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GALLERY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Gallery Artwork from the Museum Museum of Non-visible Art > GalleryGallery
HISTORY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART The Museum of Non-Visble Art (MONA) will show artwork that is text based and is. designed to be seen with the minds-eye using a brief text on a card mounted on a wall. In essence, the art work itself is what the viewer sees in their mind, but the cue for what they are imagining is written on a card, mounted on the wall like a traditionaltitle
INTERVIEWS FROM YALE UNIVERSITY RADIO WYBCX Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview MagazineRIRKRIT TIRAVANIJA
Rirkrit Tiravanija. Photo of Rirkrit Tiravanija by Roe Ethridge. “Rirkrit Tiravanija is arguably the most influential artist of his generation,” says Laura Hoptman, the organizer of the Carnegie International. He has transformed the notion of conceptual art by taking his environments out of the museum to the ends of the earth,literally.
KATHRANNE KNIGHT
Kathranne Knight is a visual artist and co-editor of Correspondence Publishing. Her drawings speak in the packed way of a symbol– elemental, but ricocheting with associations and metaphoric possibilities. Impermanence, multiplication, and issues of representation are plumbed through materials as various as fly paper, silver, tears, and graphite.ANNIE LAPIN
Annie Lapin. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Annie Lapin was born in Washington, D.C. and lives in Los Angeles. She received a Bachelor of Arts from Yale University in 2001; a Post-Baccalaureate Certificate from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2004; and a Master of Fine Arts from the University ofCalifornia
MIREIA SALLARÈS CASAS Mireia Sallarès Casas. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Mireia Sallar è s (Barcelona, 1973) lives between Barcelona and other foreign cities where she develops her artistic practice.Being a foreigner is an essential register in her field research that is the result of long term projects on such essentialtopics as
LINDA MARY MONTANO
Linda Mary Montano is a seminal figure in contemporary feminist performance art and her work since the mid 1960s has been critical in the development of performance and video by,for,and about women. Attempting to dissolve the boundaries between art and life, Montano continues to actively explore her art/life through shared experience,role
BRAINARD CAREY
The interviews on this page are from his public affairs show on Yale radio, WYBC. Brainard Carey was born in Manhattan, New York, and grew up in Yonkers. After attending undergraduate art school at SUNY Purchase, he moved to Rhode Island and opened a gallery and began publishing a literary magazine. Carey then moved back to New YorkCity, where
MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Museum of Non-Visible Art showcases remains unseen. Although the artworks themselves are not visible, the descriptions are readable, and open our eyes to. a parallel world built of images and words. This world is not visible, but it exists, as surely as thought itself exists. The Manifesto of MONA explains everything else about the whyand how.
GALLERY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Gallery Artwork from the Museum Museum of Non-visible Art > GalleryGallery
HISTORY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART The Museum of Non-Visble Art (MONA) will show artwork that is text based and is. designed to be seen with the minds-eye using a brief text on a card mounted on a wall. In essence, the art work itself is what the viewer sees in their mind, but the cue for what they are imagining is written on a card, mounted on the wall like a traditionaltitle
KIMBERLY BROOKS
Kimberly Brooks is a contemporary American artist and author of The New Oil Painting with Chronicle Books. She is known for her portraitsand landscapes in
INTERVIEWS FROM YALE UNIVERSITY RADIO WYBCX Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview Magazine CARL BERG | INTERVIEWS FROM YALE UNIVERSITY RADIO WYBCX Carl Berg has been a curator and gallery director for almost thirty years. He is the founder/director of PRJCTLA a new alternate gallery in downtown Los Angeles. HeTAMMY NGUYEN
Tammy Nguyen is a multimedia artist whose work spans painting, drawing, printmaking, and publishing. Intersecting geopolitical realities with fiction, her practice addresses lesser-known histories through a blend of myth and visual narrative. She is the founder of Passenger Pigeon Press, an independent press that joins the work ofscientists
BRAINARD CAREY
The interviews on this page are from his public affairs show on Yale radio, WYBC. Brainard Carey was born in Manhattan, New York, and grew up in Yonkers. After attending undergraduate art school at SUNY Purchase, he moved to Rhode Island and opened a gallery and began publishing a literary magazine. Carey then moved back to New YorkCity, where
HARALD FALCKENBERG
Harald Falckenberg, born 1943, is President of the Kunstverein in Hamburg since 1998. He has studied law in Freiburg, Berlin and Hamburgand worked since
LINDA MARY MONTANO
Linda Mary Montano is a seminal figure in contemporary feminist performance art and her work since the mid 1960s has been critical in the development of performance and video by,for,and about women. Attempting to dissolve the boundaries between art and life, Montano continues to actively explore her art/life through shared experience,role
INTERVIEWS FROM YALE UNIVERSITY RADIO WYBCX Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview MagazineMONA MANIFESTO
Art is without value until it faces the market. The market purveys value. Money is banal until it has been spent. Money spent on art is money transformed. Money spent is mourned. This mourning is eased by art. We strive to enhance mourning. Mourning is a response to what is not there. An afterglow.PAGE 205
Susanna Coffey is the F.H. Sellers Professor in Painting at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She received a BFA from from the University of Connecticut atWENDY RED STAR
The Last Thanks, 2006 Pigment print. Artist Wendy Red Star works across disciplines to explore the intersections of Native American ideologies and colonialist structures, both historically and in contemporary society. Raised on the Apsáalooke (Crow) reservation in Montana, Red Star’s work is informed both by her cultural heritage and her engagement with many forms of creative expression FRESH AIR – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Fresh Air. brainard. September 28th, 2015. Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry’s standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book. It has survived not only five centuries, but also theŠEJMA FERE
Šejma Fere creates collages, mixed media artworks and installations. Her artworks deal with potential of multiple narratives. She isdiscovering
DOTTY ATTIE
Dotty Attie (born 1938, Pennsauken, New Jersey) is an American painter and printmaker. She has been exhibiting in museums and galleries worldwide since the 1970s. Attie’s work in the 1960s received some attention, but gained far more recognition after her involvement inA.I.R. Gallery.
