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Like Magic

Institution
Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art
Grant Cycle
Fall 2022
Amount
$60,000
Type of Grant
Exhibition Support
Website
massmoca.org/like-magic/ ↗
Rose Salane, Confession 2, 2023 C-Print. Returned fragment of Pompeii, Courtesy the Archaeological Park of Pompeii. 77.8 x 108.5 x 4.7 cm 30 5/8 x42 3/4 x1 7/8 in. Framed Edition of 3 plus 2 artist's proofs (CI-ROS-0101) Image © Rose Salane 2023, courtesy the artist, Carlos/Ishikawa, and the Archaeological Park of Pompeii, in the context of Pompeii Commitment. Archaeological Matters. Photographer: Eva Herzog.
Petra Szilagyi, Untitled (Rabbit V/Ritual mask). Red oak and leather 19 x 11 x 9 in. Courtesy of the artist and HESSE FLATOW, New York. Photo: Jenny Gorman
Petra Szilagyi, Prayer Room, 2019 Photos: Terry Brown
Cate O’Connell-Richards, Miner's Crown with Sticking Tommies, 2019. Sterling silver, leather, rabbit fur, handmade beeswax candles, 10 x 10 x 2 in. Photo: Jim Escalante
Simone Bailey, Hometraining (Early Sketch), 2020

Mass MoCa’s, Like Magic addresses contemporary artists’ relationships to technologies associated with magic—including devices, talismans, rituals, incantations—and invites visitors to explore the points where technology and magic converge.

In times of uncertainty, people often turn towards technologies of magic for solace and strength. These technologies are not the props used for stage magic (rabbits in hats, scarves hidden up sleeves) but rather are tools (devices, talismans, rituals, incantations) created by humans to help them survive and thrive in a chaotic world. The exhibition Like Magic brings together artists who employ technologies of magic to resist systems that attempt to surveil and control people’s lives and stories, often because of their race, ability, sexuality, gender identity, indigeneity, or immigration status. Simone Bailey, Raven Chacon, Grace Clark, Johanna Hedva, Gelare Khoshgozaran, Cate O’Connell-Richards, Rose Salane, Petra Szilagyi, Tourmaline, and Nate Young use healing earth, witches’ brooms, AI, divination, and more to imagine care-full and joy-full futures into being despite the peril promised by the past and present.

“The Warhol Foundation aims to support the full range of artistic activity in America—from exhibitions at major museums to neighborhood projects by artist collectives. Arts writers, through the range and specialization of their individual interests, touch upon all of this activity—illuminating and interrogating it and bringing it into conversation with the public. Support for artists is not complete without support for the circulation and serious consideration of their ideas. The Arts Writers Grant program keeps artists at the center of cultural dialogue and debate—in our opinion, right where they belong.”

Joel Wachs, President

The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts
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