Gregory Sholette
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Gregory Sholette is a New York-based artist, writer, educator, and activist. He is a Professor of Sculpture and Social Practice at
Queens College, City University of New York Queens College (QC) is a public college in the New York City borough of Queens. Part of the City University of New York system, Queens College occupies an campus primarily located in Flushing. Queens College was established in 1937 and offe ...
, Co-Director of Social Practice CUNY, alongside professor Chloë Bass, and Headquartered in the Center for the Humanities, at the
Graduate Center The Graduate School and University Center of the City University of New York (CUNY Graduate Center) is a public university, public research institution and post-graduate university, postgraduate university in New York City. Formed in 1961 as Divi ...
. Between 2011 and 2014 he served as a charter member of the Home Workspace Curriculum Committee in
Beirut Beirut ( ; ) is the Capital city, capital and largest city of Lebanon. , Greater Beirut has a population of 2.5 million, just under half of Lebanon's population, which makes it the List of largest cities in the Levant region by populatio ...
,
Lebanon Lebanon, officially the Republic of Lebanon, is a country in the Levant region of West Asia. Situated at the crossroads of the Mediterranean Basin and the Arabian Peninsula, it is bordered by Syria to the north and east, Israel to the south ...
. Sholette completed his PhD in the Memory Studies and Heritage Program,
University of Amsterdam The University of Amsterdam (abbreviated as UvA, ) is a public university, public research university located in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Established in 1632 by municipal authorities, it is the fourth-oldest academic institution in the Netherlan ...
, in 2017. He holds an MFA from the
University of California, San Diego The University of California, San Diego (UC San Diego in communications material, formerly and colloquially UCSD) is a public university, public Land-grant university, land-grant research university in San Diego, California, United States. Es ...
(1995); a BFA from The Cooper Union 1979; and was selected to be a Helena Rubinstein Fellow in Critical Studies (1995–1996) at the
Whitney Museum of American Art The Whitney Museum of American Art, known informally as "The Whitney", is a Modern art, modern and Contemporary art, contemporary American art museum located in the Meatpacking District, Manhattan, Meatpacking District and West Village neighbor ...
’s Independent Studies Program (ISP).


Career

Sholette co-founded several
New York City New York, often called New York City (NYC), is the most populous city in the United States, located at the southern tip of New York State on one of the world's largest natural harbors. The city comprises five boroughs, each coextensive w ...
based art collectives and group projects, including
Political Art Documentation/Distribution Political Art Documentation/Distribution (PAD/D) PAD/D was originally simply called "Political Art Documentation", but "Distribution" was added to the group title after a year or so of operation. was an American leftist art collective based in Ne ...
or PAD/D (1980-1988) with Jerry Kearns and Lucy R. Lippard; REPOhistory (1989-2000); Gulf Labor Coalition (2011-ongoing) with
Naeem Mohaiemen Naeem Mohaiemen (born 1969) uses film, photography, installation, and essays to research South Asia's postcolonial markers (the Indo-Pakistani War of 1947–1948 and the Bangladesh Liberation War of 1971). His projects on the 1970s revolutionary ...
, Andrew Ross and
Walid Raad Walid Raad (Ra'ad) (Arabic: وليد رعد) (born 1967 in Chbanieh, Lebanon) is a contemporary media artist. The Atlas Group is a fictional collective, the work of which is produced by Walid Raad. He lives and works in New York, where he is curr ...
; and co-organized the projects ''Imaginary Archive'' (2010-ongoing), It's The Political Economy, Stupid! with Oliver Ressler (2012-2016); and Dark Matter Supercollider Games (2015, S.a.L.E Docks cultural center, Venice, Italy). Sholette is also an author and editor and has written for journals such as
e-flux e-flux is a publishing platform and archive, artist project, curatorial platform, and e-mail service founded in 1998. The arts news digests, events, exhibitions, schools, journal, books, and art projects produced and/or disseminated by e-flux ...
,
Afterimage An afterimage, or after-image, is an image that continues to appear in the eyes after a period of exposure to the original image. An afterimage may be a normal phenomenon (physiological afterimage) or may be pathological (palinopsia). Illusory ...
, ''
Artforum ''Artforum'' is an international monthly magazine specializing in contemporary art. The magazine is distinguished from other magazines by its unique 10½ × 10½ inch square format, with each cover often devoted to the work of an artist. Notably ...
'', ''CAA Art Journal'', ''FIELD'', ''
Hyperallergic ''Hyperallergic'' is an online arts magazine, based in Brooklyn, New York. Founded by the art critic Hrag Vartanian and his husband Veken Gueyikian in October 2009, the site describes itself as a "forum for serious, playful, and radical thinki ...
'', ''Oxford Art Journal'', '' Texte zur Künst'', and the ''Journal of Aesthetics and Protest'', among others.