DANA DEGIULIO
Dana DeGiulio. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Dana DeGiulio, 41, teaches painting in New York. Her book Nefertiti for the Blind was released by Attendant in February 2019. from Proposal for a Future Museum. Digital video still, 2013.JACOB FABRICIUS
Jacob Fabricius is currently working as a freelance curator, writer and publisher. He lives in Copenhagen, Denmark. Previously Fabricius was director at Malmö Konsthall, Sweden (2008-12) and at Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen, Denmark (2013-14), where he has curated a large number of exhibitions including solo shows by RivaneCOLEEN FITZGIBBON
Coleen Fitzgibbon recently finished two documentaries, one on the nether-world installations of sculptor Johnathan Silver (Infidel in the Studio) and a canoe tour of superfund site in Greenpoint, Brooklyn (Greenpoint 2017). Fitzgibbon is in the 1980’s work of The Offices at the HirshHorn Museum’s current show Brand New and is currently MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART The idea for this institution came from an artist collaborative called Praxis (Brainard and Delia Carey). Praxis is a husband and wife team known for performance and installation work, such as the giving out of hugs and foot-washing at museums and galleries and immersiveinstallations.
GALLERY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Gallery Artwork from the Museum Museum of Non-visible Art > GalleryGallery
HISTORY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART The idea for this institution came from an artist collaborative called Praxis (Brainard and Delia Carey). Praxis is a husband and wife team known for performance and installation work, such as the giving out of hugs and foot-washing at museums and galleries and immersiveinstallations.
RIRKRIT TIRAVANIJA
Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview MagazineLINDA MARY MONTANO
Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview MagazineBRAINARD CAREY
Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview MagazineTAMMY NGUYEN
Tammy Nguyen is a multimedia artist whose work spans painting, drawing, printmaking, and publishing. Intersecting geopolitical realities with fiction, her practice addresses lesser-known histories through a blend of myth and visual narrative. MIREIA SALLARÈS CASAS Mireia Sallares Casas is an artist and writer from Barcelona, Spain. Living in Barcelona is increasingly difficult as the city gentrifies and housing costs soar so she recently moved out of the city where she is able to have more space to live and have her studio.KATHRANNE KNIGHT
Kathranne Knight is a visual artist and co-editor of Correspondence Publishing. Her drawings speak in the packed way of a symbol–elemental, but
HARALD FALCKENBERG
Harald Falckenberg, born 1943, is President of the Kunstverein in Hamburg since 1998. He has studied law in Freiburg, Berlin and Hamburgand worked since
MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART The idea for this institution came from an artist collaborative called Praxis (Brainard and Delia Carey). Praxis is a husband and wife team known for performance and installation work, such as the giving out of hugs and foot-washing at museums and galleries and immersiveinstallations.
GALLERY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Gallery Artwork from the Museum Museum of Non-visible Art > GalleryGallery
HISTORY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART The idea for this institution came from an artist collaborative called Praxis (Brainard and Delia Carey). Praxis is a husband and wife team known for performance and installation work, such as the giving out of hugs and foot-washing at museums and galleries and immersiveinstallations.
RIRKRIT TIRAVANIJA
Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview MagazineLINDA MARY MONTANO
Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview MagazineBRAINARD CAREY
Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview MagazineTAMMY NGUYEN
Tammy Nguyen is a multimedia artist whose work spans painting, drawing, printmaking, and publishing. Intersecting geopolitical realities with fiction, her practice addresses lesser-known histories through a blend of myth and visual narrative. MIREIA SALLARÈS CASAS Mireia Sallares Casas is an artist and writer from Barcelona, Spain. Living in Barcelona is increasingly difficult as the city gentrifies and housing costs soar so she recently moved out of the city where she is able to have more space to live and have her studio.KATHRANNE KNIGHT
Kathranne Knight is a visual artist and co-editor of Correspondence Publishing. Her drawings speak in the packed way of a symbol–elemental, but
HARALD FALCKENBERG
Harald Falckenberg, born 1943, is President of the Kunstverein in Hamburg since 1998. He has studied law in Freiburg, Berlin and Hamburgand worked since
MANIFESTO – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART The only surface worth painting is the mind of the viewer. The viewing of art should not require eyes. Art should be entoptic. We strive toforce meditation.
MONA MANIFESTO
A MANIFESTO: TO CLARIFY THE NON-VISIBLE. 1. Art itself is nothing. All that matters is what is left. The afterglow. The ambition is toproduce this.
INTERVIEWS FROM YALE UNIVERSITY RADIO WYBCX Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview MagazineWENDY RED STAR
The Last Thanks, 2006 Pigment print. Artist Wendy Red Star works across disciplines to explore the intersections of Native American ideologies and colonialist structures, both historically and in contemporary society. Raised on the Apsáalooke (Crow) reservation in Montana, Red Star’s work is informed both by her cultural heritage and her engagement with many forms of creative expressionPAGE 205
Susanna Coffey is the F.H. Sellers Professor in Painting at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She received a BFA from from the University of Connecticut atŠEJMA FERE
Šejma Fere creates collages, mixed media artworks and installations. Her artworks deal with potential of multiple narratives. She isdiscovering
DANA DEGIULIO
Dana DeGiulio, 41, teaches painting in New York. Her book Nefertiti for the Blind was released by Attendant in February 2019.DOTTY ATTIE
Dotty Attie (born 1938, Pennsauken, New Jersey) is an American painter and printmaker. She has been exhibiting in museums and galleriesworldwide
STEPHAN PASCHER
Stephan Pascher is an artist, writer, and educator, with projects that incorporate a wide range of materials, media, and forms: from installation to photography, drawing, and printed matter. Over tCOLEEN FITZGIBBON
Coleen Fitzgibbon recently finished two documentaries, one on the nether-world installations of sculptor Johnathan Silver (Infidel inthe Studio) and a
MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Museum of Non-Visible Art showcases remains unseen. Although the artworks themselves are not visible, the descriptions are readable, and open our eyes to. a parallel world built of images and words. This world is not visible, but it exists, as surely as thought itself exists. The Manifesto of MONA explains everything else about the whyand how.
