A note from J.W. Mahoney
Corrections from J.W. Mahoney on “Report from Washington, D.C.” Art in America, May 2008
It's always lucky whenever the DC arts community gets any major art magazine coverage, and, with only a few exceptions, noted below, I stand by the edit of the text of this article. My image selection for the piece, however, was largely ignored by the editors. There are images I consider redundant by some Color School artists – the art world knows all these people by now – and, without any disrespect implied to the artists themselves, any images by artists unmentioned in the text were selected by my editors. The piece looks good, but it's not as I designed it to look.
Some textual corrections: Philippa Hughes' name is spelled that way. The gallery representing Tom Downing's estate is the Addison-Ripley Gallery, even as Leigh Conner has often featured Tom's work. And Michael O'Sullivan is noted as "the only DC art critic to be taken seriously by local artists," when the original text was, specifically, "the only Washington Post art critic to be," etc. And the original piece was longer, and included more artists, from Jae Ko to Borf, to Yoko Ono.
What's important is that our arts community continue to wake up to two significant conditions: first, that we're radically, originally, rich aesthetically, however slim or quixotic the validation feels from our greater social community and its media - and its museums. Second, that we have to validate (or keep validating) ourselves and each other first, before and whether or not an art world of 2008 or 2009 ever does.
J.W. Mahoney
2 comments:
Enjoyed Jim's piece in AiA but wonder why he neglected two innovative galleries: Project 4 & Meat Market? As one of many DC-area artists not mentioned (along with Melissa Ichiuji, Akemi Maegawa, Reuben Breslar, J.T. Kirkland, John James Anderson, John M. Adams, Rev. James W. Bailey, Lisa Blas, Janis Goodman, Lucy Hogg, Matthew Langley, Randall Packer, et. al.) I humbly accept my position as "barely emerging" and promise higher visibility in future. By the way, we share pages in May's issue as my "Letter to the Editor, along with Ms. Eleanor Heartney's riposte, was published.
Tim Tate, Amy Lin, Molly Springfield, most of the Trawick and Sondheim prizewinners... it also completely ignored the "Greater DC" galleries and just stuck to the District other than Arlington. Also mentioned a couple of artists who no longer live or work in the District.
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