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Walking Point

Ground Floor

FEB 16 - MAR 10

Walking Point

 

February 16th – March 10th, 2018

Ground Floor

 

Mary Ann Aitken             Wally Hedrick

Craig Kalpakjian              Paul Chan

Tetsumi Kudo                   Tony Conrad

Lee Lozano                        Dan Flavin

Pope.L                                 Isa Genzken

Andrew Ross                     Rachel Harrison

Martin Wong

 

The mechanisms and effects of war are often designed to be obscured, if not entirely hidden. Since World

War II, and especially since Vietnam, the state and military industrial complex have fueled a nearly

continuous, largely unremarked-upon series of armed conflicts, all the while implicating unwitting American

subjects in that perpetuation. At the time of this exhibition the United States is at war in at least six

countries in the Middle East and North Africa, and is embroiled in further battles throughout the world.

Mainstream and social media have made abuses of state power more visible in the past decade, helping to

stoke ever-spreading flames of dissent, like in the late ’60s; yet the media also tends to under-report on

atrocities overseas, and to uphold establishment power structures at home.

 

These structures often rely on private funding as well as systems and technologies developed for combat

and securitization that, more and more, saturate everyday life. But it’s nearly impossible to comprehend the

extent of this saturation, not just abroad, where civilians in the above-mentioned regions consistently face

the effects of violent, expensive imperialism, but also here in the United States, where the state saps data,

money, time, and other resources from its subjects in its efforts to maintain a state of war, a state of

exception. Forty-plus years since the provisional end of Vietnam, amid what Stephen Graham has called

“the new military urbanism,” vulnerable people across the globe are, in effect, often “walking point”

whether they know it or not.*

 

The artists in Walking Point  take different approaches to uncovering the aims and effects of the

contemporary militarized, corporatized state. In many cases coming from or looking to the American avantgardes

of the Vietnam era, the artists employ strategies of abstraction and appropriation to demonstrate

how the cloudy structures around us are built, maintained, and manifested—and how, in the shadow of

never ending war, those structures lay waste to the bodies and finances of the subjects they rely upon.

 

* “‘Walking point’ on patrol in Vietnam meant being the first to face ambush, sniper fire, or booby traps.

According to one account, this duty meant a man needed to develop a ‘sixth sense for danger’ in order to protect

himself and his comrades” (http://www.historybyzim.com/2012/07/walking-point-vietnam-1966/). The exhibition's

title refers to Walking Point: An Infantryman's Untold Story by Michael H. Cunningham (2016).

 

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