Art and exhibitions

Sholette has curated several traveling exhibitions. While he was Curator of Education at the
New Museum The New Museum of Contemporary Art is a museum at 235 Bowery, on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in New York City. It was founded in 1977 by Marcia Tucker. History The museum originally opened in a space in the Graduate Center of the then-nam ...
in 1998, he curated the “Urban Encounters” exhibit, which highlighted the work of six Manhattan activist art collectives “generating political ferment and a lot of good art.” His conceptual group project ''Imaginary Archive'' (2010-2015) consists of a collection of documents that suggest an alternative social reality, takes “the notion of collaboration as a living, working material to be debated, explored and tested.” The installation project has traveled the cities of Kyiv, Graz, Galway, Philadelphia, Friedrichshafen, and Wellington in New Zealand. In 2017, Sholette’s solo exhibition ''Darker,'' a series of ink, pencil and acrylic wash drawings based on photographs of activist art and other political protests, was presented at Station Independent Projects. The project depicted “art activism in dark tones,” and examined “how dark matter is visualized and activated in mixed media works that explore recent moments of protest.” In 2022, he contributed to traveling exhibition ''Art for the Future:'' ''Artists Call and Central American Solidarities'' with “Insurrection,” which featured “a short text repeatedly silkscreened on four adjacent panels that remain half-concealed under a lush thicket of synthetic flora native to Latin America.”


Art criticism

Although his work has been criticized for primarily focusing on the New York art scene, Sholette has made three principal contributions in the field of art criticism and aesthetics.


Tactical media

Building upon the concept of
tactical media Tactical media is a term coined in 1996, to denote a form of media activism that privileges temporary interventions in the media sphere over the creation of permanent and alternative media outlets. Examples Tactical media projects are often a mix ...
, Sholette, along with Gene Ray, challenged the political relevance of tactical media and DIY creative strategies in the context of ongoing privatization and securitization in 2008. Sholette first addressed this topic in 2004 with ''The Interventionists: A Users’ Manual for the Creative Disruption of Everyday Life,'' co-edited with Nato Thompson.


Collective artistic labor

In ''Collectivism after Modernism: The Art of Social Imagination'', Sholette and Blake Stimson argue that the true potential of artistic collectivism can only be understood if it is historicized. Sholette and Stimson both claim that collaborative collectively produced artwork emerges as a central tool in challenging capitalism’s thrive for individualism, but that its form has undergone a fundamental change in the contemporary period following the collapse of modernism. In collaboration with art critics and scholars such as Jelena Stojanović,
Reiko Tomii is a Japanese-born art historian and curator based in New York. Specializing in Japanese modern and conceptual art in its global context during the postwar period, Tomii is one of the art historians publishing in the English language on postwar Jap ...
,
Okwui Enwezor Okwui Enwezor (23 October 1963 – 15 March 2019) was a Nigerian curator, art critic, writer, poet, and educator, specializing in art history. Enwezor served as artistic director of several major exhibitions, including Documenta11 (2002) and th ...
, Alan Moore and Brian Holmes, the authors push for the periodization of collectivism after
modernity Modernity, a topic in the humanities and social sciences, is both a historical period (the modern era) and the ensemble of particular Society, socio-Culture, cultural Norm (social), norms, attitudes and practices that arose in the wake of the ...
(
Futurism Futurism ( ) was an Art movement, artistic and social movement that originated in Italy, and to a lesser extent in other countries, in the early 20th century. It emphasized dynamism, speed, technology, youth, violence, and objects such as the ...
,
Productivism Productivism or growthism is the belief that measurable productivity and growth are the purpose of human organization (e.g., work), and that "more production is necessarily good". Critiques of productivism center primarily on the limits to ...
,
Constructivism Constructivism may refer to: Art and architecture * Constructivism (art), an early 20th-century artistic movement that extols art as a practice for social purposes * Constructivist architecture, an architectural movement in the Soviet Union in t ...
, and
Surrealism Surrealism is an art movement, art and cultural movement that developed in Europe in the aftermath of World War I in which artists aimed to allow the unconscious mind to express itself, often resulting in the depiction of illogical or dreamlike s ...
), and in the post-
World War II World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
era. In this way, the book attempts “to understand the various forms of postwar collectivism as historically determined phenomena and to articulate the possibilities for contemporary collectivist art production.” While the book lacks “a systematic debate on the differences between the collaborative and the collectivist,” it is nevertheless “a very rich, but sometimes overdescriptive and overdetailed, survey of collectivist artistic action in all parts of the world (only China, the Islamic world and Australia are missing)."


