I wish I had pictures of the last few weeks. I had the honor or training curators at MoMA to conduct oral histories; they're preparing to meet curators and artists from around the world. Being in the secret chambers of a place I love was half the fun. Running around the galleries after the training was also thrilling.
Ecstatic Alphabets/Heaps of Language is an amazing show, if you have time to see it.
Here are some photos from
Paul Eliman's series on 'found fonts.'
This was one of my favorite parts of the show.
[From Imprint]
...the conceptual heart of the show, and the highlight, is Found Fount,
by the London-based designer Paul Elliman. Elliman has long been
experimenting with deconstructions of language and objects—creating
alphabets from photobooth portraits, for example. Whereas some artists
in the show disassemble language into its physical forms or turn it into
sculptures drained of immediate linguistic meanings, Elliman conjures
words from ordinary objects. "Dead Scissors," for example, collects
broken-off scissor handles that look like the letter P.
Although Elliman has been gathering the pieces of Found Fount for 23
years, this is the first time the physical forms have been publicly on
display. The show collects just a small sampling of the work, which
still takes up a vast vitrine: cracked pieces of plastic, rusted metal
U-rings, rhinestone-encrusted broaches, plastic beads, and cardboard
cast-offs.