GALLERY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Gallery Artwork from the Museum Museum of Non-visible Art > GalleryGallery
HISTORY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART The Museum of Non-Visble Art (MONA) will show artwork that is text based and is. designed to be seen with the minds-eye using a brief text on a card mounted on a wall. In essence, the art work itself is what the viewer sees in their mind, but the cue for what they are imagining is written on a card, mounted on the wall like a traditionaltitle
INTERVIEWS FROM YALE UNIVERSITY RADIO WYBCX Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview MagazineRIRKRIT TIRAVANIJA
Rirkrit Tiravanija. Photo of Rirkrit Tiravanija by Roe Ethridge. “Rirkrit Tiravanija is arguably the most influential artist of his generation,” says Laura Hoptman, the organizer of the Carnegie International. He has transformed the notion of conceptual art by taking his environments out of the museum to the ends of the earth,literally.
KATHRANNE KNIGHT
Kathranne Knight is a visual artist and co-editor of Correspondence Publishing. Her drawings speak in the packed way of a symbol– elemental, but ricocheting with associations and metaphoric possibilities. Impermanence, multiplication, and issues of representation are plumbed through materials as various as fly paper, silver, tears, and graphite.ANNIE LAPIN
Annie Lapin. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Annie Lapin was born in Washington, D.C. and lives in Los Angeles. She received a Bachelor of Arts from Yale University in 2001; a Post-Baccalaureate Certificate from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2004; and a Master of Fine Arts from the University ofCalifornia
MIREIA SALLARÈS CASAS Mireia Sallarès Casas. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Mireia Sallar è s (Barcelona, 1973) lives between Barcelona and other foreign cities where she develops her artistic practice.Being a foreigner is an essential register in her field research that is the result of long term projects on such essentialtopics as
LINDA MARY MONTANO
Linda Mary Montano is a seminal figure in contemporary feminist performance art and her work since the mid 1960s has been critical in the development of performance and video by,for,and about women. Attempting to dissolve the boundaries between art and life, Montano continues to actively explore her art/life through shared experience,role
BRAINARD CAREY
The interviews on this page are from his public affairs show on Yale radio, WYBC. Brainard Carey was born in Manhattan, New York, and grew up in Yonkers. After attending undergraduate art school at SUNY Purchase, he moved to Rhode Island and opened a gallery and began publishing a literary magazine. Carey then moved back to New YorkCity, where
MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Museum of Non-Visible Art showcases remains unseen. Although the artworks themselves are not visible, the descriptions are readable, and open our eyes to. a parallel world built of images and words. This world is not visible, but it exists, as surely as thought itself exists. The Manifesto of MONA explains everything else about the whyand how.
GALLERY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Gallery Artwork from the Museum Museum of Non-visible Art > GalleryGallery
HISTORY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART The Museum of Non-Visble Art (MONA) will show artwork that is text based and is. designed to be seen with the minds-eye using a brief text on a card mounted on a wall. In essence, the art work itself is what the viewer sees in their mind, but the cue for what they are imagining is written on a card, mounted on the wall like a traditionaltitle
INTERVIEWS FROM YALE UNIVERSITY RADIO WYBCX Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview MagazineRIRKRIT TIRAVANIJA
Rirkrit Tiravanija. Photo of Rirkrit Tiravanija by Roe Ethridge. “Rirkrit Tiravanija is arguably the most influential artist of his generation,” says Laura Hoptman, the organizer of the Carnegie International. He has transformed the notion of conceptual art by taking his environments out of the museum to the ends of the earth,literally.
KATHRANNE KNIGHT
Kathranne Knight is a visual artist and co-editor of Correspondence Publishing. Her drawings speak in the packed way of a symbol– elemental, but ricocheting with associations and metaphoric possibilities. Impermanence, multiplication, and issues of representation are plumbed through materials as various as fly paper, silver, tears, and graphite.ANNIE LAPIN
Annie Lapin. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Annie Lapin was born in Washington, D.C. and lives in Los Angeles. She received a Bachelor of Arts from Yale University in 2001; a Post-Baccalaureate Certificate from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2004; and a Master of Fine Arts from the University ofCalifornia
MIREIA SALLARÈS CASAS Mireia Sallarès Casas. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Mireia Sallar è s (Barcelona, 1973) lives between Barcelona and other foreign cities where she develops her artistic practice.Being a foreigner is an essential register in her field research that is the result of long term projects on such essentialtopics as
LINDA MARY MONTANO
Linda Mary Montano is a seminal figure in contemporary feminist performance art and her work since the mid 1960s has been critical in the development of performance and video by,for,and about women. Attempting to dissolve the boundaries between art and life, Montano continues to actively explore her art/life through shared experience,role
BRAINARD CAREY
The interviews on this page are from his public affairs show on Yale radio, WYBC. Brainard Carey was born in Manhattan, New York, and grew up in Yonkers. After attending undergraduate art school at SUNY Purchase, he moved to Rhode Island and opened a gallery and began publishing a literary magazine. Carey then moved back to New YorkCity, where
INTERVIEWS FROM YALE UNIVERSITY RADIO WYBCX Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview MagazineMONA MANIFESTO
Art is without value until it faces the market. The market purveys value. Money is banal until it has been spent. Money spent on art is money transformed. Money spent is mourned. This mourning is eased by art. We strive to enhance mourning. Mourning is a response to what is not there. An afterglow. ARTISTS – PAGE 92 – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART This is a continuation of the interview that began on 12/09/2015, It was recorded on Saturday, January 2nd, 2015.PAGE 205
Susanna Coffey is the F.H. Sellers Professor in Painting at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She received a BFA from from the University of Connecticut atWENDY RED STAR
The Last Thanks, 2006 Pigment print. Artist Wendy Red Star works across disciplines to explore the intersections of Native American ideologies and colonialist structures, both historically and in contemporary society. Raised on the Apsáalooke (Crow) reservation in Montana, Red Star’s work is informed both by her cultural heritage and her engagement with many forms of creative expressionŠEJMA FERE
Šejma Fere creates collages, mixed media artworks and installations. Her artworks deal with potential of multiple narratives. She isdiscovering
MARINA ADAMS
MARINA ADAMS is a painter based in both New York City and Parma, Italy. She earned her MFA in painting from Columbia University’s School of the Arts and her BFA from Tyler School of Art, Temple University. Adams’ work has been the subject of a number of solo exhibitions including Marina Adams at Galerie Gris, Hudson, NY (2015 and 2013); Marina Adams: Coming Thru Strange at HionasDOTTY ATTIE
Dotty Attie (born 1938, Pennsauken, New Jersey) is an American painter and printmaker. She has been exhibiting in museums and galleries worldwide since the 1970s. Attie’s work in the 1960s received some attention, but gained far more recognition after her involvement inA.I.R. Gallery.
