Bibliography
Brown Rebecca M.,
‘In This Issue: Muttering and Listening’,
in Rebecca M. Brown (ed.),
Art Journal,
College Art Association,
New York
, vol.77
no.3,
Fall
2018,
p.5.
Excerpt
Editorial work involves listening, opening one’s sense to silenced voices, to the quiet whispering at the porous edges of our consciousness. Gail Hastings notes that sometimes artworks seem to be reticent teachers, “muttering a lesson,” which we have to pry out of them. As both an artist and scholar reading the material and spatial in Donald Judd’s sculpture Untitled (DSS 33), Hastings rejects this metaphor, stating with and through Judd’s works and words that “The knowledge we therefore seek of DSS 33’s space cannot be found as a critically apt, well-packaged utterance detachable from the work. It is found, instead, in the reciprocal movement of the work’s self-determination, the ‘living force of its existence,’ forever in process of creating space while perpetually wading through the ‘natural confusion’ of life this embroils.” (A pause, here, to agree wholeheartedly with Hastings’s formulation while recognising it as, indeed, a well-packaged utterance of the highest caliber, one that does not deliver a didactic lesson.)
Hastings Gail,
‘Space Practising Tools: A beginning’,
in Rebecca M. Brown (ed.),
Art Journal,
College Art Association,
New York
, vol.77
no.3,
Fall
2018,
pp.63-75.
Hastings Gail,
‘Preface’,
Space Practising Tools,
Pigment Publisher,
Melbourne
2021,
p.xi.
Excerpt
Were the people of antiquity so in fright of space as conjectured by art historian Alois Riegl that they sought safety in its exclusion by embracing material objects? […] Did so-called Minimal art’s reintroduction of ‘real’ space in the 1960s reignite deeply buried anxieties?
Roffe Jon,
‘A New Stereoscope’,
Space Practising Tools,
Pigment Publisher,
Melbourne
2021,
pp.1–3.
Excerpt
The artist that works with space and light turns back towards the conditions of experience themselves, towards the matrix of human being, but on the side of space and light, siding with things and the condition of their apparition rather than their experience.