In Honor of Patricia Johanson | 2024

Groundswell: Exploring the Consciousness of Land Art

Land art, a movement where Earth finds itself as both concept and medium, has historically been dominated by male artists. However, the comprehensive exhibition Groundswell: Women of Land Art, curated by Leigh A. Arnold and on view at the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas, spotlights the women who have made significant contributions to the field.

 
 

The exhibition features the work of 12 artists, each offering a unique perspective on our relationship with the land: Lita Albuquerque, Alice Aycock, Beverly Buchanan, Agnes Denes, Maren Hassinger, Nancy Holt, Patricia Johanson, Ana Mendieta, Mary Miss, Jody Pinto, Michelle Stuart, and Meg Webster. Arnold thoughtfully organizes over 100 works by the artists around thematic ideas, fostering a powerful dialogue throughout the exhibition. Above the museum’s vestibule entrance is a sphere of small branches in tandem among the concrete and metal structures that make up the ceiling of the Nasher. It’s a site-specific piece by Maren Hassinger and the first work to introduce visitors to the showcase before check-in.

Arnold has been with the Nasher for 10 years. Her doctoral thesis focused on the unfinished works of Robert Smithson, one of land art’s most prominent artists, which adds a compelling academic foundation for curating Groundswell. Perhaps a subtler reason for her connection to this exhibition is her experience living in Nebraska and Texas—states that, with their vast, open landscapes, naturally invite contemplation and ideation. Arnold's curatorial vision aims to expand beyond the narrow canon of land art, underscoring the significant contributions of women artists to this movement and others, with nuanced approaches that transcend gender boundaries.

One of the central themes of the exhibition is the freedom these artists found within the land art movement. Rather than imposing their will on the landscape, these women’s works are often additive, rooted in a spirit of collaboration with the Earth rather than a desire to control it.

The exhibition spans almost the entire museum, with the exception of a smaller gallery in the center, which still features work from the Nasher’s permanent collection that specifically relates to Groundswell. Somewhat ironically, the museum’s sculpture garden displays only two works from the exhibit: Nancy Holt’s Pipeline, which winds through the museum and extends outdoors, and Michelle Stuart’s Marici: Light of the Dawn, which is partially submerged in water. Within the galleries, a notable commonality when engaging with nature as subject matter is the emphasis on color and texture. Raw, natural hues—clay red, dusted pink, sky blue, fresh green, wilted yellow, concrete grey, dirt brown, and others—are omnipresent in a compelling way. Beyond the gallery walls is Patricia Johanson’s Fair Park Lagoon (1981-86).

Growing up in Dallas, I can attest to the transformative experience of visiting Johanson's sculpture. This piece, completed in 1986, is an exceptional example of land art that blends seamlessly with the environment and functions as a successful public artwork. Johanson's approach was not about imposing on nature but restoring the ecosystem, showing the power of artists in conversation with the Earth. As a child, I saw the lagoon, shrouded in mystery, as a living, mythical creature lurking beneath the water’s surface—a symbol of the magic of imagination.

The power of land art lies in its ability to speak to us, even without the need for explanations or context. It becomes a conscious force of nature, inviting us to ask questions and explore the art within the Earth itself. Groundswell encourages us to appreciate these poetic acts that women artists have contributed to the movement, reclaiming the history of the Earth's transformation into an art form.

Chronicles | 2023

Sub Rosa Support
$1.00

My intent for Sub Rosa is to provide access to curated information centered on art and activism. Valuing my time as an artist, I’ve been thinking of a way to offer readers the choice to pay for my chronicles. Below is an option to support my project for as little as $1 one time or however you’re comfortable.

 

A R T

2023 As Saved in My Phone

Dallas Museum of Art

Matthew Wong: The Realm of Appearances on view October 2022 - February 2023

Self-taught artist Matthew Wong worked alongside his challenges with autism and tourettes. He swiftly rose to critical acclaim within a six-year career and tragically passed at 35 in 2019. In the article Matthew Wong’s Life in Light and Shadow by Raffi Khatchadourian, Raffi follows Matthew’s life from childhood to 2019 with conversations and studio visits by his mother, Monita, co-founder of The Matthew Wong Foundation.