DANA DEGIULIO
Dana DeGiulio. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Dana DeGiulio, 41, teaches painting in New York. Her book Nefertiti for the Blind was released by Attendant in February 2019. from Proposal for a Future Museum. Digital video still, 2013.COLEEN FITZGIBBON
Coleen Fitzgibbon recently finished two documentaries, one on the nether-world installations of sculptor Johnathan Silver (Infidel in the Studio) and a canoe tour of superfund site in Greenpoint, Brooklyn (Greenpoint 2017). Fitzgibbon is in the 1980’s work of The Offices at the HirshHorn Museum’s current show Brand New and is currently MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Museum of Non-Visible Art showcases remains unseen. Although the artworks themselves are not visible, the descriptions are readable, and open our eyes to. a parallel world built of images and words. This world is not visible, but it exists, as surely as thought itself exists. The Manifesto of MONA explains everything else about the whyand how.
GALLERY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Gallery Artwork from the Museum Museum of Non-visible Art > GalleryGallery
WENDY RED STAR
The Last Thanks, 2006 Pigment print. Artist Wendy Red Star works across disciplines to explore the intersections of Native American ideologies and colonialist structures, both historically and in contemporary society. Raised on the Apsáalooke (Crow) reservation in Montana, Red Star’s work is informed both by her cultural heritage and her engagement with many forms of creative expressionRIRKRIT TIRAVANIJA
Rirkrit Tiravanija. Photo of Rirkrit Tiravanija by Roe Ethridge. “Rirkrit Tiravanija is arguably the most influential artist of his generation,” says Laura Hoptman, the organizer of the Carnegie International. He has transformed the notion of conceptual art by taking his environments out of the museum to the ends of the earth,literally.
STEPHAN PASCHER
Stephan Pascher. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Stephan Pascher is an artist, writer, and educator, with projects that incorporate a wide range of materials, media, and forms: from installation to photography, drawing, and printed matter. Over the past two decades Pascher’s work has been exhibitedinternationally at
BRAINARD CAREY
The interviews on this page are from his public affairs show on Yale radio, WYBC. Brainard Carey was born in Manhattan, New York, and grew up in Yonkers. After attending undergraduate art school at SUNY Purchase, he moved to Rhode Island and opened a gallery and began publishing a literary magazine. Carey then moved back to New YorkCity, where
MIKE RADER | INTERVIEWS FROM YALE UNIVERSITY RADIO WYBCX Mike Rader is a mixed media artist working in film, animation, painting, sculpture, printmaking and drawing. Often mixing all of these elements into one work, he creates a creative playpen to flesh out an area of interest. Mike chooses his mediums by need rather than passion by asking the question of which medium will best articulate his current creative curiosity.ANNIE LAPIN
Annie Lapin. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Annie Lapin was born in Washington, D.C. and lives in Los Angeles. She received a Bachelor of Arts from Yale University in 2001; a Post-Baccalaureate Certificate from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2004; and a Master of Fine Arts from the University ofCalifornia
CHRISTINE MULLEN KREAMER Dr. Christine Mullen Kreamer is Deputy Director and Chief Curator at the National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution, where she has worked since 2000. Her exhibitions and publications explore art and ritual, gender, African systems of knowledge, and museum practice, and they bridge the disciplines of art history, anthropology, andVERENA JOHANNSMANN
Hybrids, Atomism and Space Performance by Verena Johannsmann. While thinking about advancement of her theses and post doc research in Avantgarde Performance-Art Dr. Verena Johannsmann worked for Marc Spiegler and Noah Horowitz on a Curatorial Design within the context of Art Basel (between Miami Beach and Hong Kong) the last months. MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Museum of Non-Visible Art showcases remains unseen. Although the artworks themselves are not visible, the descriptions are readable, and open our eyes to. a parallel world built of images and words. This world is not visible, but it exists, as surely as thought itself exists. The Manifesto of MONA explains everything else about the whyand how.
GALLERY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Gallery Artwork from the Museum Museum of Non-visible Art > GalleryGallery
WENDY RED STAR
The Last Thanks, 2006 Pigment print. Artist Wendy Red Star works across disciplines to explore the intersections of Native American ideologies and colonialist structures, both historically and in contemporary society. Raised on the Apsáalooke (Crow) reservation in Montana, Red Star’s work is informed both by her cultural heritage and her engagement with many forms of creative expressionRIRKRIT TIRAVANIJA
Rirkrit Tiravanija. Photo of Rirkrit Tiravanija by Roe Ethridge. “Rirkrit Tiravanija is arguably the most influential artist of his generation,” says Laura Hoptman, the organizer of the Carnegie International. He has transformed the notion of conceptual art by taking his environments out of the museum to the ends of the earth,literally.