Dark matter and the political economy of the art world

Sholette’s art focuses on the forgotten, repressed or speculative genealogies of redundant, politically invisible cultural labor that actually maintains and reproduces the mainstream high art world marketplace. Sholette uses “
dark matter In astronomy, dark matter is an invisible and hypothetical form of matter that does not interact with light or other electromagnetic radiation. Dark matter is implied by gravity, gravitational effects that cannot be explained by general relat ...
” as a metaphor for these artistic practices and institutions, arguing that the visible, institutional art world is actually dependent on what it marginalizes and overshadows. He further developed this concept in ''Dark Matter: Art and Politics in the Age of Enterprise Culture'' (2010). This book engages with the mainstream conditions of the art system through the definition of what Sholette later describes in ''Delirium and Resistance'' (2017) '' ''as “bare art.” Borrowing from
Giorgio Agamben Giorgio Agamben ( ; ; born 22 April 1942) is an Italian philosopher best known for his work investigating the concepts of the state of exception, form-of-life (borrowed from Ludwig Wittgenstein) and '' homo sacer''. The concept of biopolitic ...
’s notion of bare life “as the condition of bodies reduced to biological existence through being excluded from the category of political citizenship by the state,” Sholette defines bare art as art deprived of any socially transformative capacity and dedicated to financial management and the reproduction of the status quo. Theorist Marc James Léger describes Sholette's concept of artistic dark matter as "the work of autonomous and participatory cultural production by amateur, informal, unofficial, autonomous, activist and non-institutional workers." Susan Ryan, Professor of Art History at
Louisiana State University Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, commonly referred to as Louisiana State University (LSU), is an American Public university, public Land-grant university, land-grant research university in Baton Rouge, Louis ...
, interprets the term as involving art "so embedded in reality that it is off the art radar." Art Historian Kuba Szreder at the
Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw () is a public university of visual arts and applied arts located in the Polish capital. The academy traces its history back to the Department of Arts founded at the Warsaw University in the Duchy of Warsaw in 18 ...
writes that the “mock institutions” Sholette points to are "native to artistic dark matter—research institutes, informal universities, collectives of urban gardeners, tribes of survivalists, temporary service points—each of which tends to operate in an institutional landscape ravaged by hostile forces of late capitalism.” Mockinstitutions mimic institutional structures as a form of critical reinvention, see for example the projects of artist Marina Naprushkina.


Criticism of work

Artist David Beech at
University of the Arts London The University of the Arts London is a public collegiate university in London, England, United Kingdom. It specialises in arts, design, fashion, and the performing arts. The university is a federation of six arts colleges: Camberwell College of ...
writes that while ''Dark Matter'' “is an important and timely contribution,” Sholette’s economic arguments are flawed. For example, “there is a fundamental problem with” his “idea of an “art strike” because “ t production is not wage labor.” Richard Lloyd, associate professor of sociology at
Vanderbilt University Vanderbilt University (informally Vandy or VU) is a private university, private research university in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Founded in 1873, it was named in honor of shipping and railroad magnate Cornelius Vanderbilt, who provide ...
, observes that in ''Dark Matter'' “one strains…to find an alternative model for doing “art and politics in the age of enterprise culture,” as suggested by Sholette's investigations and lived experience as a politically conscious and apparently marginal artist (thus part of the dark matter).” Lloyd further states that Sholette’s depiction of his own projects “is impersonal—there is no first-person reflection on these projects or their efficacy, though one can glean ambivalence in his depictions of how easily these moments of aesthetic resistance are ultimately absorbed by the neoliberal system.” Ultimately, Lloyd critically points out that “it becomes questionable whether the most prominent of these political interventions should be classed in the dark matter at all, or whether they form another sort of illuminated sphere among the art worlds.” In 2017 Sholette published ''Delirium and Resistance: Activist Art and the Crisis of Capitalism'', in which he argues that art has become simultaneously part of the increasing financialization of everything under neoliberal capitalism and a valuable resource for civic mobilization and progressive social transformation. A key concept that ties ''Dark Matter'' to ''Delirium and Resistance'' is Sholette’s suggestion that society has entered a world of Bare Art. Social and cultural anthropologist Gretchen Coombs asserts that Sholette uses the terms “art and activism,” “social practice,” and “socially engaged” interchangeably, and while he “works out these differences through his case studies…these terms often function on different registers, specifically as they are understood in our globalized world.” The book’s focus on New York also “casts a specter across the book’s historical arc, effectively provincializing what needs to be deprovincialized.” Sholette has sought to expand his scope of practice and study outside of New York. In 2019, he guest edited a special double issue of ''FIELD'' titled ''Art, Anti-Globalism, and the Neo-Authoritarian turn'', which reports on the rise of ultra-nationalism/authoritarianism from 30 different nations. His most recent book, ''The Activism of Art and the Art of Activism'' (2022), covers South America, Serbia, Afghanistan, Hong Kong, Syria and other locations in addition to the US and Europe in a brief overview of protest aesthetics, and made it into the list of
The Art Newspaper ''The Art Newspaper'' is a monthly print publication, with daily updates online, founded in 1990 and based in London and New York City. It covers news of the visual arts as they are affected by international politics and economics, developments i ...
's top art books of 2022. However, art critic and editor J.J. Charlesworth at
ArtReview ''ArtReview'' is an international contemporary art magazine based in London, founded in 1948. Its sister publication, ''ArtReview Asia'', was established in 2013. History Launched as a fortnightly broadsheet in February 1949 by a retired country ...
writes that the book does not address “the ambiguities of demanding that ‘high culture’ be abolished while its institutions remain, and in effect get taken over by progressive artists-as-activists.”


