“A Wicked Problem” Exhibition

EFA Project Space

poster for “A Wicked Problem” Exhibition

This event has ended.

A “wicked problem” is a term used by social policy experts to describe an issue that has innumerable causes, is tough to describe, and doesn’t have a right answer.

Classic wicked problems include climate change and poverty. An unconventional wicked problem would be curating an exhibition. To curate is to propose a shared meaning under incomplete, contradictory, and changing individual imperatives. To curate is to ask a question with no “true” or “false” answer. To curate is to generate a problem that is resistant to resolution.

When an upcoming exhibition fell through unexpectedly, we decided to take this opportunity to think about the relationship between exhibition spaces, curators, and artists, and to consider what exactly it is that we do, as one of many nonprofit spaces in New York that facilitates exhibition-making. For A Wicked Problem, we called on artists and curators to dispose with all practical limitations and envision audacious, outrageous, and impossible exhibitions. We asked: “Please send us proposals for shows regardless of practical limitations—submissions may include any number of artists alive or dead (or none at all), use any locations on this planet (or off), and assume a budget that is limitless.” (Read the original call for proposals here.) Fourteen of those proposals are partially realized in this show, and were selected by jurors Naima Keith (Studio Museum Harlem), Prem Krishnamurthy (P! and Projects Projects), Larissa Harris (Queens Museum), and David Senior (MoMA Library).

The selected proposals include the idea of turning the gallery into a hotel for small animals, installing artworks on a snowflake or a roller coaster, and launching Richard Serra’s sculpture Fulcrum into orbit around Earth.

Above all, we think this show of shows will be a lot of fun. Please join us in speculating on the impossible.

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