STEPHAN PASCHER
Stephan Pascher. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Stephan Pascher is an artist, writer, and educator, with projects that incorporate a wide range of materials, media, and forms: from installation to photography, drawing, and printed matter. Over the past two decades Pascher’s work has been exhibitedinternationally at
BRAINARD CAREY
The interviews on this page are from his public affairs show on Yale radio, WYBC. Brainard Carey was born in Manhattan, New York, and grew up in Yonkers. After attending undergraduate art school at SUNY Purchase, he moved to Rhode Island and opened a gallery and began publishing a literary magazine. Carey then moved back to New YorkCity, where
MIKE RADER | INTERVIEWS FROM YALE UNIVERSITY RADIO WYBCX Mike Rader is a mixed media artist working in film, animation, painting, sculpture, printmaking and drawing. Often mixing all of these elements into one work, he creates a creative playpen to flesh out an area of interest. Mike chooses his mediums by need rather than passion by asking the question of which medium will best articulate his current creative curiosity.ANNIE LAPIN
Annie Lapin. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Annie Lapin was born in Washington, D.C. and lives in Los Angeles. She received a Bachelor of Arts from Yale University in 2001; a Post-Baccalaureate Certificate from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2004; and a Master of Fine Arts from the University ofCalifornia
CHRISTINE MULLEN KREAMER Dr. Christine Mullen Kreamer is Deputy Director and Chief Curator at the National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution, where she has worked since 2000. Her exhibitions and publications explore art and ritual, gender, African systems of knowledge, and museum practice, and they bridge the disciplines of art history, anthropology, andVERENA JOHANNSMANN
Hybrids, Atomism and Space Performance by Verena Johannsmann. While thinking about advancement of her theses and post doc research in Avantgarde Performance-Art Dr. Verena Johannsmann worked for Marc Spiegler and Noah Horowitz on a Curatorial Design within the context of Art Basel (between Miami Beach and Hong Kong) the last months. HISTORY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART The Museum of Non-Visble Art (MONA) will show artwork that is text based and is. designed to be seen with the minds-eye using a brief text on a card mounted on a wall. In essence, the art work itself is what the viewer sees in their mind, but the cue for what they are imagining is written on a card, mounted on the wall like a traditionaltitle
MONA MANIFESTO
Art is without value until it faces the market. The market purveys value. Money is banal until it has been spent. Money spent on art is money transformed. Money spent is mourned. This mourning is eased by art. We strive to enhance mourning. Mourning is a response to what is not there. An afterglow. ARTISTS – PAGE 92 – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART This is a continuation of the interview that began on 12/09/2015, It was recorded on Saturday, January 2nd, 2015.PAGE 205
Susanna Coffey is the F.H. Sellers Professor in Painting at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She received a BFA from from the University of Connecticut at ANN MCCOY | INTERVIEWS FROM YALE UNIVERSITY RADIO WYBCX Ann McCoy is a New York-based sculptor, painter, and art critic, and Editor at Large for the Brooklyn Rail. She was awarded a 2019 John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship. She lectured on art history, the history of projection, and mythology in the graduate design section of the Yale School of Drama until May 2020, and taught in theArt
DOTTY ATTIE
Dotty Attie (born 1938, Pennsauken, New Jersey) is an American painter and printmaker. She has been exhibiting in museums and galleries worldwide since the 1970s. Attie’s work in the 1960s received some attention, but gained far more recognition after her involvement inA.I.R. Gallery.
MARINA ADAMS
MARINA ADAMS is a painter based in both New York City and Parma, Italy. She earned her MFA in painting from Columbia University’s School of the Arts and her BFA from Tyler School of Art, Temple University. Adams’ work has been the subject of a number of solo exhibitions including Marina Adams at Galerie Gris, Hudson, NY (2015 and 2013); Marina Adams: Coming Thru Strange at Hionas MIREIA SALLARÈS CASAS Mireia Sallarès Casas. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Mireia Sallar è s (Barcelona, 1973) lives between Barcelona and other foreign cities where she develops her artistic practice.Being a foreigner is an essential register in her field research that is the result of long term projects on such essentialtopics as
LINDA MARY MONTANO
Linda Mary Montano is a seminal figure in contemporary feminist performance art and her work since the mid 1960s has been critical in the development of performance and video by,for,and about women. Attempting to dissolve the boundaries between art and life, Montano continues to actively explore her art/life through shared experience,role
DIANE LEWIS
Diane Lewis is Principal of Diane Lewis Architects PC, a practice established in 1983, and is a tenured Professor of Architecture at The Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture of the Cooper Union where she has been on the faculty from 1982 to the present. Lewis MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Museum of Non-Visible Art showcases remains unseen. Although the artworks themselves are not visible, the descriptions are readable, and open our eyes to. a parallel world built of images and words. This world is not visible, but it exists, as surely as thought itself exists. The Manifesto of MONA explains everything else about the whyand how.
HISTORY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ARTMUSEUM OF INVISIBLE ARTNON VISUAL ARTMONA MUSEUMSAND SPRINGS MUSEUMSANDY SPRING MUSEUM MDINVISIBLE ART The Museum of Non-Visble Art (MONA) will show artwork that is text based and is. designed to be seen with the minds-eye using a brief text on a card mounted on a wall. In essence, the art work itself is what the viewer sees in their mind, but the cue for what they are imagining is written on a card, mounted on the wall like a traditionaltitle
RIRKRIT TIRAVANIJA
Rirkrit Tiravanija. Photo of Rirkrit Tiravanija by Roe Ethridge. “Rirkrit Tiravanija is arguably the most influential artist of his generation,” says Laura Hoptman, the organizer of the Carnegie International. He has transformed the notion of conceptual art by taking his environments out of the museum to the ends of the earth,literally.
WENDY RED STAR
The Last Thanks, 2006 Pigment print. Artist Wendy Red Star works across disciplines to explore the intersections of Native American ideologies and colonialist structures, both historically and in contemporary society. Raised on the Apsáalooke (Crow) reservation in Montana, Red Star’s work is informed both by her cultural heritage and her engagement with many forms of creative expressionKATHRANNE KNIGHT
Kathranne Knight is a visual artist and co-editor of Correspondence Publishing. Her drawings speak in the packed way of a symbol– elemental, but ricocheting with associations and metaphoric possibilities. Impermanence, multiplication, and issues of representation are plumbed through materials as various as fly paper, silver, tears, and graphite. MIREIA SALLARÈS CASAS Mireia Sallarès Casas. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Mireia Sallar è s (Barcelona, 1973) lives between Barcelona and other foreign cities where she develops her artistic practice.Being a foreigner is an essential register in her field research that is the result of long term projects on such essentialtopics as
LINDA MARY MONTANO
Linda Mary Montano is a seminal figure in contemporary feminist performance art and her work since the mid 1960s has been critical in the development of performance and video by,for,and about women. Attempting to dissolve the boundaries between art and life, Montano continues to actively explore her art/life through shared experience,role
ANNIE LAPIN
Annie Lapin. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Annie Lapin was born in Washington, D.C. and lives in Los Angeles. She received a Bachelor of Arts from Yale University in 2001; a Post-Baccalaureate Certificate from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2004; and a Master of Fine Arts from the University ofCalifornia
AGUSTÍN ORTIZ HERRERA Agustín Ortiz Herrera’s practice is developed in the fields of audiovisual and performance. He is interested in a critical approach that challenges the semantic possibilities of narrative audiovisuJACOB FABRICIUS
Jacob Fabricius is currently working as a freelance curator, writer and publisher. He lives in Copenhagen, Denmark. Previously Fabricius was director at Malmö Konsthall, Sweden (2008-12) and at Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen, Denmark (2013-14), where he has curated a large number of exhibitions including solo shows by Rivane MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Museum of Non-Visible Art showcases remains unseen. Although the artworks themselves are not visible, the descriptions are readable, and open our eyes to. a parallel world built of images and words. This world is not visible, but it exists, as surely as thought itself exists. The Manifesto of MONA explains everything else about the whyand how.
