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Artist Talk: Joyce Kozloff in Conversation with Claire Reddleman

Left: Joyce Kozloff, photo by Grace Roselli
Right: Claire Reddleman

On March 16, a Zoom webinar brings together Joyce Kozloff and Claire Reddleman to discuss Kozloff's exhibition, Joyce Kozloff: Mind Mapping, currently on view in the lobby at 375 Hudson in New York, through April 8.

Claire Reddleman teaches in the Digital Humanities department at King’s College London, working on digital cultural heritage, visual methods, mapping, and contemporary art. She recently authored Cartographic Abstraction in Contemporary Art: Seeing with Maps, which was published in 2018 by Routledge. Afterward, she carried out postdoctoral studies using visual research methods to engage with the history of France’s penal colonies. Claire’s Ph.D. in Cultural Studies from Goldsmiths, University of London, focused on Marxian theory, mapping, and contemporary art. Claire previously gained a MA in Art and Politics from Goldsmiths and a BA in History of Art from the University of Reading. She is also a photographic artist.

Joyce Kozloff is considered a major figure in both the Pattern and Decoration and the Feminist art movements of the 1970s, and since the early 1990s, she has utilized mapping as a structure for layering multiple meanings and examining the ways that information is communicated. Her artistic practice aims to fuse widespread cultural traditions, including applied and decorative arts, with an activist temperament. Kozloff has completed 18 public artworks, in the US and abroad. The most recent, a GSA commission, Memory and Time, will be installed at the new federal courthouse in Greenville, SC this summer. Recent exhibitions featuring Kozloff’s work include With Pleasure: Pattern and Decoration in American Art 1972-1985, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, CA (2019), traveling to Bard Hessel Museum of Art, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY (2021); Less is a Bore: Maximalist Art & Design, Institute for Contemporary Art, Boston, MA (2019); across boundaries, Draiflessen Collection, Mettingen, Germany (2018); Les Chemins du Sud, MRAC, Sérignan, France (2019); Pattern and Decoration: Ornament as Promise, Ludwig Forum for International Art, Aachen, Germany, traveled to MUMOK, Vienna, Austria and Ludwig Museum, Budapest, Hungary (2018-2019); Pattern, Decoration & Crime, MAMCO, Geneva, Switzerland, traveled to Le Consortium, Dijon, France (2018-2019), Crossing Boundaries: Art/Maps, Boston Public Library, MA (2018).

Joyce Kozloff: Mind Mapping is on view in the lobby of 375 Hudson through April 8.
Public hours are Monday through Friday from 9am-5pm. 

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375 Hudson Street is owned by Hudson Square Properties, a joint venture of Trinity Church Wall Street, Norges Bank Investment Management and Hines as Operating Partner. The exhibition was curated by Lenore Goldberg and Jay Grimm.

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