A Brand New End: Survival and Its Pictures is a solo photography-based exhibition of new work by Carmen Winant.
The exhibition has been organized by Ksenia Nouril, PhD, The Print Center’s Jensen Bryan Curator.
You've got to dig to dig it, you dig?
A Brand New End: Survival and Its Pictures is a solo photography-based exhibition of new work by Carmen Winant.
The exhibition has been organized by Ksenia Nouril, PhD, The Print Center’s Jensen Bryan Curator.

Other Echoes Inhabit The Garden takes its title from T.S. Elliot’s first poem in his Four Quartets: Burnt Norton (1936) by way of Edward Said’s speech at Toronto’s York University in 1993. Said concludes,
Imperialism consolidated the mixture of cultures and identities on a world scale. But its worst and most paradoxical gift was to allow people to believe that they were only, mainly, exclusively white or black or Western or Oriental. Just as human beings make their own history, they also make their cultures and ethnic identities. No one can deny the persisting continuities of long traditions, sustained habitations, national languages and cultural geographies…Survival, in fact, is about the connections between things. In Eliot’s phrase, reality cannot be deprived of the “‘other echoes that inhabit the garden.’
Clare began to talk, steering carefully away from anything that might lead towards race or other thorny subjects. It was the most brilliant exhibition of conversational weightlifting that Irene had ever seen. Her words swept over them in charming well-modulated streams. Her laughs tinkled and pealed. Her little stories sparkled.
Passing, Nella Larsen
The willingness to stay in the fathom–Popova
I was in a band one summer
we never could harmonize
we smiled and kept playing
we loved our united disunity
a wild stubborn focus
Auguries Cast Aside by CAConrad
Jean-Luc Godard Was Cinema’s North Star by Richard Brody, September 13, 2022, New Yorker.
Arjun’s dissenting voice murmured in her mind, ‘There will always be poetry.’
[…]
forged together into a force that didn’t need an enemy to define it.
[…]
We run on stories about things […] look at everything you have to work with and find a new shape.
Babylon’s Ashes, James S. A. Corey


Related : ADOPTED LANDSCAPES, opens SEPTEMBER 15, at COLLECTIVE 62 ARTIST STUDIOS
