This interview took place the glorious sunny afternoon of October 7, 2006, at the Spain Restaurant in Los Angeles, California, hours before the New York Mets swept the Los Angeles Dodgers to win the National League Division Series. The interview covers a wide range of questions: from Lawson’s artistic career, deanship at CalArts, and writing publications, to Lawson’s current thoughts on contemporary art, art pedagogy and the impact of market forces on artistic production.
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January 21st, 2007 by Sergio Muñoz Sarmiento in
Editorials
“Cubans are not going to fight over the last few crumbling homes,” said Nicolas J. Gutiérrez Jr., a 42-year-old Cuban-American lawyer in Miami who represents many business claimants and for himself seeks the return of two sugar mills, 15 cattle ranches, a food distribution center and more. “Out of the hundreds of people I represent and the thousands I talk to I’ve never met anyone who says he’s going to go back there and kick people out. On a base level, that would be immoral.” Immoral, perhaps, but illegal?
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January 12th, 2007 by Sergio Muñoz Sarmiento in
Editorials
An interesting week for visual culture, law, and community formation as elucidated by digital and real-property mediums. The New York Times reported on December 18, 2006, on Charles Saatchi’s ever-popular “Stuart,” his online website analogous to the now edificed, MySpace.com. The day before the New York Times also reported on Houston, Texas’ Project Row Houses, a project initiated and run by Rick Lowe.
While Saatchi’s project raises more legal questions than interesting propositions, Project Row Houses manage to invoke and critique both.
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January 6th, 2007 by Sergio Muñoz Sarmiento in
Residuary

For this installation, Asher proposed that the two horizontal rows of aluminum panels on either side of and on the same level as the Bergman Gallery windows should be removed from the facade and placed on an interior wall of the gallery for the duration of the exhibition.

Arguing that this project “points to the conditions in which architecture and art, as practices, have become irreconcilable,” Asher believes that the only similarity between these two practices is ultimately stylistic.
December 2nd, 2006 by Sergio Muñoz Sarmiento in
Editorials
In this book, Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben (1942- ) tackles the concept known as “state of exception” (“suspension of law”). Agamben is primarily known for his first and most influential book, Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life. (1) With State of Exception (2), originally published in 2003 in Italian under the title Stato di eccezione, Agamben continues the narration of a political and juridical problem, a four-part sequel of which this is the first.
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November 18th, 2006 by Sergio Muñoz Sarmiento in
Editorials
The trouble with style in contemporary architecture has three sources. One cause is artistic: the absence of a canonical set of forms sustained by authoritative standards of expression and representation. The second basis is social: the inability of any one group in society to get its anxieties recognized as the ones that count. The third root, and the most important, lies in engineering: the increasing failure of physical constraints to determine the shape of buildings. The attempt to disclose in the outward appearance the internal structural necessity — an ideal most fully satisfied in the emergence of late Gothic and early modernism — now seems to have lost its promise if not its point. As a result, the commitment to a particular style may appear to be both coercive and gratuitous. The architect’s stylistic positionings may seem tainted by narcissism and pandering.
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November 18th, 2006 by Sergio Muñoz Sarmiento in
Editorials
Ruben Verdu’s project raises timely issues not only of incarceration, confinement and the state apparatus, but also of sovereignty and expression.
An apt and current example of the functions of such state power is the recent case of Donny Johnson, a 46 year-old prisoner in California’s maximum security prison Pelican’s Bay.
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