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349 WINTER 2024-25 POST-DESIRE LAND

This winter issue of Flash Art delves into the essence of desire in today’s context, and explores what it means to be an artist in the United States at this moment. With terms like “brat” and “demure” being used to describe various lifestyles, we are prompted to consider what a new understanding of desire might look like. Following Shumon Basar’s concept of “endcore,” which captures the anxiety that social media, alarming news, and tumultuous historical moments have instilled in our society, we ask ourselves: Is desire still something we yearn for?

 

For this issue, we invited artists working in different media to aphorize the idea of desire or anti-desire.

 

Tom Burr, in conversation with Gordon Hall, discusses the origins of his Torrington Project, an endeavor stemming from Burr’s desire to allow works created over the years to share the same space and engage in dialogue with one other, as well as his dissatisfaction with the constraints of the current art system. The project represents a space for rethinking artistic practice. Burr appears on the cover of the winter issue, photographed by David Brandon Geeting in his studio in Torrington, wearing Gucci.

 

On the occasion of their show “It Waives Back” at Fondazione Prada in Tokyo, Lizzie Fitch and Ryan Trecartincontributed to this issue with a striking visual essay featuring stills from their latest film, TITLE WAIVE (2019–24) — a dynamic collage of moments, recorded over seven years on Fitch and Trecartin’s property in Ohio — along with archival images. Fitch and Trecartin have created a special visual piece for the cover.

 

Brett Ginsburg talks to Cusson Cheng about the nuances of his spatial choreographies. Together, they examine the ebb and flow of meaning in contemporary art, and the art of manipulating the viewer’s perspective through a transformative experience that resonates beyond the typical white cube space. For his cover story, Ginsburg was photographed by Luis Corzo in his studio in New York, wearing Stone Island.

 

Coumba Samba is profiled by Olivia Kan-Sperling for this issue, in an exploration of Samba’s multifaceted practice, which includes paintings, performance, and also music, to communicate raw emotion, many references, and life being compressed into something deceptively easy to consume. Samba appears on the cover photographed by Lengua in London, wearing Stefan Cooke and Kuboraum.

 

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349 WINTER 2024-25 POST-DESIRE LAND
349 WINTER 2024-25 POST-DESIRE LAND
349 WINTER 2024-25 POST-DESIRE LAND
349 WINTER 2024-25 POST-DESIRE LAND
349 WINTER 2024-25 POST-DESIRE LAND
349 WINTER 2024-25 POST-DESIRE LAND
349 WINTER 2024-25 POST-DESIRE LAND
349 WINTER 2024-25 POST-DESIRE LAND
349 WINTER 2024-25 POST-DESIRE LAND

This winter issue of Flash Art delves into the essence of desire in today’s context, and explores what it means to be an artist in the United States at this moment. With terms like “brat” and “demure” being used to describe various lifestyles, we are prompted to consider what a new understanding of desire might look like. Following Shumon Basar’s concept of “endcore,” which captures the anxiety that social media, alarming news, and tumultuous historical moments have instilled in our society, we ask ourselves: Is desire still something we yearn for?

 

For this issue, we invited artists working in different media to aphorize the idea of desire or anti-desire.

 

Tom Burr, in conversation with Gordon Hall, discusses the origins of his Torrington Project, an endeavor stemming from Burr’s desire to allow works created over the years to share the same space and engage in dialogue with one other, as well as his dissatisfaction with the constraints of the current art system. The project represents a space for rethinking artistic practice. Burr appears on the cover of the winter issue, photographed by David Brandon Geeting in his studio in Torrington, wearing Gucci.

 

On the occasion of their show “It Waives Back” at Fondazione Prada in Tokyo, Lizzie Fitch and Ryan Trecartincontributed to this issue with a striking visual essay featuring stills from their latest film, TITLE WAIVE (2019–24) — a dynamic collage of moments, recorded over seven years on Fitch and Trecartin’s property in Ohio — along with archival images. Fitch and Trecartin have created a special visual piece for the cover.

 

Brett Ginsburg talks to Cusson Cheng about the nuances of his spatial choreographies. Together, they examine the ebb and flow of meaning in contemporary art, and the art of manipulating the viewer’s perspective through a transformative experience that resonates beyond the typical white cube space. For his cover story, Ginsburg was photographed by Luis Corzo in his studio in New York, wearing Stone Island.

 

Coumba Samba is profiled by Olivia Kan-Sperling for this issue, in an exploration of Samba’s multifaceted practice, which includes paintings, performance, and also music, to communicate raw emotion, many references, and life being compressed into something deceptively easy to consume. Samba appears on the cover photographed by Lengua in London, wearing Stefan Cooke and Kuboraum.

 

IN THIS ISSUE →  Letter from the Editor  Cover Story The Politics and Erotics of Receptiveness. Tom Burr in Conversation with Gordon Hall  Cover Story Visual Essay by Lizzie Fitch and Ryan Trecartin   Cover Story Spatial Choreographies. Brett Ginsburg in Conversation with Cusson Cheng Cover Story Surface Compressions. Coumba Samba by Olivia Kan-Sperling  Young Men's Games. Matthew Barney by Travis Diehl Focus On Chicago Model City by Mark Acciari  Archive Gordon Matta-Clark Critic Dispatch I <3 NY by Daniel Merritt The Curist ESPAC FOUNDATION, MEXICO CITY Laura Orozco in Conversation with Leslie Moody Castro ◯ When the party’s over. Jasmine Gregory by Margaret Kross  System Failure. Maren Karlson by Marie Catalano ◯ Cry, Scream, Die. Elaine Cameron-Weir by Caroline Elbaor Unpack / Reveal / Unleash (I), Elipse. B. Ingrid Olson by Alex BennettStudio Scene On the Occasion of Absence. David L. Johnson by Jessica Kwok ◯ Anything-Post-Something. Nina Hartmann by Gea Politi  ◯Letter from the City Enemy from Space by Danielle Dean