Faucet Repair

12 September 2025

Son shell: Began based on Omeed playing cello until the afterimage of Tessa pulling a hermit crab out of clear ocean water in Sag Harbor overlapped it and mixed with contemplation of home, sleep, death, omnipresent technology, rest, and ultimately something that feels pretty aligned with the allegory of the cave in relation to the wisdom accrued from both growing older and remaining steadfast on the artist's path. To aspire not just to claim knowledge of the shadows, but to rejoin one's fellow prisoners in solidarity toward a jostling free and a relocation of embodied experience.


10 September 2025

These new works are finding their stride through a combination of clear gesso, graphite, acrylic, oil, and colored pencil—usually in that order. Keeping acrylic, pencils, and oil on hand as the three main players during the actual image-making has created a nimble kind of rhythm in which dead ends with one medium turn into fresh starts with another, but it has also got me thinking about material hierarchies. I'm wary of veering too far into formal territory, (I'm reminded again of Judd writing about how, in his estimation, Joseph Stella over-prioritized technical experimentation at the expense of ideas), but I do think there is something about the interplay between these materials when permanence is a factor; wax colored pencils and oil don't mix, so there's a finality to the choices made in colored pencil, a commitment to an irreversible decision that is really working for me right now. And also seems like it could be somehow wrapped up in what I'm getting at with this comparison of what isolation/solitude meant in the second half of the 20th century and what it means in the first two decades of the 21st. Words exiting one's mind through one's mouth on their way to someone else seems like a more permanent action than saying it to your AI friend (literally—in my head I'm referring to that new wearable AI “Friend” product).


8 September 2025

Another bit from studio conversation today—the idea of “specificity” came up in the context of me holding my references looser and looser. I personally feel like doing so is making my work ring truer, but Edith brought up that one should be careful to not lose specificity when allowing obfuscation / fragmentation / incoherence to happen. I get her point, but I realized when she said this that specificity isn't really a concern of mine. Not anymore anyway. And it's not that I don't value it—I do, and I think recognizing it and honing in on it is a good path to meaningful work—but for me personally I suppose I have begun to cultivate an absolute trust that my instinctive choices, even during research, are doing the filtering toward specificity for me. Even grabbing screenshots from the home movies I mentioned in my last post—the act of doing so was impulsive, unthinking, acted on from the hazy peripheral germ of a spark in the back of my mind. Only afterwards was I able to retrace my steps and find a unifying factor, which was there all along despite the fact that I didn't acknowledge it until following it blindly.


6 September 2025

Edith asked me in the studio today where my source material has been coming from for this new body of work—I told her about the pre-2000s home videos I've been finding via Kino Library. From 16mm in the 50s to handheld camcorders in the 80s and 90s, I've been focusing on isolated figures engaged, absorbed, occupied in flow. Being drawn to these kinds of scenes and poses isn't new for me, but I've been thinking about the significance in finding them via home videos; with someone behind the camera, there's a communal or social element baked in to the act of capturing someone in their solitude. This feels like a stark contrast with how we have turned the camera on ourselves as the past two decades have unfolded since the first iPhone was released, which in turn has changed our understanding of isolation. Using my work as a mirror to reflect this inversion back to viewers is interesting to me.


4 September 2025

Susan Rothenberg: The Weather at Hauser & Wirth New York. My first time encountering her work in the flesh—these are such slow release paintings. Was especially taken by Dos Equis (acrylic and tempera on canvas, 169.9 x 296.2 x 4.1 cm, 1974), a big white one of two horses overlapping, the whole composition sliced by lines intersecting twice near the canvas's horizontal midline, once near the top middle edge, and once near the bottom middle edge. The effect is kaleidoscopic, almost as if you are watching the forms alternate between embossing and debossing themselves, the mere presence of the intersecting lines recontextualizing/refreshing/re-presenting the angles of the horses as elemental pivot points. There is also the barely perceptible ghost of what perhaps could have been a first try at placing one of the left x's lines hiding underneath the final layer of white, as if innumerable axes form the architecture of the painting and she has chosen to cover all but those that remain. So much done with seemingly so little.