HISTORY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ARTMUSEUM OF INVISIBLE ARTNON VISUAL ARTMONA MUSEUMSAND SPRINGS MUSEUMSANDY SPRING MUSEUM MDINVISIBLE ART The Museum of Non-Visble Art (MONA) will show artwork that is text based and is. designed to be seen with the minds-eye using a brief text on a card mounted on a wall. In essence, the art work itself is what the viewer sees in their mind, but the cue for what they are imagining is written on a card, mounted on the wall like a traditionaltitle
RIRKRIT TIRAVANIJA
Rirkrit Tiravanija. Photo of Rirkrit Tiravanija by Roe Ethridge. “Rirkrit Tiravanija is arguably the most influential artist of his generation,” says Laura Hoptman, the organizer of the Carnegie International. He has transformed the notion of conceptual art by taking his environments out of the museum to the ends of the earth,literally.
WENDY RED STAR
The Last Thanks, 2006 Pigment print. Artist Wendy Red Star works across disciplines to explore the intersections of Native American ideologies and colonialist structures, both historically and in contemporary society. Raised on the Apsáalooke (Crow) reservation in Montana, Red Star’s work is informed both by her cultural heritage and her engagement with many forms of creative expressionKATHRANNE KNIGHT
Kathranne Knight is a visual artist and co-editor of Correspondence Publishing. Her drawings speak in the packed way of a symbol– elemental, but ricocheting with associations and metaphoric possibilities. Impermanence, multiplication, and issues of representation are plumbed through materials as various as fly paper, silver, tears, and graphite. MIREIA SALLARÈS CASAS Mireia Sallarès Casas. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Mireia Sallar è s (Barcelona, 1973) lives between Barcelona and other foreign cities where she develops her artistic practice.Being a foreigner is an essential register in her field research that is the result of long term projects on such essentialtopics as
LINDA MARY MONTANO
Linda Mary Montano is a seminal figure in contemporary feminist performance art and her work since the mid 1960s has been critical in the development of performance and video by,for,and about women. Attempting to dissolve the boundaries between art and life, Montano continues to actively explore her art/life through shared experience,role
ANNIE LAPIN
Annie Lapin. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Annie Lapin was born in Washington, D.C. and lives in Los Angeles. She received a Bachelor of Arts from Yale University in 2001; a Post-Baccalaureate Certificate from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2004; and a Master of Fine Arts from the University ofCalifornia
AGUSTÍN ORTIZ HERRERA Agustín Ortiz Herrera’s practice is developed in the fields of audiovisual and performance. He is interested in a critical approach that challenges the semantic possibilities of narrative audiovisuJACOB FABRICIUS
Jacob Fabricius is currently working as a freelance curator, writer and publisher. He lives in Copenhagen, Denmark. Previously Fabricius was director at Malmö Konsthall, Sweden (2008-12) and at Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen, Denmark (2013-14), where he has curated a large number of exhibitions including solo shows by Rivane HISTORY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART The Museum of Non-Visble Art (MONA) will show artwork that is text based and is. designed to be seen with the minds-eye using a brief text on a card mounted on a wall. In essence, the art work itself is what the viewer sees in their mind, but the cue for what they are imagining is written on a card, mounted on the wall like a traditionaltitle
MONA MANIFESTO
Art is without value until it faces the market. The market purveys value. Money is banal until it has been spent. Money spent on art is money transformed. Money spent is mourned. This mourning is eased by art. We strive to enhance mourning. Mourning is a response to what is not there. An afterglow. INTERVIEWS FROM YALE UNIVERSITY RADIO WYBCX Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview Magazine ARTISTS – PAGE 92 – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART This is a continuation of the interview that began on 12/09/2015, It was recorded on Saturday, January 2nd, 2015. FRESH AIR – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Fresh Air. brainard. September 28th, 2015. Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry’s standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book. It has survived not only five centuries, but also theDOTTY ATTIE
Dotty Attie (born 1938, Pennsauken, New Jersey) is an American painter and printmaker. She has been exhibiting in museums and galleries worldwide since the 1970s. Attie’s work in the 1960s received some attention, but gained far more recognition after her involvement inA.I.R. Gallery.
BRAINARD CAREY
The interviews on this page are from his public affairs show on Yale radio, WYBC. Brainard Carey was born in Manhattan, New York, and grew up in Yonkers. After attending undergraduate art school at SUNY Purchase, he moved to Rhode Island and opened a gallery and began publishing a literary magazine. Carey then moved back to New YorkCity, where
DANA DEGIULIO
Dana DeGiulio. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Dana DeGiulio, 41, teaches painting in New York. Her book Nefertiti for the Blind was released by Attendant in February 2019. from Proposal for a Future Museum. Digital video still, 2013.TAMMY NGUYEN
Tammy Nguyen is a multimedia artist whose work spans painting, drawing, printmaking, and publishing. Intersecting geopolitical realities with fiction, her practice addresses lesser-known histories through a blend of myth and visual narrative. She is the founder of Passenger Pigeon Press, an independent press that joins the work ofscientists
DIANE LEWIS
Diane Lewis is Principal of Diane Lewis Architects PC, a practice established in 1983, and is a tenured Professor of Architecture at The Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture of the Cooper Union where she has been on the faculty from 1982 to the present. Lewis MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Museum of Non-Visible Art showcases remains unseen. Although the artworks themselves are not visible, the descriptions are readable, and open our eyes to. a parallel world built of images and words. This world is not visible, but it exists, as surely as thought itself exists. The Manifesto of MONA explains everything else about the whyand how.
