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The New York Public Library



presents



An Art Book Series
Event<http://www.nypl.org/events/programs/2014/04/23/art-problem-joshua-decter-john-miller-and-special-guests-art-book-series-event>



*Art Is a Problem*



*Joshua Decter in conversation with*


*John Miller, Chelsea Haines, *

*Paul Ramirez Jonas*
*, Ruba Katrib *



Wednesday April 23, 2014

6:00 p.m.



Margaret Liebman Berger Forum
Room 227 (2nd Floor)



The New York Public Library

Stephen A. Schwarzman Building

5thAvenue at 42nd Street

New York, NY 10016

917-275-6975

 www.nypl.org

*(directions) <http://www.nypl.org/locations/tid/36/directions>*



 Room 227 opens to public at 5:30 p.m.
All events are FREE and subject to last minute change or cancellation.



In New York-based writer, curator and art historian *Joshua Decter’s new
book,* *Art Is a Problem: Selected Criticism, Essays, Interviews and
Curatorial Projects
(1986-2012)*<http://www.artandeducation.net/announcement/art-is-a-problem-joshua-decter%E2%80%99s-new-jrpringier-book-and-book-events/>,
the author examines contemporary art in relation to its various
ideological, public, discursive, and social contexts. The book encompasses
seven chapters:*Institutional Critique® and its Discontents*; *Aporia* (art
as politics, the politics of art); *Everything is Social* *(Platforms,
Participations, Publics, Constituencies, Networks, Spaces, Sites,
Situations, Collaborations, Cooperations, Conflicts, Interventions…)*;
*Convoluted
Cities*; The (Un)De-definition of Art; *What Do We Want from Exhibitions?*; *On
the Curatorial Road*. Decter examines art’s paradoxical condition: art
problematizes, and is intrinsically a problem. From this standpoint, he
analyzes art’s definitions, functions, ethical entanglements, societal
aspirations, and cultural contradictions.



*In this event Joshua Decter is joined in a discussion by the book’s
editor, artist & writer John Miller, writer and curator Chelsea
Haines, artist Paul Ramírez Jonas, and curator Ruba Katrib.*



*Copies of* *Art Is a Problem <http://www.artbook.com/9783037641958.html>** are
available for purchase and signing at the event after audience Q&A*.



*Joshua Decter* <http://creativetime.org/summit/speakers/joshua-decter/> is
a New York-based writer, curator, art historian, and theorist who has
contributed to *Artforum*,*Afterall*, *Texte zur Kunst*, *Flash Art*, *The
Exhibitionist*, among other international periodicals. He has curated
exhibitions at institutions such as PS1 (now MoMA PS1), The Center for
Curatorial Studies at Bard College, Apex Art, The Museum of Contemporary
Art in Chicago, The Kunsthalle Vienna, and The Santa Monica Museum of Art.
His exhibition projects have been reviewed in *The New York Times*,
*Artforum*, *The Village Voice*, *Art Monthly*, *The Los Angeles Times*, *Art
News*, *Le Monde*, and elsewhere. In addition to *Art is a Problem*, Decter
is also the co-author of a forthcoming 2014 book, *Exhibition as Social
Intervention: ‘Culture in Action’
1993*<http://www.artbook.com/9783863354480.html>,
volume 3 of Afterall Books* Exhibition Histories*  series. From 2007 to
2011, Decter was Director of the Master of Public Art Studies Program at
the University of Southern California’s Roski School of Fine Arts in Los
Angeles, where he founded the new graduate program, M.A. Art and Curatorial
Practices in the Public Sphere. He has also taught at the Center for
Curatorial Studies at Bard College, The School of Visual Arts in New York,
The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, New York University, UCLA, Art
Center College of Design in Pasadena, and Bennington College. Decter has
organized many international conferences, including: *The Architecture of
Display: new approaches to exhibition design* at the Santa Monica Museum of
Art, 2006; *The Question of the City*, Museumsquartier, Vienna Art Week,
2006; *The Situational Drive: Complexities of Public Sphere Engagement*,
co-sponsored by inSite, Creative Time, and The Cooper Union, New York,
2007; and  *Participation and Friction: Rethinking Art and Architecture as
Public Culture* (*Architecture, Design Art: Strategies for Survival & Art
and Architecture in the Public Sphere of Cities*) at USC in Los Angeles.