‘Monita and I entered an antechamber, where some canvases were stacked, and she paused. She had warned me that she could tolerate only a brief time inside. Wong’s paintings—mostly imagined landscapes—are portals to luminous, vibrant, moody places. Though not surreal, they are the product of reverie: poetic concoctions inspired by memory, stray ideas, or the paint itself as he compulsively worked it. Midnight forests glow, somehow, without light, by a painterly magic. A milky tundra extends across a horizon, looking soft, opulent, ominous. Spectral icebergs—vulnerable, tentative, lost—drift in glasslike seas.’ Matthew Wong’s Life in Light and Shadow by Raffi Khatchadourian for The New Yorker published May 9, 2022.

I only got to zoom through his retrospective, which traveled to the DMA once. I had little to no knowledge of his work and wished I could stay a little longer, a little longer, and more until I was at the museum 10 minutes past closing time (sorry!). At first glance, the works seemed abstract, with glimpses into figuration emerging, and slowly, the struggle between Matthew’s grasping at his emotions, realities, dreams, troubles, and triumphs came to show itself.

More saves from the DMA in 2023 are below.

I'll Be Your Mirror: Art and the Digital Screen explored the impact of screens on art from 1969 to the present. The exhibition comprised over sixty works by fifty artists who have used various media such as paintings, sculpture, video games, augmented reality, and video.

The exhibition focuses on the pervasive influence of screens in contemporary life, examining their role in shaping culture, connectivity, surveillance, digital abstraction, and more. The show has nine key themes: liminal space, connectivity, surveillance, the repository, digital abstraction, the posthuman body, automation and the loneliness epidemic, ecology, and turning a mirror on ourselves.

Curated by Alison Hearst, I'll Be Your Mirror: Art and the Digital Screen stands out as one of the past decade's most in-depth explorations of art and digital technology in the Southwest region. It was scheduled way too short for such a comprehensive exhibition and exceptionally groundbreaking to view here in Texas.

The Warehouse

Open Storage: 25 Years of Collecting on view August 2022 - April 2023

Formed by Dallas-based art collectors Cindy and Howard Rachofsky, The Wearhouse is home to their post-war modern and contemporary art collection that feels a little bit classified yet proud to be locally located.

Curated by Allan Schwartzman, Open Storage: 25 Years of Collecting comprises 216 works by 148 artists and is stated to be roughly 20 percent of the collection. The wayfinding of the exhibition worked in chronological order of the works acquired.

Browse the checklist for a good time, linked here.

The Nasher Sculpture Center

2023 Nasher Prize Laureate Senga Nengudi on view February - April 2023

Born in Chicago in 1943, Sengra Nengudi has been a prominent figure in the contemporary art scene since the 1960s. Her work often explores the intersections of identity, race, gender, and the body. Known for her innovation using materials like pantyhose and sand, Nengudi’s interest in art and dance has shaped her practice and ability to push boundaries.

Groundswell: Women of Land Art on view September 2023 - January 7, 2024

Land art, a movement where the Earth finds duality as canvas and medium, has historically been dominated by male artists. However, the comprehensive exhibition Groundswell: Women of Land Art, on view at The Nasher Sculpture Center curated by Leigh A. Arnold, shifts the spotlight toward women who have made significant contributions to the field.

Arnold has been at the Nasher for ten years. Her doctoral thesis covered the unfinished works of Robert Smithson, one of Land art’s most prominent artists, making for a compelling academic case to take on mounting Groundswell, but perhaps an additional and less obvious reason is her experience living in Nebraska and Texas, states that lend to contextualizing how the vast and sprawling land can be a source for ideation. Arnold's curatorial vision clearly aims to move beyond the narrow canon of land art, making it evident that female artists have contributed significantly to this movement and others, having their own nuanced approaches that transcend gender boundaries.

The exhibition encompasses almost the entire museum except for a smaller gallery in the middle of the institution, but even then, this features work from Nasher’s permanent collection that specifically relates to Groundswell. The museum’s sculpture garden, somewhat ironically, displays only two works from the exhibit, including Nancy Holt’s Pipeline, which winds throughout the museum, making its way outside, and Michelle Stuart’s Marici: Light of the Dawn, which is submerged in water. Within the galleries, a commonality that shows when dealing with nature as the subject matter is color and texture. Raw and natural hues of clay red, dusted pink, sky blue, fresh green, wilted yellow, concrete grey, dirt brown, and so on are omnipresent in a special, compelling way.