Other select work


Publications

''The Art of Activism and the Activism of Art'' (London: Lund Humphries, 2022). ''Art As Social Action: An Introduction to the Principles & Practices of Teaching Social Practice Art'' (co-edited with Chloë Bass, Skyworth/Allworth Press, 2018). ''Merciless Aesthetic/Nemilosrdna estetika'' (WHW Press, Croatia, 2016). ''It's the Political Economy, Stupid'' (co-edited with Oliver Ressler, Pluto Press, 2012).


Art projects

“Precarious Workers Pageant,” a collaborative performance intervention carried out during the
Venice Biennial The Venice Biennale ( ; ) is an international cultural exhibition hosted annually in Venice, Italy. There are two main components of the festival, known as the Art Biennale () and the Venice Biennale of Architecture, Architecture Biennale (), ...
on the evening of August 7, 2015 that consisted of a public procession staged in solidarity with migrant laborers working on
Saadiyat Island Saadiyat Island (; ', for "Island of Happiness") is a natural island and a Cultural tourism, tourism-cultural environmentally friendly project for Culture of the United Arab Emirates, Emirati heritage and culture that is located in Abu Dhabi, U ...
in
Abu Dhabi Abu Dhabi is the capital city of the United Arab Emirates. The city is the seat of the Abu Dhabi Central Capital District, the capital city of the Emirate of Abu Dhabi, and the UAE's List of cities in the United Arab Emirates, second-most popu ...
where a
Frank Gehry Frank Owen Gehry ( ; ; born February 28, 1929) is a Canadian-American architect and designer. A number of his buildings, including his private residence in Santa Monica, California, have become attractions. Gehry rose to prominence in th ...
designed
Guggenheim Museum The Guggenheim Museums are a group of museums in different parts of the world established (or proposed to be established) by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation. Museums in this group include: * The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, Ne ...
will soon be under construction. Venice, Italy with Queens College Social Practice Students/Alumni, 2015. “Our Barricades,” Station Independent Projects, a series of stark black and white bas-relief pieces graphically linking the oily materiality of street barricades to global petro-politics, the war on terror, and the need for an aesthetics of resistance, 2014. “15 Islands for
Robert Moses Robert Moses (December 18, 1888 – July 29, 1981) was an American urban planner and public official who worked in the New York metropolitan area during the early to mid-20th century. Moses is regarded as one of the most powerful and influentia ...
,” a site-specific project in the Panorama of the City of New York, which was originally built for the 1964 World’s Fair by urban planner Robert Moses. The project placed new islands around the Panorama’s waterways based on proposals by Larry Bogad, Marc Fischer, Aaron Gach/Center for Tactical Magic, Ann Messner, Ted Purves, Rasha Salti,
Dread Scott Scott Tyler (born 1965), known professionally as Dread Scott, is an American artist whose works, often participatory in nature, focus on the experience of African Americans in the contemporary United States. His first major work, ''What Is the Pr ...
, Libertad Guerra, Dara Greenwald, Marisa Jahn, and several others who Sholette invited to respond to the prompt, “If you could add an island to New York City, what would that new landmass be like?”
Queens Museum The Queens Museum (formerly the Queens Museum of Art) is an art museum and educational center at Flushing Meadows–Corona Park in Queens, New York City, United States. Established in 1972, the museum includes the '' Panorama of the City of New ...
, 2012.Maria Fitzsimons,
Imaginary islands fully realized ‘Greg Sholette: Fifteen Islands for Robert Moses
’” ''Queens Chronicle,'' April 5, 2012


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Sholette, Gregory Year of birth missing (living people) Living people