Tag: Donald Kuspit

  • Revisiting The Dialectical Potato (2024)

    While recently preparing a lecture for the United By Potato Power conference in Cēsis, Latvia, I returned to a paper I had not carefully revisited in many years: The Dialectical Potato: Potato in Art, Art in Potato.

    Originally published in 2003 by Donald Kuspit, the essay was written while I was completing graduate school at Stony Brook University. At the time, I regarded it primarily as an art historical investigation into the appearance of potatoes within art and culture.

    Reading the paper again more than twenty years later was a satisfying experience.

    What I found was not simply an early survey of potato imagery, but the beginnings of ideas that would later become central to my work. Concepts now associated with POTATOISM, Potato Humanities, the Potato Art Spectrum, and the Think Potato Institute were already present in embryonic form throughout the text.

    I was particularly struck by how many of the questions that continue to guide my research today were already visible in those pages. Why does the potato repeatedly emerge as a symbolic object across cultures and historical periods? How can a humble food become a vehicle for mythology, identity, labor, humor, ritual, politics, and artistic expression? Why does the potato seem uniquely capable of sustaining contradictory meanings simultaneously?

    What appeared in 2003 as a graduate school paper now felt more like a foundational document.Revisiting The Dialectical Potato also made me realize that the project remains unfinished. Since its publication, more than two decades of new potato artworks, exhibitions, performances, films, photographs, and cultural artifacts have emerged, while countless historical examples have come to light that I was unaware of at the time. What once appeared to be a finished paper now feels more like the opening chapter of a much larger project—one that I hope to continue through a future publication, POTATOISM: The Global History of Potato Art.

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  • The Dialectical Potato Accepted for Publication (2002)

    Entering my last semester of graduate work at Stony Brook University, I have just received encouraging news: my paper, The Dialectical Potato: Potato in Art, Art in Potato, has been accepted for publication in Art Criticism thanks to the auspices of Professor Donald Kuspit.

    The paper began with a simple question that had occupied my thoughts for years: Why do potatoes keep appearing in art, and what do these appearances mean? What started as an attempt to chronicle the major appearances of the potato in the work of avant-garde artists gradually expanded into a much larger investigation. The more I researched, the more connections I discovered. Potatoes seemed to emerge everywhere—in mythology, folklore, religion, agriculture, conceptual art, performance, photography, politics, and popular culture. What many people dismiss as an ordinary vegetable increasingly appeared to me as a surprisingly rich cultural symbol.

    For months I immersed myself in the writings of artists, critics, philosophers, anthropologists, and cultural theorists. Ideas from many different disciplines seemed to converge and inform my subject.

    Admittedly, I was a bit nervous presenting such an unconventional topic to my professor, the art critic Donald Kuspit, but his response was enthusiastic. He described the paper as “unique and brilliant,” comments that have encouraged me tremendously. Although many people might consider the potato an unusual subject or symbol for serious inquiry, Kuspit’s remarks make me feel vindicated in pursuing the project. Three semesters studying with Kuspit and engaging the thinkers he introduced undoubtedly helped shape this text.

    The acceptance of The Dialectical Potato in Art Criticism makes me genuinely excited. I put a great deal of effort and creativity into this research, and publication feels like an important milestone. The paper grew out of years of looking at artists such as Vincent van Gogh, Joan Miró, Joseph Beuys, Sigmar Polke, Jörg Immendorff, Matthew Barney, and many others. What began as a simple observation developed into a broader investigation of the potato as a recurring image, object, and symbol within art and culture.

    The acceptance of this paper by a reputable academic journal gives me confidence to continue pursuing these ideas. For now, I am simply excited to see the article in print and curious to discover where this line of research leads.

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