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CUE Art Foundation

  • EXHIBITIONS
    • Current
    • Past
  • EVENTS
    • Public Events Calendar
    • NADA New York 2025
    • Saplings: Presented by Forest For Trees
  • PROGRAMS + OPPORTUNITIES
    • Open Call for Exhibitions
    • Art Critic Mentorship Program
    • CUE Teen Collective
  • PARTNERSHIPS
    • Evercore Artist Award
  • CATALOGUES + MEDIA
    • Digital Catalogues
    • Catalogue Essay Archive
  • ABOUT CUE
    • Mission & History
    • Staff & Board
    • Job Openings
    • Visitor Information
    • Space Rental
    • Subscribe
    • News
  • PROGRAM ALUMNI
    • Past Solo Exhibition Artists
    • Past Exhibition Mentors
    • Past Group Show Artists + Curators
    • Past Writing Program Participants
  • SUPPORT
    • Membership
    • Donate
    • Supporters
  • SHOP
    • CUE Shop
  • SEARCH
CUE Art Foundation

"Three-dimensional Allegory: Lucia Love’s Reflecting Pool" by Louis Doulas

Added on November 15, 2014 by Admin.

This essay was written in conjunction with Lucia Love: Reflecting Pool, on view at CUE Art Foundation November 1 - December 11, 2014.

Lucia Love’s 2014 installation, Reflecting Pool, at CUE Art Foundation is theatrical and dramatic, and unlike most conventional exhibitions, in which the default setting is a brightly lit white cube, hers is a darkened, immersive environment, shadowy and murky, like a dream, or rather, like a nightmare.

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In Essays Tags Louis Doulas

"On the Work of Julia Hechtman" by Evan Smith

Added on November 12, 2014 by Admin.

This essay was written in conjunction with Julia Hechtman: Suddenly Everything Has Changed, on view at CUE Art Foundation December 18, 2014 - January 31, 2015.

In her subtle, meandering book, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, essayist Annie Dillard explores the forested surroundings of her home in rural Virginia, recording in exquisite detail the biological routines, transcendence, cruelty and beauty at work in the natural world. Dillard’s personal account winds in and out of observation of the outside world and contemplation of her own interior life and faith. 

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In Essays Tags Evan Smith

"Dina Kelberman's I'm Google" by Stephanie Barber

Added on August 7, 2014 by Admin.

This essay was written in conjunction with Dina Kelberman: What Is In It, on view at CUE Art Foundation September 6 - October 18, 2014.

Smoke becomes fibers and fibers become wood and wood wood packaged and packages packed packages which become buckets which sit on bleachers which surround stadiums which call to grass which calls to painted lawns of chemical colors and turn romantic in the night.

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In Essays, Art21 Tags Stephanie Barber
Lucky Pierre, Last Meals

Lucky Pierre, Last Meals

Human Nature by Lilly Lampe

Added on July 24, 2014 by Admin.

In Human Nature and Conduct (1922), American philosopher John Dewey writes, “By killing an evil-doer or shutting him up behind stone walls, we are enabled to forget both him and our part in creating him. Society excuses itself by laying the blame on the criminal.”1 In this statement, Dewey emphasizes society’s tendency to vilify the convict, an act which both absolves others from their role—indirect, institutional, or otherwise—in the creation of criminals, and effectively excludes the criminal from society. 

Today there are over 200,000 people in federal prisons and over one million in state prisons in America.2

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In Essays Tags Lilly Lampe

"Margaret Cogswell's Moving the Water(s)" by Amanda Parmer

Added on May 7, 2014 by Admin.

This essay was written in conjunction with Margaret Cogswell's RIVER FUGUES: Moving the Water(s), on view at CUE Art Foundation April 26 - May 31, 2014.

Margaret Cogswell’s two installations—Moving the Water(s):  Ashokan Fugues (2014) and Moving the Water(s):  Wyoming River Fugues(2012)—play sound and image off one another to show the social and physical effects of water’s commodification on the land and citizens of the United States. Drawing on documents, interviews and historical records from the past hundred years in New York and Wyoming, these works present an immersive visual and aural score regulated by a metronomic beat.

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In Essays Tags Amanda Parmer

"Graem Whyte's Carnal Optimism" by John Corso

Added on March 4, 2014 by Admin.

Walking through one of Graem Whyte’s exhibitions is an adventure. On the walls might hang an assortment of curious objects that seem to resemble misshapen billiard sticks or wobbly tennis rackets. They may appear alongside of ping-pong tables that are so drastically reconfigured as to suggest entirely new gaming equipment. There might be musical instruments that seem to belong to Dr. Seuss’s world. Occasionally, Whyte even includes space-age pods into which you might climb for a few magical moments.

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In Essays Tags Graem Whyte
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info@cueartfoundation.org

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