The New Social Environment#310

Sanya Kantarovsky with Ann C. Collins & Benjamin Clifford

 

1 p.m. Eastern / 10 a.m. Pacific

Artist Sanya Kantarovsky joins Rail contributor Ann C. Collins and Rail ArtSeen Editor Ben Clifford for a conversation. We conclude with a poetry reading.

In this talk

Sanya Kantarovsky

© Sanya Kantarovsky, image courtesy of Luhring Augustine, New York
Image courtesy of the artist and Luhring Augustine, New York
Known for his work across a variety of mediums, including texts and curatorial projects, Sanya Kantarovsky’s multifaceted approach often results in artworks that seem forced to reckon with their own embarrassment. The dark humor consistent in Kantarovsky’s work pits the sumptuous against the abject and thrusts private space—be it physical or psychological—into public view. Kantarovsky’s figurative paintings contain drastic shifts in scale, paint application, and stylization. Similarly, the artist probes his art historical predecessors: both canonical and relatively unknown painters, writers, and illustrators. The presence of these muses, which dot Kantarovsky’s compositions, simultaneously questions and indulges in a lineage of painterly impulses.

Ann C. Collins

Ann C. Collins
Regular contributor to the Brooklyn Rail’s ArtSeen section, Ann C. Collins holds a BFA in Film and Television from NYU and an MFA in Art Criticism & Writing from the School of Visual Arts. Her work has also appeared in Degree Critical and Variables West. Her film editing projects include Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold; Can You Bring It: Bill T. Jones and D-Man in the Waters, and the Netflix series The Pharmacist. Her film work has screened at Sundance, Berlin, and New York film festivals. She lives in Brooklyn.

Benjamin Carlos Clifford

Benjamin Carlos Clifford
Art historian and editor based in New York City, Benjamin Carlos Clifford received his Ph.D. from NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts in 2019, writing his dissertation on the controversial status of painting and its relation to a rhetoric of postmodernism that developed in the late 1970s. He has worked at the Jewish Museum and in MoMA’s Department of Photography, and has taught at NYU, Adelphi University, and Christie’s Education. Currently, he serves as an ArtSeen for the Brooklyn Rail, and is revising a chapter of his dissertation for publication.

❤️ 🌈 We'd like to thank the The Terra Foundation for American Art for making these daily conversations possible, and for their support of our growing archive.