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Happy Holidays to all our readers!
Over the past year, we at CAS have been asking ourselves how we can reorient away from a perspective of competition and into one of community and support within the art world. How can we as individuals, organizations, and societies best relate to artworks and each other? We’ve done this by slowing down our process, building lasting relationships with local and international artists and writers, and exploring how we relate to individual artworks both old and new.
We’re thrilled to have been able to host the CAS Residency in Art Writing in person for the first time in over two years! This autumn we welcomed Samuel Brzeski and Claudia La Rocco to Stavanger, and they responded with evocative texts on their time in the region. We also invited critic Susanne Christensen to the city, where she reviewed the exhibition Experiences of Oil at the Stavanger Art Museum and spoke with us about her current work as the editor of the Norwegian Art Yearbook.
In several articles we narrowed our focus and invited writers to relate to a single artwork or project. Tommaso Speretta offered a moving recollection of Bill T. Jones work Untitled. Endre Elvestad and Benjamin Hickethier from the Stavanger-based collective Byverksted examined a public artwork by Andreas Bøe's that is facing imminent destruction. Derek Sargent spoke with CAS about The Grave Project, a performative research project with Jess Miley that highlights the lives of historical figures that have impacted queer culture. And in our first-ever video interview, social anthropologist and sociologist Merete Jonvik spoke with artists Hans Edward Hammonds and Maiken Stene about their project Paradise Rangers.
We have also broadened our areas of research on Public Art and Collections. Cultural journalist Kristin Aalen examined the project Snublestein commemorating Norwegian Jewish Holocaust victims. Art historian and curator Espen Johansen questioned the value of monuments and the role of maintaining an art collection in the public space.
CAS has highlighted inclusive and collaborative practices through Anne Theresa Tveita’s review of the exhibition Ruth Asawa – Citizen of the Universe at Stavanger Art Museum, CAS Editor Heather Jones’ coverage of Identity Pitches – a new book and ongoing collaborative project by Cory Arcangel and Stine Janvin, and Merete Jonvik’s reflections on power structures and the democratization of art at the opening of the new National Museum in Oslo.
We look forward to examining these concepts of community and relationship within the arts more intensely in 2023. In the meantime, Happy Holidays and happy reading!
All our best to all of you,