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Lori Waxman, 60 wrd/min art critic, 2012. Installation view at dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel, Germany. Photo credit: Claire Pentecost.Since 2005, Lori Waxman has conducted a work of performance art about art criticism entitled the 60 wrd/min art critic. Through this ongoing performance she has provided brief written reviews to visual artists in various geographical locations, on a first-come, first-served basis.For three days at University Galleries of Illinois State University, Waxman will receive artists seeking reviews as part of 60 wrd/min art critic. Reviews, which are free of charge, will be scheduled and written in twenty-five minute increments during these hours: March 24 and March 25, from 11am to 5pm, and March 26, from 10am to 4pm.Reviews will be signed, “published,” and ready for pick-up within the timeframe of the performance. Artist, artwork, critic, and review will all exist in the same space simultaneously, thereby helping to demystify the art review process. The reviews will all be posted at the performance site and will remain on view through April 3. In addition, the reviews will be published on this webpage beginning on March 24. WGLT public radio is an NPR affiliate and a service of Illinois State University.Appointments for Waxman’s reviews can be requested beginning on March 10 by emailing critic@60wrdmin.org. Please include any date and time preferences. In the event the requests for reviews exceed 30, selections will be made by computer lottery. Participants will be notified via email about appointments and the details of the performance process.Waxman describes the 60 wrd/min art critic as many things: “an exploration of short-form art writing, a work of performance art in and of itself, an experiment in role shifting between artist and critic, [and] a democratic gesture and a circumvention of the art review process.” She says that at a time when newspaper and magazine art columns are disappearing, the 60 wrd/min art critic “aims to get a community thinking about where the responsibility for art criticism resides…the project deals comically and literally with the idea that there are too many artists and galleries, and not enough critical venues to cover it all.”Waxman has focused her project on regional arts communities in a wide variety of locations across America, including Detroit; Portland, Maine; and Kansas City, Missouri. In the summer of 2012, a 100-day version was included in dOCUMENTA (13), the major survey of international art held every five years in Kassel, Germany. An artist book of those reviews was later published by Onestar Press, Paris.Waxman, who was born in Montreal, Canada, writes a biweekly column for the Chicago Tribune. She teaches art history and criticism at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and holds a Ph.D. from the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, where she wrote her dissertation about walking as a radical aesthetic art form. She is co-author of Girls! Girls! Girls! in contemporary art (2011) and Talking with Your Mouth Full: New Language for Socially Engaged Art (2008).The 60 wrd/min art critic is a project of the Creative Capital | Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant Program. More information on this national project can be found at www.60wrdmin.org. At University Galleries, this project is organized by Senior Curator Kendra Paitz and is sponsored by the Harold K. Sage Foundation and the Illinois State University Foundation Fund.University Galleries is located at Uptown Station at the corner of Beaufort and Broadway streets. Parking is available directly above in the Uptown Station parking deck, and the first hour is free, as well as any time after 5:01pm. If you need special accommodations to participate in any event, please contact University Galleries at 309.438.5487 or gallery@IllinoisState.edu. All events at University Galleries are free and open to the public. For more information, visit www.FineArts.IllinoisState.edu/galleries or call 309.438.5487.

STEPHEN RAMBERG

60 WRD/MIN ART CRITIC AT UNIVERSITY GALLERIES, NORMAL, IL 3/24/16 1:03PM

 

 

 

Agnostics admit that they have no idea what human afterlife will hold: maybe something, maybe nothing. Stephen Ramberg need not locate themself in such limbo. A sculptor, their primary material is donated paper goods—documents, old letters, books, statements—that achieve a new life after being pulped and formed into large, bulbous shapes held together by ribs of ceramic coil. Man-made objects are born and live a life that eventually ends; recycling posits a second life that in oblique ways regenerates what energy is left over from that first time around. Echoes of samsara, the Hindu and Buddhist belief in the endless cycle of death and rebirth, rebound throughout Ramberg’s sculptures, as they do in the works of famed recycled-materials artists like Theaster Gates or John Preus. Ramberg’s gambit is an earthier one, however, resulting here in a form that could have been built by wasps or burrowed by moles. That’s part of the lesson of rebirth: you might come back as an ant, so watch where you step.  

 

—Lori Waxman 

 

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