A book with a black cover placed on a light gray background; white text on the cover reads "Studies into Darkness: The Perils and Promise of Freedom of Speech, edited by Carin Kuoni and Laura Raicovich" in a serif font. Red, blue, and green edge printing; green and blue edges visible.

Announcement

The Brooklyn Rail & the Vera List Center for Art and Politics: Conversations on Freedom of Speech

Feb 20, 2024

The Brooklyn Rail and the Vera List Center for Art and Politics are pleased to announce a new programming partnership thats revisit VLC’s vital 2022 publication on freedom of speech.

THE BROOKLYN RAIL & THE VERA LIST CENTER FOR ART AND POLITICS PRESENT: CONVERSATIONS ON FREEDOM OF SPEECH
FEBRUARY 20, 2024

Today, the Brooklyn Rail and the Vera List Center for Art and Politics are pleased to announce a new programming partnership. From February–April 2024, the Rail’s daily Zoom series, the New Social Environment, will host three programs that revisit Vera List Center’s vital 2022 publication Studies into Darkness: The Perils and Promise of Freedom of Speech (co-published with Amherst College Press). Building on the VLC’s Seminar Series Freedom of Speech: A Curriculum for Studies into Darkness, the publication explores freedom of speech through the lenses of history, poetics, and social justice, bringing together the writings and ideas of dozens of contributing artists, activists, curators, and writers. Two years after its publication, its central questions have only become more urgent and timely.

For Part I of the series, on Thursday, February 22 at 11 am EST on Zoom, artist Amar Kanwar will be in conversation with curator and historian Rattanamol Singh Johal. Kanwar prompted Studies into Darkness with the question: “Is there an idea, concept, or social construct that would benefit from a retreat ‘into darkness’—into a space of profound reconsideration and rethinking?” In this dialogue, Kanwar and Johal will discuss the potentiality of darkness as a mode of reconsideration and the role of text and image in Kanwar’s work. Through examinations of Kanwar’s artworks, including Such a Morning, The Torn First Pages, The Peacock’s Graveyard, they’ll reflect on the role of art in cultivating generosity and new imaginaries.

Save the date for Part II (March 14) and Part III (April 4) of the series. We’ll invite Rail contributors to organize dialogues that examine anew, with contemporary examples, the very relevant contradictions innate to freedom of speech discussed in the publication.

Part I: Revisiting Studies into Darkness: A Conversation with Amar Kanwar
Thursday, February 22, 2024
11 am EST / 8 am PST
Artist Amar Kanwar joins curator and historian Rattanamol Singh Johal for a conversation at a special time of 11 am EST, presented by the Brooklyn Rail in partnership with the Vera List Center for Art and Politics.

 

 

Related

A book with a black cover placed on a light gray background; white text on the cover reads "Studies into Darkness: The Perils and Promise of Freedom of Speech, edited by Carin Kuoni and Laura Raicovich" in a serif font. Red, blue, and green edge printing; green and blue edges visible.

Book, e-book

Studies into Darkness: The Perils and Promise of Freedom of Speech

Conversation, Workshop

Studies into Darkness: Manifestos, in Genre and in Practice

Mar 9, 2024

Seminar Overview

Freedom of Speech: A Curriculum for Studies into Darkness

Nov 12, 2018–Sep 21, 2019

Conversation, Screening

Amar Kanwar, Such a Morning, 2017

Nov 11, 2018

Book Launch, Performance

Studies into Darkness: The Perils and Promise of Freedom of Speech Book Launch

Jun 7, 2022

Conversation

Studies into Darkness: Editors and Artists in Conversation

Oct 13, 2022

Interview

“My language has disappeared.” A Conversation on Studies into Darkness

Amar Kanwar, Carin Kuoni, and Laura Raicovich

News

Art Papers: Art Isn’t Neutral, A Conversation With Carin Kuoni and Laura Raicovich

Oct 1, 2019