James Baldwin with a bust of his likeness by Lawrence (Larry) Wolhandler. The photograph was taken in Paris in 1975. šø by Jane Evelyn Atwood.
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James Baldwin with a bust of his likeness by Lawrence (Larry) Wolhandler. The photograph was taken in Paris in 1975. šø by Jane Evelyn Atwood.

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Writer Hilton Als has brought together a wonderful collection of works exploring art and language for The Writingās on the Wall: Language and Silence in the Visual Arts at Hill Art Foundation.Ā Quotes from several authors are included alongside the art, adding another dimension to the show.
From the gallery-
This group exhibition presents artists whose work explores the relationships between communication and language. In the curatorial text, Als explains: āfor this exhibition, I wanted to show what silence looked likeāat least to meāand what words looked like to artists.ā
āWriting and erasure have been important sources of inspiration for many of the artists in my familyās collection, including Christopher Wool, Rudolf Stingel, Vija Celmins, and Cy Twombly,ā says J. Tomilson Hill, President of the Hill Art Foundation. āHilton Als has identified a fascinating motif and introduced important loans to illustrate the rich history of these lines of inquiry into the present day.ā
In his accompanying essay, Poetics of Silence, Als probes the power of visual art to skirt the written or spoken word. The works included convey āthe sense we have when language isnāt working,ā evoke āEKGs of rhythm followed by silence, or surrounded by it,ā reveal āpainting as languageās subtext,ā illustrate āwhat we mean to say as opposed to what gets said,ā and āfind beauty in the tools that one uses to erase wordsāand then to make new ones.ā He reflects on his own entry into the art world as an art history student at Columbia in the 1980s, and his efforts as a writer and curator to create a democratic ālanguage of perceptionā that transcends traditional connoisseurship.
The Writingās on the Wall encompasses a range of mediums, from video installation to printed zine. Artists in the exhibition include Ina Archer, Kevin Beasley, Jared Buckhiester, Vija Celmins, Sarah Charlesworth, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Fang: Betsi-Nzaman, Ellen Gallagher, Joel Gibb and Paul P., Rachel Harrison, Ray Johnson, G.B. Jones and Paul P., Jennie C. Jones, Christopher Knowles, Willem de Kooning, Sherrie Levine, Judy Linn, Christian Marclay, Brice Marden, Agnes Martin, Claes Oldenburg, Ronny Quevedo, Irving Penn, Umar Rashid, Medardo Rosso, David Salle, Rudolf Stingel, Cy Twombly, Andy Warhol, Steve Wolfe, Larry Wolhandler, and Christopher Wool.
Alsā essay provides not only more information on the show and the art included, but also his own experience of learning about and experiencing art.
Below is a brief excerpt but it is well worth it to read the essay in its entirety.
Part of the experience I hope to evoke here draws a line between language, which is to say active contemplation, and being, which requires nothing more than your presence first and language second (or third). You know what being is. It happens to you all the time. You may be in a museum, or a public park, or sitting dully in your house, with ānothingā on your mind, and then there you areāa kind of walking phenomenology, language-free, but not feeling. In fact, you are suffused with feeling. Your feet are on the ground, and your body, released from the chatter of the everyday, is porous to the surrounding world with its various silencesāa world where everything and nothing speaks to you. The clouds; some pictures on a white wall; a beautiful, hitherto-unknown sculpture reaching for eternity; that blank wall standing between you and the wonders of a garden that manages to grow right here in the middle of Manhattanāthey all became part of your being, the self that is always on the verge of discovery, if only you can listen to its silences.
Silence says so much, if you listen. (From Marianne Mooreās 1924 poem āSilenceā: āThe deepest feeling always shows itself in silence; not in silence, but restraint.ā) And since I have been a writer all my life, itās a relief not to think in words sometimes, and to look at pictures, which do not so much deny verbalization but are without language, only the experience of here and now. Sometimes being simply means that we are somewhere, and we are porous to contemplation. When we think about visual culture or production, words arenāt the first things that come to mind. What does is the thing itself. And for this exhibition, I wanted to show what silence looked likeāat least to meāand what words looked like to artists. The struggle to speak, to say, to reveal language or an attempt at languageācommunicationāin a visual medium that has a complicated relationship to speech.
Alsā website includes his older writing ,but you can read more of his recent essays and reviews on The New Yorkerās website and he frequently posts on Instagram.
This exhibition closes 3/29/25.
Larry Wolhandler-Liminal 6, 2018. Oil, acrylic, pen, pencil on canvas. 36x36 in.