Nancy Holt, Pipeline, 1986

Nancy Holt, Pipeline, 1986

Described as ‘beyond the gallery walls’ is Patricia Johnson’s Fair Park Lagoon, (1981-86).

Patricia Johnson, Fair Park Lagoon, (1981-86)

Patricia Johnson, Fair Park Lagoon, (1981-86)

As a Dallas native, I can personally attest to the transformative experience of visiting Johnson's sculpture. Her work is an exceptional example of land art that blends seamlessly with the environment and functions as a successful public artwork. Johnson's approach was not about imposing on nature but restoring the ecosystem, showing the power of artists in conversation with the Earth. As a child, the lagoon, shrouded in mystery, once seemed like a living, mythical creature lurking beneath the water's surface to me. It was a symbol of the magic of imagination.

Not-Gallery Shows

Dallas-based artists, curators, and activists who utilize non-traditional art spaces to showcase work provide greater flexibility for experimentation while still adhering to the formative constraints of the given architectural parameters.

Odyssey Studios housed space for the exhibit The Compass Of Our Stuggles, organized by the Palestinian Youth Movement, honoring Palestinian prisoners and martyrs by installing text and images of stories directly related to the North Texas community. An interactive aspect was the duaa wall, where visitors could leave written notes of solidarity.

Chateau Chateau, organized by Joel Murray and Clint Bargers, takes place annually inside the Aldredge House on Swiss Avenue, with twenty artists working inside, activating rooms, corners, tubs, walls, and crevices. Exploring the show felt like being inside an artist-made funhouse.

DC EMPTY, Dallas Contemporary’s time-based programming highlights regional artists as a way for the museum to utilize unused space during rotating exhibitions and serve the Dallas creative community. Colton James White’s DC EMPTY iteration, They Love Me, They Love Me Not, was a 5-hour durational piece of pacing, plucking flowers, a moment of pause for lunch, and a cathartic ending in an exhausting game of they love me, they love me not.

Refer to fig. 361 curated by Jillian Wendel featured artists Aliyah Cydonia, Hannah Baskin, and Jose Vasquez Ramirez throughout a space that lent it’s history and constructions conceptually to the work.


L I T E R A T U R E

Saved and Yet to Read

In a way, each book has themes of complexities of individual identity, exploring how personal experiences, mental health, and societal forces shape who we are and ways to transform and escape from those societal norms.

 

Strangers to Ourselves: Unsettled Minds and the Stories That Make Us by Rachel Aviv

‘“Strangers to Ourselves” delicately balances two truths that prove remarkably difficult to hold in tandem. We all have our own minds, our own experiences, our own suffering; we are also social creatures who live among others, and social forces have at least some bearing on how we understand who we are. Aviv suggests that we continue to cling to reductive theories about brain chemistry because “the reality — that mental illness is caused by an interplay between biological, genetic, psychological and environmental factors — is more difficult to conceptualize.”’

In ‘Strangers to Ourselves,’ a Revelatory Account of Mental Illness - Jennifer Szalai for The New York Times published 2022

 
 

Kitchen by Banana Yoshimoto

‘According to the author herself, the main themes in her work are "the exhaustion of young Japanese in contemporary Japan" and "the way in which terrible experiences shape a person's life" — additional issues explored in "Kitchen" include transexuality and the loneliness inherent in modern Tokyo life.’

Andrew Lee for The Japan Times published 2014

 
 

The Sweet Indifference of the World by Peter Stamm

‘Christoph and Magdalena. Chris and Lena. Peter Stamm’s latest novel, The Sweet Indifference of the World, is a short, sophisticated tale for the post-truth era, in which four identities become irreparably intertwined.’

Katie Simpson for The London Magazine

 

‘Being thoroughly trained in semiology, sociology, phenomenology, psychoanalysis with profound curiosity and humility, Shiff’s writing elevates the dignity of art as a fundamental form of human communication hence our survival. Elegantly designed as intended for broad readership, including art historians, art critics, artists, among other lovers of art, this volume is a must-read experience with pleasure and discovery.’

