If print news is truly exiting the culture, it's making a real racket on the way out.
By now you've probably heard about the The Last Newspaper, the collective exhibition at the New Museum in New York City, "
dedicated to deconstructing the power and possibilities of the press." And you might have seen editions of the museum's New City Reader, a "
performance-based editorial residency," edited by Kazys Varnelis and Joseph Grima. And now the
pinkcomma gallery in Boston is exhibiting Newsstand, co-curated by Chris Grimley, Michael Kubo, Mark Pasnik and Mimi Zeiger.
I haven't seen these exhibitions. Living on the left coast, I'm experiencing them — where else? — on the web. But certainly the discussion on the respective websites seems smart and serious. Also romantic and wistful, a twilight appreciation of the sheer physical presence of paper and ink, an acknowledgment that "print" is no longer just a medium but also an era, and that the newspaper is now, as David Carr offhandedly refers to it today in the New York Times, "
an ancient motif" in the inevitably messy process of being reinvented.
The pinkcomma gallery hasn't created a website for the show, but a friend has shared some images.