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Hello again – another working week is done and here we are for your dose of restorative freedom from documenta 14. Today you can sit back and listen to philosopher Antonio Negri speak to you in French about ideas of struggle, freedom and enlightenment (from the supermarket to Trump). Don’t worry if you can’t understand […]

What a week! Now is the time to unwind and to escape to Athens and listen to Malidi’s story of her life-changing journey and the light she shines on our own struggles. Malidi means “to always find a purpose and path in life” in Kawakwaka’wakw, the language spoken by the native people of the Pacific […]

Do you work the standard grind of Monday through Friday without finding any time to restore your body and mind with creatively or intellectually challenging activities? Sure, you may squeeze in a few pages of a book or a quick visit to a museum, but do you constantly struggle to undo the damage your hips, […]

1834    Ohio Penitentiary founded. 1870    The Ohio State University founded. 1878    Columbus Museum of Art founded (as Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts). 1929    Writer Chester Himes enters Ohio Pen. 1930    Ohio Pen fire kills over 300 inmates. 1934    Chester Himes’ short story about the Ohio Pen fire (“To What Red Hell?”) from the perspective of […]

For a project I created in collaboration with the Wexner Center for the Arts during the run of their exhibition William Kentridge: the Refusal of Time (February 3-April 15, 2018), I made a questionnaire that asked Wexner staff and visitors (both in person and online) to think about the passing of time in their lives. There […]

The clip is only one minute and six seconds long, and was uploaded on September 11, 2012 by someone calling themselves guysintrouble. A young Alec Baldwin is being led in handcuffs through a hallway with two guards and his female lawyer, played by Stephanie Zimbalist, an actress I have never heard of or seen before. […]

The demolition of the Ohio Penitentiary in Columbus was completed in 1998, the same year that Chester Himes’ novel Yesterday Will Make You Cry, set within that very same prison’s walls, was published. The autobiographical novel narrates the story of Jimmy Monroe, Himes’ white alter ego, who finds himself doing time at the Ohio Pen, where […]