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Nothing in MoMA

Abraham Adams

Published on September 22, 2018 by punctum books

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Pages
90 pages
Languages
English
Dimensions
5⤫8 in.
ISBN (Paperback)
ISBN: 978-1-947447-75-2 (Paperback)
ISBN (PDF)
ISBN: 978-1-947447-76-9 (PDF)
LCCN
LCCN: 2018953767
BISAC subject codes
BISAC: PHO011010
Thema subject codes
THEMA: AJCD

Nothing in MoMA is a series of photographs captured in areas of Manhattan museums in which there are no artworks, written words, or people. Addressing the “grammar that organizes and secures our scene of looking,” in the words of art historian David Joselit’s introduction, the book imagines a composite empty museum or a narrative of marginal attention. Originally displayed in partial prototype as a children’s board book at Artists Space in 2015, Nothing in MoMA is here collected for the first time in the series’ entirety.

Evoking the history of indeterminacy as much as that of institutional critique, the deadpan composition of Adams’s photographs likewise recalls François Jullien’s theory of bland aesthetics, in a playful reductio of socio-institutional space to a bare literality. Both a visual essay on museum phenomenology and a performance document, Nothing in MoMA describes a choreography of avoidance, in which a conceptual constraint becomes a means of seeing and navigating concrete space.

Biographies

  • Abraham Adams

    (Author)

    Brown University

    Abraham Adams is an artist and writer based in New England. His books include Nothing in MoMA (Punctum, 2018), Before (Inpatient Press, 2016/18), and Intersubjectivity (Sternberg Press, 2016), and his essays on art and poetics have appeared with Artforum, Harper's, and Triple Canopy. His work has been exhibited and performed at Artists Space and the Poetry Project in New York, Galerie Barbara Weiss in Berlin, and elsewhere. Formerly the associate editor of Zone Books and an editor of Ugly Duckling Presse, he directs the gallery Time Farm at MIT and is an MFA candidate in the Brown University Literary Arts Program.

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Genres

  • Art+Aesthetics
  • Built Environments

Keywords

  • architecture
  • conceptual art
  • museology
  • photography
  • void studies