Season 8

Season 8 of Momus: The Podcast launches with Ajay Kurian, an artist, critic, and co-founder of New Crits, a platform for artist mentorship. Kurian speaks with Sky Goodden about a text by Robert Pogue Harrison on the art of the zen garden (Gardens: An Essay on the Human Condition, University of Chicago Press, 2008), and about his artist-writer influences including Robert Smithson, Paul Chan, and Hannah Black. He also touches on his recent response (in Cultured Mag) to Dean Kissick’s screed on identity politics (in Harper’s), and what it required to “clean the public restroom” in the wake of Kissick’s feature going viral.  “I think I was more upset by how bad the piece was than the ideas in the piece. […] I think especially for artists of color, like none of that stuff is new to us. And to think that there was massive progress …  it could all be taken away in a second. I’m not holding it as new solid ground.”

Kurian’s solo exhibition Peanuts (Deluxe) is on view at 47 Canal in New York through March 22.  

This episode is supported by CONTACT Photography Festival, Plural Art Fair, and Workman Arts

Momus: The Podcast is edited by Jacob Irish, with production assistance from Chris Andrews.

About the Guest

About the Guest, and more

  • Ajay Kurian is an artist, educator, and writer. He is the founder of NewCrits, a global platform for virtual studio mentorship for artists of all backgrounds and experience. He’s shown internationally including the Fridericianum, Kassel; The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; The Aishti Foundation, Lebanon, and many more. Kurian lives in Brooklyn, New York. He holds a BA from Columbia University in Visual Arts and Art History.

More by the Guest

This is Ajay Kurian's first piece for Momus.

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