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Grantees
Greg Allen
Bill Anthes
Negar Azimi
Debra Balken
Myron Beasley
Kirsty Bell
Amy Bernstein
Julia Bryan-Wilson
Susan Cahan
Benjamin Carlson
C. Carr
Jessica Chalmers
Caryn Coleman
Greg Cook
Huey Copeland
Christoph Cox
Douglas Crimp
Eda Cufer
Clare Davies
Geeta Dayal
Catherine de Zegher
Natasha Degen
David Deitcher
T.J. Demos
Eva Díaz
Carol Diehl
Jennifer Doyle
Alexander Dumbadze
Craig Dworkin
Darby English
Jan Estep
Michèle Faguet
Jason Farago
Lisa Farrington
Elena Filipovic
Elizabeth Finch
Mia Fineman
Martin Friedman
Leanne Goebel
Jen Graves
Tim Griffin
Joseph Grigely
Bruce Hainley
Ed Halter
Mark Harris
Robby Herbst
Matthew Jesse Jackson, Andrew Perchuk, and Christopher P. Heuer
Cinqué Hicks
Kathryn Hixson
Jeff Huebner
Gary Indiana
Paddy Johnson
Branden Joseph
Douglas Kahn
Farrah Karapetian
Jeffrey Kastner
Sonia Katyal
Jonathan Katz
Alexander Keefe
Grant Kester
Judith Russi Kirshner
Kelly Klaasmeyer
Liz Kotz
Jennifer Krasinski
Chris Kraus
Claudia La Rocco
Christy Lange
Quinn Latimer
Annette Leddy
Pamela Lee
Jesse Lerner
Glenn Ligon
Tan Lin
Lucy R. Lippard
Leora Maltz-Leca
Mary Warner Marien
HG Masters
Tom McDonough and Nancy Davenport
Jane McFadden
Gene McHugh
Fionn Meade
Christine Mehring and Sean Keller
Morgan Meis
Ara H. Merjian
Richard Meyer
Sharon Mizota
Sohrab Mohebbi
Barbara Moore
Alan W. Moore
Judd Morrissey
John Motley
Julian Myers and Edgar Arceneaux
Eileen Myles
Frances Negrón-Muntaner
Maggie Nelson
Molly Nesbit
Viet Nguyen
Meg Onli
Ara Osterweil
Judith Ostrowitz
Mark Owens
Zabet Patterson
John Peffer
Peter Plagens
Barbara Pollack
Daniel R. Quiles
Lyle Rexer
Frances Richard
David Rimanelli
Judith Rodenbeck
Joan Rothfuss
Raphael Rubinstein
Alix Rule
Andrew Russeth
Rebekah Rutkoff
Harbeer Sandhu
Mira Schor
Felicity Scott
Emily Eliza Scott
Cameron Shaw
George Slade
Irene Small
Valerie Soe
Abigail Solomon-Godeau
David Spalding
Anjali Srinivasan and Yuka Otani
Judith Stein
George Stolz
Jim Supanick
Michael Taussig
Roberto Tejada
Reiko Tomii
Meredith Tromble
Patricia Tumang
Margarita Tupitsyn
Jason Urban, R.L. Tillman, and Amze Emmons
Murtaza Vali
Tom Vanderbilt
Christian Viveros-Faune
McKenzie Wark
Lori Waxman
Harry J. Weil
Jonathan Weinberg
William Wilson
John Yau
Gene Youngblood
Stephen Zacks
Sandra Zalman
Alexander Dumbadze
Jack Goldstein and the Origins of Postmodernism (Article)
Alexander Dumbadze’s article will assert that postmodernism’s origins are not fixed temporally to the late 1970s or spatially to New York. Many of the signal themes of postmodernism—including the critique of representation and a nuanced sense of performativity—came to the foreground in the conceptual art produced in Los Angeles in the early 1970s. In particular, Dumbadze is interested in the way many conceptual artists based in Los Angeles conceived of individual subjectivity and the potential, or lack thereof, of one’s will. Jack Goldstein, a participant in Douglas Crimp’s 1977
Pictures
show and a defining figure of New York postmodernism, was first active in the Los Angeles conceptual art scene and was close to Bas Jan Ader, Ger Van Elk, William Leavitt, and Allen Ruppersberg. Dumbadze’s article will show that Goldstein’s art was a conduit of ideas from Los Angeles to New York in the mid-1970s. He contends that this development begins to reveal a contemporary art world similar to that of the present, where ideas and aesthetic advances are not geographically or temporally determined.
Alexander Dumbadze recently completed a book manuscript on the artist Bas Jan Ader, to be published by the University of Chicago Press, and is editing, with Suzanne Hudson,
Contemporary Art: 1989 to the Present
(forthcoming, Wiley-Blackwell, 2012). He is a founder (with Suzanne Hudson and Joshua Shannon) of both the Society of Contemporary Art Historians and the Contemporary Art Think Tank. He has written a number of catalogue essays and reviews for such publications as
Artforum
,
Modern Painters
, and
Sohbet: The Journal of Contemporary Arts and Culture
. In 2009 he participated in
Our Literal Speed
(Chicago). Dumbadze has recently lectured at X-Initiative (New York, 2010) and the Radboud Universiteit (Nijmegen, Netherlands, 2009). Dumbadze is an assistant professor of art history at George Washington University. He holds a PhD from the University of Texas at Austin.