The Best Art Books of 2023 Phong Bui for The Brooklyn Rail

 
 

The Membranes by Chi Ta-wei

‘Taiwanese author Chi Ta-wei’s newly translated novel, “The Membranes,” was originally published in 1995 — and you can tell. This is a future extrapolated from the ‘90s, with books-on-disc and depleted ozone rather than the internet and climate change. And yet, though the book’s hereafter looks backward to us today, there’s something very timely about its play with gender fluidity and the social construction of identity. There’s also something timeless about Chi’s future, because of how it bends and defies time itself. The novel is about how identity is a story we tell ourselves through time — or back through time. And that story, for Chi, is queer.’

Noah Berlatsky for Los Angeles Times published 2021

 
 

Easy Beauty by Chloé Cooper Jones

‘As “a woman with a body that could never be mistaken for symmetrical or orderly,” she long believed that the only way to deserve anyone else’s respect, much less desire, was to “be extraordinary in all other aspects,” brilliant and witty and humorous and cool. If the book is any proof, Jones is all these things. But there’s more to this gorgeous, vividly alive memoir.’

New Memoirs Bristling with Wit, Warmth and Spiky Intelligence Kate Tuttle for The New York Times published 2022

 
 

The Shop by Magazine B

‘Some might wonder why we chose to highlight brick-and-mortar shops amid our new normal. Since the onset of the pandemic, we’ve experienced firsthand the wonderful world of e-commerce. However, our restricted lifestyles have also helped us realize what kind of person we are, and subsequently, what gives us strength to keep going. For example, some people get energy from the ambience of a restaurant or its bustling environment more than the food. And some people enjoy the process of discovering new things in a brick-and-mortar shop more than the actual products. It doesn’t matter how great e-commerce services or algorithms get—these experiences will be forever nonpareil.’

Magazine B

 
 

Coffin Bound by Dan Watters

‘Chased by an unstoppable killer, Izzy Tyburn has decided that if the world won't have her in it, it can have nothing of her at all. She's re-treading her life, leaving nothing but burned rubber, ash, and the sun-scorched bones of those who get in her way.’

Image Comics

 

M U S I C

Screenshots Throughout the Year

I have a thing for trying to correlate seemingly unrelatable things, and really, this is a playlist of screenshots I took of songs I was listening to throughout the year, none of which I remember why. It’s exceptionally random but a testament to how music can sync to a feeling in a given moment. So if you’re open to a journey through damn near any genre under the sun, welcome?

 

Image credits Alexandra Hulsey

Chronicles | Midyear 2022

Sub Rosa Support
$1.00

My intent for Sub Rosa is to provide access to curated information centered on art and activism. Valuing my time as an artist, I’ve been thinking of a way to offer readers the choice to pay for my chronicles. Below is an option to support my project for as little as $1 one time or however you’re comfortable.

All images by Alexandra Hulsey / embedded with source links.


A R T

Favorites So Far

It's been a while, and I thought reconnecting via another chronicle made sense in the middle of the year. Maybe Sub Rosa is a bi-yearly thing now. Anyways, I'd like to share some of the art I've enjoyed seeing so far. Found in New Orleans Museum of Art this July, Dallas Art Fair in April, and Latino Cultural Center in May.

Some commonalities in these artworks below are that they're fantastical, colorful, shapely, entertaining, and offered me a much-needed pause.

Larry Bell, Pacific Red (VI), 2016-2017. New Orleans Museum of Art.

 

Gert & Uwe Tobais, I don’t Want Love, 2022. Cassina Projects at Dallas Art Fair.

 

Joan Miró, The Red Disk, 1960. New Orleans Museum of Art

 

Stefanie Popp, Obelism (Skilos), 2020. Keijsers Koning at Dallas Art Fair.

Michael Henry Hayden, Internal Clock, 2020. Moskowitz Bayse at Dallas Art Fair.

Vladimir Waone, Melody of Unkown Moments, 2021. Sapar Contemporary at Dallas Art Fair.

 

Areum Yang, Until I Find My Home, 2022. Derek Eller Gallery at Dallas Art Fair.

 

Carol Bove, Mood, 2017. New Orleans Museum of Art.

 

Kapoor, Anish, Untitled, 1997. New Orleans Museum of Art.

 

Elizabeth Osborne, Zinnias With Chair, 2017. Barry Campbell Gallery at Dallas Art Fair.

