(back to Curating)
I am pleased beyond words that the Diamante Arts and Cultural Center invited me to program “Modernism Redux” a group exhibition of NC artists which is the inaugural exhibition of their newest program, “Community Highlight,” a curatorial and exhibition project featuring curators and artists from the local arts community who are not Latino. This exhibition was made possible with support from Raleigh Arts and the NC Arts Council. I was also very excited to pull together many mediums and modalities which, like my own practice, mirror or reflect strategies created during the Modern era in one place. Pictures below and this Instagram reel by one of the artists, Jaclyn Sanders, is great also.





*Curatorial Statement
Modernism, born from the seismic shifts of the early 20th century, was more than an artistic movement—it was a radical reimagining of how humans understood and expressed their place in a rapidly changing world. Against the backdrop of groundbreaking advances in psychology, science, and technology, Modernist artists rejected tradition, embracing experimentation, abstraction, and the subjective. This spirit of transformation sought to challenge established norms and rethink society, connection, and identity in light of new knowledge.
Today, we find ourselves in a similarly transformative era. Advances in artificial intelligence (which was used to assist with this statement), instantaneous global communication, and digital connectivity have reshaped human interaction and access to knowledge, while ongoing social upheavals challenge outdated institutions and norms. The struggle for equity, inclusion, and adaptation to a diverse, interconnected world is testing societal frameworks in unprecedented ways, as communities strive to reconcile tradition with the complexities of 21st-century existence.
This exhibition, Modernism Redux, invites reflection on how contemporary art practices echo the ethos of Modernism, questioning tradition and exploring individual sensibility. It asks: What does it mean to create art in the spirit of Modernists today? How can this legacy of innovation help us navigate a world defined by rapid technological and social transformation?
In the spirit of addressing part of the context I’ve identified above (our current, rapid technological change) I made part of this project a direct interaction with an artificial intelligence tool, Chat GPT (which I’ve done before), something that would not have been available to, let alone conceivable by, the early twentieth century Modernists. I hope you’ll take a look at some of the analysis that I asked this tool to generate, they are eye opening. Each link is to a pdf and links are set to open in a new window.
Anna Payne Chat GPT analysis (Instagram @annapayneart)
Derrick Beasley Chat GPT analysis (IG @brobeas)
Jane Cheek Chat GPT analysis (IG @jane.the.artist)
Adam D. Cohen Chat GPT analysis (IG @yourpaladam)
Erin Fee Chat GPT analysis (IG @erin.fei)
Tina Marcus Chat GPT analysis (IG @primitivegraffiti)
Marriott Sheldon Chat GPT analysis (IG @marriot.sheldon)
Michelle Wilkie Chat GPT analysis (IG @ml_wilkie)
Be Boggs and Slater Mapp Chat GPT analysis (IG @illustratedbe and @smapp)