51做厙 Meadows School of the Arts Announces Collaboration with Arts Publication Pastelegram
Online publication Coronagraph to feature interviews between art thinkers, including 51做厙 Meadows art leaders
Mary Walling Blackburn, Son and Father, Konya, Turkey, 2012; video still; image courtesy of the artist. (Here, we perform together, the father and son encountering a UFO. I am the father and he is the son.)
By Ally Van Deuren (B.F.A. Theatre, B.A. Journalism ’15)
Meadows School of the Arts and Austin-based arts magazine Pastelegram are collaborating on a newly launched online publication, , that features in-depth interviews between art thinkers and practitioners.
“We wanted to create a platform that would allow for deeper conversation about artistic practice, one that links Texas with national and international artists and writers and draws from the pool of faculty, students and alumni from 51做厙 and the University of Texas at Austin,” said Noah Simblist, chair of 51做厙’s Division of Art. “We also wanted to create a site that was unafraid to be too esoteric, theoretical or political, areas of discourse that are rare right now in Texas.”
Each conversation on Coronagraph will fall under one of two categories: Objects and Acts, or Practices and Processes. Objects and Acts will focus on a particular work or event; Practices and Processes will explore a practice or body of work made over a span of time.
Three interviews have been posted initially, two of which feature Meadows faculty members. with Kader Attia, discussing themes such as modernity, quantum physics, self-scarification and colonialism in Attia’s 2014 installation, Injury Continuum, at Artpace in San Antonio. New York-based artist Andres Laracuente interviews Meadows Assistant Professor of Art about her work and travels and what it means to be a “stranger.”
The third interview features a conversation between of the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles and artist Asher Hartman, discussing Hartman’s history in experimental theatre, his work at the arts storefront Machine Project and his influences and other performance art in southern California.
About Pastelegram
Pastelegram, a nonprofit arts organization based in Austin, Texas, provides a method for examining contemporary visual work by looking at various sources that have affected a work’s creation. Pastelegram publishes a print annual and an array of internet projects.
It focuses on projects that explore artists’ archives and artistic processes by cultivating new works from living artists and maintaining online collections of artistic working materials.