Raymond Yeboah, New Beginnings. Latino Cultural Center, Dallas, TX.

Fabian Treiber, This Place, 2022. Anat Ebgi Gallery at Dallas Art Fair.

 

100 W Corsicana

Located in Downtown Corsicana, 100 W Corsicana serves as a prestigious creative residency for rigorously working artists from visual to literary. I visited for the first time in May for 100W x 10YRS, a celebration of the conception of 100 W Corsicana. The building and its surroundings are hauntingly beautiful. It inspired me to continue a project I explored in college, where you ink up a portion of a textured surface, place paper on top, and press into it to make a monoprint.

The application for 2023 residencies closed on September 1st, and I’m eager to see the next cycle of artists.

100 W Corsicana

Downtown Corsicana

Downtown Corsicana

 

STOREFRONT

100 W Corsicana

100 W Corsicana

100 W Corsicana

100 W Corsicana

 

The residency also has a bookstore called STOREFRONT, where you’ll find literature and artwork by resident participants. I picked up Tatiana Ryckman’s I Don’t Think of You (Until I Do) and, more recently, Seven Samurai Swept Away in a River by Jung Young Moon.

Corsicana reminded me how much I appreciate old buildings and old things, which in a way brings me to our road trip to New Orleans.

 

New Orleans

I've been to NOLA a lot, in fact, twice this year already, but I visited the New Orleans Museum of Art for the first time in July. It's relatively small, and its curation is one of my favorites I've ever seen! The vibrant modern art galleries displayed household named heartthrobs from Warhol, Modigliani, Kasner, and Miró with many others to have a unique conversation I felt like I was a part of. At the same time, the contemporary gallery focused on new acquisitions of work by BIPOC, LGBTQIA+, and female-identifying artists, which was badass in concept and execution. Outside was a massive sculpture garden that placed artwork complementary to the native swampy environment that felt otherworldly.

New Orleans has a lot of dualities to note, like placement/displacement, authenticity/facade, beauty/dismay, and stillness/chaos. I'm glad to have reflected on these this January and July, which felt especially meaningful in the context of 2022, if that makes sense. Some things feel new, some old, and there’s some new/old feelings, plus everything in between.

L O C A L

Dallas Artist Resources

Texas froze again in February, flooding circulated through the city in August, and temperatures reached as high as 109°F. throughout the summer, while the Dallas Climate Action seems over-ambitious for a city with 62 desert infrastructures.

One of the most significant ways individuals can make a change is to stop or cut down on meat and dairy in whatever way they can—also, taking agency on your own money. Consider alternative options for how much plastic accompanies what you're buying, what excess looks like for you, donating instead of throwing away, and research if the companies you shop at show actions against their role in climate change. 

M U S I C

Something to listen to post-storm

 

Chronicles | June 2021

Some questions I had this June; Artwork often has a unique power to exist wherever it wants but, what’s that mean for rural Texas residents? What’s the moral thing to do with an unwanted painting? This month also covers local artwork commemorating Juneteenth, an underreported Dallas newspaper’s history, celebrating Gay Pride by featuring artwork post Stonewall and a playlist for making art.

Read More

Chronicles | September 2020

In this post, you’ll see a building that offers heat to entire neighborhoods, a hotel and library that sits within the forest, and an event center built of fungus. Other topics include a prolific botanist in celebration of Mexican Heritage Month, art world news, and a free guide to making pottery. I also created a Spotify playlist inspired by the transition of summer to fall.

Read More

Chronicles | July 2020

Barbara Earl Thomas will create a commissioned installation for Yale’s Grace Hopper College that addresses the school’s current namesake and the previous, John C. Calhoun. Dallas’s art industry is reemerging through historical hardships and current ones.

Read More

Chronicles | June 2020

June 2020 was spent reflecting, learning, and listening. Through the art of Jacob Lawrence and Gordon Parks, a dismantling of the exclusive and racist portrayal of history is shown. To share productive ways to fight racism, local organizations are listed. + more.

Read More

Chronicles | May 2020

Is there validation for ‘copycat’ architecture? Is physical museum closure the only way to ensure inclusivity? Listen to what Native American designers and business owners have to say about sustainability and fashion. Use literature as a tool to subvert systemic racism against Black Americans.

Read More