After the Feast

Installation view of 4 sculptural objects in a grid-lined exhibition space
Installation view, “Joshua Liebowitz | After the Feast”
December 2016, Transmitter, Brooklyn, New York
Photo: Carl Gunhouse


Grid installation design for exhibition
Post festum: ‘after the feast; after the fact; it is too late.’
The viewer is greeted to the default settings by the operator cube. It is transparent, and looks as if it were created by the grid itself. The grid is disorienting, which, it is remarked, shouldn’t be the case. Artifacts. .bits of data. .some standing upright. Another, of unknown image form is thrown from a projection machine across the floor of the grid: as though it were a kind of shadow, given its semblance to an adjacent slab of material. Strange cuts on this piece of material; they seem to have been made not by a human, but by a computer. The viewer wonders: what came first, the shadow-looking image, or its oddly-cut, neighboring wedge? Beyond the operating cube rests a graph: or what could be a graph. It is hard to say whether it still contains any useful information to understanding the new situation, or is instead, the remains of some type of ritualized technology dependence. The viewer is confident that the latter must be the case with what they find to their left. Still recognizable are components of the mobile experience world devices folks had used. Protruding from what seems like an outgrown mess of grid, the parts surely did not get there by themselves. Perplexed, the viewer turns around towards the default cube. In what future version of this system will answers be provided?

Wireframe acrylic cube and vinyl text on floor at bottom and right reading "hello world" and "death death" Sculpture made of laser cut, black acrylic slices
Sculptural installation comprised of acrylic objects and iphone replacement screens Sculptural object comprised of Graphene powder on canvas, attached to wall
(Clockwise) Default Settings, 2016, Acrylic and vinyl text, 32 x 32 x 32 inches
Devotion & Livestock, 2016, Laser-cut acrylic slices, 6 x 65 x 35 inches
Firmware Update, 2016, Graphene nanoplatelet powder and acrylic on canvas, LEDs, 21 x 45 x 13 inches
The Managed Horizon, 2016, Acrylic, iPhone replacement screens, 45 x 80 x 61 inches
Photos: Carl Gunhouse