooting was in progress in the Navy Yard area. Concerned, I did as much research as I could; the reports I found at that time indicated that only a few people had been wounded, and the shooter was contained. Despite the unfolding tragedy and uncertainty of the situation, I thus made the decision to continue with the performance as best we could based on that context. I relinquished my phone, which served as my primary source of information, for the duration of the performance beginning at 10:30am. I never imagined the shooting to become as bad as it did.
chukwumaa: The performance was a roving one, so we had a lot of ever-shifting ground to cover, as performer (Wilson), performance documenter (Jane) and performance assistant (myself), respectively.
I operated Wilmer’s phone for the duration of the performance, to live-tweet FAUST WALK, with intermittent breaks for E and the CONNERSMITH gallerists to correspond on Wilmer’s whereabouts. In addition, I employed my truck in the delivery of Wilmer and the ladder to the start point of the performance, as well as to assist E in following and photographing the performance. E’s challenge was following Wilmer and artfully attaining the shots they’d discussed. My challenge was keeping up with both Wilmer and E in DC traffic without accident or citation. I was practically a primary audience and the performance was a totally engrossing activity. Other events were pushed out of my mind for the duration of the performance.
WILMER: Both E. Jane and chukwumaa did a phenomenal job in supporting the infrastructure of my performance. They acted calmly, made sound decisions when necessary, and lent their great skill to the overall aesthetic and composition.
On the Police Encounter
chukwumaa: We noticed the police trailing us when we packed up and left the harbor at the end of FAUST WALK, and stopped when they flagged us down. When I first stopped, they commanded me to turn off the vehicle and put my hands out of the window. I was pretty terrified, because I’d (1) never heard that command before and (2) more police vehicles were showing up as we were getting these commands, including one truck that swerved from off M st to park directly in front of me. Both E and Wilmer were alarmed too.
WILMER: There was no indication that we were being stopped in relation to the Navy Yard shooting until well into the progression of the encounter, after the police felt ready to explain their reasoning. That preceding period of uncertainty was harrowing, as we reeled to think of any logical reason for having been stopped and because the initial police response was so vehement.
chukwumaa: Eventually some officers came to speak to us and E, understanding the weight and potential dynamics of the situation, overcame her fear and spoke directly and clearly to the officers about what she felt was an unfair stop. This actually calmed the officers as they shifted from barking orders to explaining the situation. They soon realized they didn’t have a situation on their hands, as reported to them, and quickly sent us on our way.
On E’s Essay
chukwumaa: You mentioned the core of the issue with the conversation around this incident possibly being the egging on of sensationalism, right?
WILMER: I don’t have firsthand evidence of the exact exchange(s) that occurred, but I do know that the bulk of E. Jane’s peri0d essay changed dramatically from its initial form. The alleged impetus was the stylistic preference of an editor. The final edit contextualized the performance and its parameters less, altered passages deemed “academic,” and focused more on the police encounter and all its confusion.
On the Fallout
chukwumaa: It seems that the places where the most responsibility for these events lie have been thus far ignored. The anonymous tipster had the privilege of acting on fear without recoil, though we in the car, did not. Considering the sudden and jarring shift we experienced from “ah, the performance is over” to “ah, there are several police, many bystanders and a cameraman surrounding us” all of our responses were reasonable and valid, period.
Likewise, the editorial decision to lead the launch of an art platform with such a charged, raw and honest response hasn’t been questioned as much as E has for simply sharing both her artistic and human response to the absurd situation.
I lastly noticed a kind of critique of a response to the situation, at all, as some sort of disrespect or affront to the experience of those affected by the shooting. To put it simply, this situation was an effect of the shooting too and sharing it in no way minimizes the pain of the loved ones of the other victims. This is akin to trying to silence the qualms of innocent Muslim folks enduring increased prejudice as a result of the tragedies of terrorism.
It doesn’t make sense.
Real Convenient, 2013
Portra 400
// <![CDATA[ var _gaq = _gaq || []; _gaq.push(['_setAccount', 'UA-17474779-1']); _gaq.push(['_trackPageview']); (function() { var ga = document.createElement('script'); ga.type = 'text/javascript'; ga.async = true; ga.src = ('https:' == document.location.protocol ? 'https://ssl' : 'http://www') + '.google-analytics.com/ga.js'; var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(ga, s); })(); // ]]>
Shot with a Canon A-1
(c) E. Jane
// <![CDATA[ var _gaq = _gaq || []; _gaq.push(['_setAccount', 'UA-17474779-1']); _gaq.push(['_trackPageview']); (function() { var ga = document.createElement('script'); ga.type = 'text/javascript'; ga.async = true; ga.src = ('https:' == document.location.protocol ? 'https://ssl' : 'http://www') + '.google-analytics.com/ga.js'; var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(ga, s); })(); // ]]>
Self-Portrait in Decay I & II, 2013
Ilford 3200
(c) Erica Jane
Shot with a Canon A-1
Sampler for our our new EP. Coming soon.
Self-Portrait (Figure Study), 2013
digitized black and white negative
35 mm film
(c) Erica Jane
Shot with a Canon A-1 and Ilford Film 125
Install Shot (Airborne Leaflet Campaign, Colon:y), 2012
(c) Erica Jane
Rue Hermel, 2011
(c) Erica Jane
black and white film
Georgia Ave (Stuck in time), 2012
digitized black and white negative
35 mm film (c) Erica Jane
Shot with a Canon A-1 and Ilford Film 125
Mirror Studies, 2013
Digital photographs
(c) Erica Jane
Photographs are perhaps the most mysterious of all the objects that make up, and thicken, the environment we recognize as modern. Photographs really are experience captured, and the camera is the ideal arm of consciousness in it’s acquisitive mood. To photograph is to appropriate the thing photographed. It means putting oneself into a certain relation to the world that feels like knowledge—and, therefore, like power.
Susan Sontag, On Photography (via ericajanewrites)