HISTORY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ARTMUSEUM OF INVISIBLE ARTNON VISUAL ARTMONA MUSEUMSAND SPRINGS MUSEUMSANDY SPRING MUSEUM MDINVISIBLE ART The Museum of Non-Visble Art (MONA) will show artwork that is text based and is. designed to be seen with the minds-eye using a brief text on a card mounted on a wall. In essence, the art work itself is what the viewer sees in their mind, but the cue for what they are imagining is written on a card, mounted on the wall like a traditionaltitle
RIRKRIT TIRAVANIJA
Rirkrit Tiravanija. Photo of Rirkrit Tiravanija by Roe Ethridge. “Rirkrit Tiravanija is arguably the most influential artist of his generation,” says Laura Hoptman, the organizer of the Carnegie International. He has transformed the notion of conceptual art by taking his environments out of the museum to the ends of the earth,literally.
WENDY RED STAR
The Last Thanks, 2006 Pigment print. Artist Wendy Red Star works across disciplines to explore the intersections of Native American ideologies and colonialist structures, both historically and in contemporary society. Raised on the Apsáalooke (Crow) reservation in Montana, Red Star’s work is informed both by her cultural heritage and her engagement with many forms of creative expressionKATHRANNE KNIGHT
Kathranne Knight is a visual artist and co-editor of Correspondence Publishing. Her drawings speak in the packed way of a symbol– elemental, but ricocheting with associations and metaphoric possibilities. Impermanence, multiplication, and issues of representation are plumbed through materials as various as fly paper, silver, tears, and graphite. MIREIA SALLARÈS CASAS Mireia Sallarès Casas. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Mireia Sallar è s (Barcelona, 1973) lives between Barcelona and other foreign cities where she develops her artistic practice.Being a foreigner is an essential register in her field research that is the result of long term projects on such essentialtopics as
LINDA MARY MONTANO
Linda Mary Montano is a seminal figure in contemporary feminist performance art and her work since the mid 1960s has been critical in the development of performance and video by,for,and about women. Attempting to dissolve the boundaries between art and life, Montano continues to actively explore her art/life through shared experience,role
ANNIE LAPIN
Annie Lapin. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Annie Lapin was born in Washington, D.C. and lives in Los Angeles. She received a Bachelor of Arts from Yale University in 2001; a Post-Baccalaureate Certificate from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2004; and a Master of Fine Arts from the University ofCalifornia
AGUSTÍN ORTIZ HERRERA Agustín Ortiz Herrera’s practice is developed in the fields of audiovisual and performance. He is interested in a critical approach that challenges the semantic possibilities of narrative audiovisuJACOB FABRICIUS
Jacob Fabricius is currently working as a freelance curator, writer and publisher. He lives in Copenhagen, Denmark. Previously Fabricius was director at Malmö Konsthall, Sweden (2008-12) and at Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen, Denmark (2013-14), where he has curated a large number of exhibitions including solo shows by Rivane MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Museum of Non-Visible Art showcases remains unseen. Although the artworks themselves are not visible, the descriptions are readable, and open our eyes to. a parallel world built of images and words. This world is not visible, but it exists, as surely as thought itself exists. The Manifesto of MONA explains everything else about the whyand how.
HISTORY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ARTMUSEUM OF INVISIBLE ARTNON VISUAL ARTMONA MUSEUMSAND SPRINGS MUSEUMSANDY SPRING MUSEUM MDINVISIBLE ART The Museum of Non-Visble Art (MONA) will show artwork that is text based and is. designed to be seen with the minds-eye using a brief text on a card mounted on a wall. In essence, the art work itself is what the viewer sees in their mind, but the cue for what they are imagining is written on a card, mounted on the wall like a traditionaltitle
RIRKRIT TIRAVANIJA
Rirkrit Tiravanija. Photo of Rirkrit Tiravanija by Roe Ethridge. “Rirkrit Tiravanija is arguably the most influential artist of his generation,” says Laura Hoptman, the organizer of the Carnegie International. He has transformed the notion of conceptual art by taking his environments out of the museum to the ends of the earth,literally.
