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Distributed for Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum

Adam Pendleton

To Divide By

Edited by Meredith Malone
With Contributions by Adam Pendleton and Isabelle Graw
A critical investigation of Adam Pendleton’s deep engagement with abstraction.
 
Adam Pendleton’s exploration of abstraction—through painting, drawing, screen printing, sculpture, language, book arts, and film—over the past five years constitutes the core of this study and the exhibition that spawned it. The book features essays by exhibition curator Meredith Malone and senior scholars Hal Foster and Joshua Chambers-Letson along with a conversation between Pendleton and the critic and theorist Isabelle Graw. These texts illuminate the artist’s fundamental understanding of abstraction as a conscious articulation of unimagined alternatives and a mechanism of both resistance and active engagement.
 
Painting is a central focus of Pendleton’s work, and Isabelle Graw, in her interview with the artist, elucidates painting as a “primary form” for Pendleton, noting how the medium conceptually and theoretically informs how he moves through and operates in other forms as well as how his works address viewers as “cognizant participants.” Hal Foster takes up Pendleton’s engagement with bookmaking as another form of activation, arguing that the artist’s creative compilations of texts and images activate readers and viewers, existing as resources to help us not only survive but flourish. Joshua Chambers-Letson’s close reading of Pendleton’s experimental film What Is Your Name? Kyle Abraham, A Portrait stimulates consideration of how artistic practice can be a means to negotiate with, dance with, and live with grief at the intersection of Black and queer love and loss. Meredith Malone contextualizes Pendleton’s recent work, examining his multifaceted approach to abstraction as a “philosophical disposition” as well as a device to realize a more expansive, chaotic, and fluid space for both artist and viewer.
 
With more than 1,400 high-quality reproductions and full transcripts of two of the artist’s recent films juxtaposed with extensive stills from each, To Divide By is Adam Pendleton’s most ambitious publication to date. It is published on the occasion of an exhibition of the same name at the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum at Washington University in St. Louis in fall 2023.
 

424 pages | 1400 color plates | 8.75 x 10.75 | © 2023

Art: American Art, Art Criticism


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Table of Contents


Director’s Foreword
Sabine Eckmann

Acknowledgments
Meredith Malone

Adam Pendleton: To Divide by
Meredith Malone

Plates I

The Artist as Anthologist
Hal Foster

Plates II

Queer Love and Loss in the Black:
A Dance with Death Is a Dance with Living
Joshua Chambers-Letson

What Is Your Name?
Kyle Abraham, A Portrait

Painting for Painting
Adam Pendleton in conversation with Isabelle Graw

Plates III

Ruby Nell Sales

Checklist
Artist’s Biography
Contributors

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