2 September 2025

Inventory: view of a stained glass altar through a church door on Nantucket, my shadow birdlike falling over a slatted bench, long blue laundry center in Flushing, tug of war with a dog, tiny black voids, orange spray paint on steel coverings, rusted apartment railings, fire escapes into the sky, shadows on and crevices in Manhattan pavement, bright white/chrome/yellow (New York subway), sky striking the horizon light a lightning bolt between buildings, sunlight wrapping around the corner of a Manhattan skyscraper, orange vent with steam, cello and violin screeching into a dark bar filled with people who didn't come to listen, end of a three-pronged Long Island City railing spray painted orange/blue/turquoise/yellow/pink and red.


31 August 2025

Great little essay on the use of language in contemporary painting by Jonathan (Tignor) from the latest entry to his Malerblöd Substack (subscribe to it if you're reading this). Especially the bit where he explains: “Language is hardly stable, but against the backdrop of an abstract painting, there is an illusion of stability.”

He addresses Daisy Parris's painting Portrait of a Poem, pointing out how “the third poetic panel is the most successful to [him] because it operates like the Basquiat above [Untitled (Tar Tar Tar, Lead Lead Lead), 1981]. “Haven’t / Wrote” is barely legible through the blast of paint. It is says more by saying less.”

That immediately made me think of Jasper Johns's Flag (1954-55), which I just saw at MoMA in New York. It's nearly impossible to find an image online that is high-quality enough to decipher the tiny words contained in the bits of newspaper articles caked in encaustic, but up close in person there were many great little moments that I could imagine must have been quite satisfying for him to push back and pull forward. Remembering a small section in particular of one of the flag's stripes where most of the newsprint is covered, but the end of a sentence about someone “going into shock” is legible. That to me felt like a nice example of language being used to expand rather than prescribe.


29 August 2025

Another thing Olivia's work prompted me to think about: how Ed Ruscha says he was originally attracted to words because “words have no size.” Wanted to know what she would think of that, and further if she regards words as having weight, because “RHYME” and “BAROQUE” are almost like sandbags in the context of the paintings they appear in in her show. They drive the paintings down, the bisection of their circular wooden bases made even more emphatic. Perhaps this is a good place to mention the 2007 MIT study I recently learned about that concluded that Russians, who have two different words for lighter blues (“goluboy”) and darker blues (“siniy”) were able to discriminate between colors faster than English speakers when tasked with describing blue stimuli that spanned the siniy/goluboy border. In this way, language quite literally is color. Or at least is key in our cultural understanding of it. So perhaps the connoted size and weight of words changes with their cultural context, which is an interesting idea to investigate.


27 August 2025

So many thing to unpack from seeing Olivia van Kuiken's show (Bastard Rhyme at Matthew Brown) and visiting her studio after. Firstly: her free-standing, double-sided paintings with pictorial images on their front sides greeting the viewer upon walking into the space and monochrome color blocks on their backs that turns the space into a color field installation when the viewer reaches the back of the room. This was a remarkable effect—the front sides engage with and are perhaps completed by the viewer, the audience key to their resistance of the extradiegetic gaze (especially the three bust paintings that are on the left side when you walk in, each one averting their eyes from the possibility of that fourth wall fracture in spite of their centered positions). They're human-size and human-like, their implied momentum often pushing from left to right, trying to escape the edges of their containers to the periphery. But once at the back of the room, their muted monochrome (dyed canvas) backsides create a sense that they've turned away, subservient to the high-hung untitled work that pays homage to the installation of Malevich's 1913 suprematist square in 1915's The Last Exhibition of Futurist Painting 0.10. At Olivia's studio I told her about someone walking into the show while I was absorbing the color field, and how I immediately hid behind one of the works to avoid them, averting my gaze in the process.


25 August 2025

Ken Price, Primal, Physical, Sensual at Matthew Marks Gallery, one of the best shows I've seen in a while (despite that title). First time seeing his work in person. The sanded-down mottling on the ceramic sculptures is a technical wonder for sure, but it's the clarity of thought, bold simplicity of his formal juxtapositions, and constant undertone of his sense of humor that makes it such a pleasing sampler. Especially edifying in its directness after seeing Olivia van Kuiken's show yesterday, which is equally effective but eschews directness at every possible turn. Price's forms naturally evade concretization, but they don't hide from it (as is the case with Love affair, 2008, ink on paper). And horniness is somehow endearing in his hands. But Specimens on Pillow Bases (1965, graphite, acrylic, and colored pencil on paper) left the strongest impression on me. Something like a drawn study, the word “pillow” appearing three times as a brand on different views of indented platforms holding the specimens—plans for them to be made plush. A hierarchy, a mountain to climb, a multitudinous proposition.