WENDY RED STAR
The Last Thanks, 2006 Pigment print. Artist Wendy Red Star works across disciplines to explore the intersections of Native American ideologies and colonialist structures, both historically and in contemporary society. Raised on the Apsáalooke (Crow) reservation in Montana, Red Star’s work is informed both by her cultural heritage and her engagement with many forms of creative expressionKATHRANNE KNIGHT
Kathranne Knight is a visual artist and co-editor of Correspondence Publishing. Her drawings speak in the packed way of a symbol– elemental, but ricocheting with associations and metaphoric possibilities. Impermanence, multiplication, and issues of representation are plumbed through materials as various as fly paper, silver, tears, and graphite. MIREIA SALLARÈS CASAS Mireia Sallarès Casas. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Mireia Sallar è s (Barcelona, 1973) lives between Barcelona and other foreign cities where she develops her artistic practice.Being a foreigner is an essential register in her field research that is the result of long term projects on such essentialtopics as
LINDA MARY MONTANO
Linda Mary Montano is a seminal figure in contemporary feminist performance art and her work since the mid 1960s has been critical in the development of performance and video by,for,and about women. Attempting to dissolve the boundaries between art and life, Montano continues to actively explore her art/life through shared experience,role
ANNIE LAPIN
Annie Lapin. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Annie Lapin was born in Washington, D.C. and lives in Los Angeles. She received a Bachelor of Arts from Yale University in 2001; a Post-Baccalaureate Certificate from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2004; and a Master of Fine Arts from the University ofCalifornia
AGUSTÍN ORTIZ HERRERA Agustín Ortiz Herrera’s practice is developed in the fields of audiovisual and performance. He is interested in a critical approach that challenges the semantic possibilities of narrative audiovisuJACOB FABRICIUS
Jacob Fabricius is currently working as a freelance curator, writer and publisher. He lives in Copenhagen, Denmark. Previously Fabricius was director at Malmö Konsthall, Sweden (2008-12) and at Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen, Denmark (2013-14), where he has curated a large number of exhibitions including solo shows by Rivane HISTORY – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART The Museum of Non-Visble Art (MONA) will show artwork that is text based and is. designed to be seen with the minds-eye using a brief text on a card mounted on a wall. In essence, the art work itself is what the viewer sees in their mind, but the cue for what they are imagining is written on a card, mounted on the wall like a traditionaltitle
MONA MANIFESTO
Art is without value until it faces the market. The market purveys value. Money is banal until it has been spent. Money spent on art is money transformed. Money spent is mourned. This mourning is eased by art. We strive to enhance mourning. Mourning is a response to what is not there. An afterglow. INTERVIEWS FROM YALE UNIVERSITY RADIO WYBCX Praxis is the collaborative name for the work of artists Delia and Brainard Carey. The Museum of Non-Visible Art is a project by Praxis, hosted by Yale University Radio with over 1500 interviews in the archive. ©Praxis Interview Magazine ARTISTS – PAGE 92 – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART This is a continuation of the interview that began on 12/09/2015, It was recorded on Saturday, January 2nd, 2015. FRESH AIR – MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Fresh Air. brainard. September 28th, 2015. Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry’s standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book. It has survived not only five centuries, but also theDOTTY ATTIE
Dotty Attie (born 1938, Pennsauken, New Jersey) is an American painter and printmaker. She has been exhibiting in museums and galleries worldwide since the 1970s. Attie’s work in the 1960s received some attention, but gained far more recognition after her involvement inA.I.R. Gallery.
BRAINARD CAREY
The interviews on this page are from his public affairs show on Yale radio, WYBC. Brainard Carey was born in Manhattan, New York, and grew up in Yonkers. After attending undergraduate art school at SUNY Purchase, he moved to Rhode Island and opened a gallery and began publishing a literary magazine. Carey then moved back to New YorkCity, where
DANA DEGIULIO
Dana DeGiulio. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Dana DeGiulio, 41, teaches painting in New York. Her book Nefertiti for the Blind was released by Attendant in February 2019. from Proposal for a Future Museum. Digital video still, 2013.TAMMY NGUYEN
Tammy Nguyen is a multimedia artist whose work spans painting, drawing, printmaking, and publishing. Intersecting geopolitical realities with fiction, her practice addresses lesser-known histories through a blend of myth and visual narrative. She is the founder of Passenger Pigeon Press, an independent press that joins the work ofscientists
DIANE LEWIS
Diane Lewis is Principal of Diane Lewis Architects PC, a practice established in 1983, and is a tenured Professor of Architecture at The Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture of the Cooper Union where she has been on the faculty from 1982 to the present. Lewis __ Museum hours: Only by Appointment__ 903 287 MONA
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Museum of Non Visible Art An Institution for Making and Exhibiting non-visible Art History Contact Us*
Museum of Non Visible Art An Institution for Making and Exhibiting non-visible Art History Contact Us*
Museum of Non Visible Art An Institution for Making and Exhibiting non-visible Art History Contact Us*
Museum of Non Visible Art An Institution for Making and Exhibiting non-visible Art History Contact Us*
Museum of Non Visible Art An Institution for Making and Exhibiting non-visible Art History Contact Us*
Museum of Non Visible Art An Institution for Making and Exhibiting non-visible Art History Contact Us*
Museum of Non Visible Art An Institution for Making and Exhibiting non-visible Art History Contact Us*
Museum of Non Visible Art An Institution for Making and Exhibiting non-visible Art History Contact Us*
Museum of Non Visible Art An Institution for Making and Exhibiting non-visible Art History Contact Us*
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COMPETITION
ART WORK
INTERVIEWS
THE MUSEUM OF NON-VISIBLE ART Composed entirely of ideas, the work that the Museum of Non-Visible Art showcases remains unseen. Although the artworks themselves are not visible, the descriptions are readable, and open our eyes to a parallel world built of images and words. This world is not visible, but it exists, as surely as thought itselfexists.
The Manifesto of MONA explains everything else about the why and how.*
OUR HISTORY
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The idea for this institution came from an artist collaborative called Praxis (Brainard and Delia Carey). Praxis is a husband and wife team known for performance and installation work, such as the giving out of hugs and foot-washing at museums and galleries and immersive installations. They live in New York and New Haven, U.S.. Note- Praxis did a kickstarter project in 2011 to support the museum with actor James Franco which was successful and helped the idea get international attention. That campaign is here - https://goo.gl/ZSNUJZ The Museum of Non-Visible Art is an artist project that will become an actual museum, an institution run by the founders. This is roughly howit will operate;
The museum will be set up like a traditional art museum with an educational department and a curatorial department, as well as administrative offices for capital project planning.Continue Reading
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GALLERY
Have you heard the story of the architect from Shiraz who designed the world’s most beautiful mosque? No one had ever conjured up such a design. It was breathtakingly daring yet well-proportioned, divinely sophisticated, yet radiating a distinctly human warmth. Those who saw the plans were awe-struck. Famous builders begged the architect to allow them to erect the mosque; wealthy people came from afar to buy the plans; thieves devised schemes to steal them; powerful rulers considered taking them by force. Yet the architect locked himself in his study, and after staring at the plans for three days and three nights, burned them all. The architect couldn’t stand the thought that the realized building would have been subject to the forces of degradation and decay, eventual collapse or destruction by barbarian hordes. During those days and nights in his study he saw his creation profaned and reduced to dust, and was terribly unsettled by the sight. Better that it remain perfect. Better that it was never built. The story is a fable, but its main idea — that a thing’s ideal state is before it comes into existence, that it is better to not be born — is equal parts terrifying and uncanny. – C.B.PRAXIS
JAMES FRANCO
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