*John Miller* <http://www.metropicturesgallery.com/artists/john-miller/> is
an artist and writer based in New York and Berlin. His work is featured in
the Hammer Museum's *Take It or Leave It: Institution, Image, Ideology*. In
2015, After All Books will publish his *Educational Complex*, a study of
Mike Kelley's eponymous piece, as part of its One Work series. Miller is a
Professor of Professional Practice <http://barnard.edu/profiles/john-miller> in
Barnard College's Art History Department.


*Chelsea Haines*<http://artforum.com/contributors/name=chelsea-haines%E2%80%8E>
 is a writer and curator based in New York, where she is a doctoral
student<http://gc-cuny.academia.edu/CHaines>
 in Art History at The Graduate Center, CUNY and a Presidential Research
Fellow at the Center for the Humanities. She is Art Editor of the online
culture magazine Guernica and Editor-at-Large of *The Exhibitionist*, a
journal on exhibition making. She is currently working on a range of
curatorial initiatives for the Vera List Center for Art & Politics at The
New School. She was the Education & Public Programs
Manager<http://curatorsintl.org/collaborators/chelsea_haines>
 at Independent Curators International (ICI) from 2009-12, and has
organized projects for institutions such as Prospect New Orleans, Portland
State University and the Shanghai Biennial.



*Paul Ramírez Jonas* <http://www.paulramirezjonas.com/> selected solo
exhibitions include Pinacoteca do Estado, Sao Paulo, Brazil; The Aldrich
Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, Connecticut; The Jack S. Blanton
Museum of Art, Austin, Texas; a survey at Ikon Gallery (UK) and Cornerhouse
(UK); Koenig & Clinton (NYC), Nara Roesler Gallery (Brazil); Alexander Gray
(NYC); Roger Björkholmen (Sweden) and Postmasters Gallery (NYC). He has
been included in group exhibitions at P.S.1 (NYC); The Whitechapel (UK);
Irish Museum of Modern Art (Ireland); The New Museum (NYC); and Kunsthaus
Zurich (Switzerland). He participated in the 1st Johannesburg Biennale; the
1st Seoul Biennial; the 6th Shanghai Biennial; the 28th Sao Paulo Biennial;
the 53rd Venice Biennial and the 7th Bienal do Mercosul , Porto Alegre,
Brazil. In 2010 his *Key to the City*
project<http://creativetime.org/programs/archive/2010/keytothecity/about-the-artist/>
 was presented by Creative Time in cooperation with the City of New York.
He is currently an Associate Professor at Hunter College, CUNY.



*Ruba Katrib* is Curator at
SculptureCenter<http://www.sculpture-center.org/home.htm>
 in Long Island City, New York, and was previously Associate Curator at the
Museum of Contemporary Art, Miami. Recent exhibitions include solo
exhibitions with David Douard, Radamés “Juni” Figueroa, and Jumana Manna.
Group exhibitions include *A Disagreeable Object*(2012), on the legacy of
surrealism, the body, and technology in contemporary art, with Anicka Yi,
Pamela Rosenkranz, Camille Henrot, Sarah Lucas, and others, and *Better
Homes* (2013), which addressed domesticity in contemporary art with Anthea
Hamilton, Josephine Pryde, Martha Rosler, Carissa Rodriguez, Neil Beloufa,
and others. Katrib organized the first comprehensive solo museum
exhibitions of Cory Arcangel (2010) and Claire Fontaine (2010). Her writing
has appeared in several periodicals including  *Artforum*,  *Kaleidoscope*,*
cura.*, and *Mousse Magazine*. Recent publications include *New Methods* (MOCA,
2013), on independent artist initiatives throughout Latin America, and
*Inquiries
Into Contemporary Sculpture – Where is Production?* (co-editor) published
by SculptureCenter and Black Dog Publishing London, 2013.



In its sixth year the program series *An Art Book*, initiated and organized
by *Arezoo Moseni*<http://www.nypl.org/events/programs/2014/03/12/bad-boy-eric-fischl-arezoo-moseni-artist-dialogue-series-event>,
is a celebration of the essential importance and beauty of art books. The
events showcase book presentations and discussions by world renowned
artists, critics, curators, gallerists, historians and writers.


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