Home
Roni Horn: Wits' End
Barnes and Noble
Roni Horn: Wits' End
Current price: $45.00


Barnes and Noble
Roni Horn: Wits' End
Current price: $45.00
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
Horn's silkscreens of crowdsourced clichés and colloquialisms celebrate the instabilities of the vernacular
In the two series of drawings that comprise
Wits' End
, Roni Horn (born 1955) takes handwritten idioms, clichés and colloquialisms as her source material. Horn asked approximately 300 people to write down five of these vernacular phrases, which were then made into individual silkscreens. In
Wits' End Sampler
(2018), shown at the Menil Drawing Institute in Houston, Texas, in 2018-19, the idioms are screened in a unique configuration directly on the wall;
Wits End Mash
(2019) consists of compositions of 75 to 350 idioms silkscreened on paper.
These drawings engage the "moments when language fails and connotation migrates," with meaning that "delights in instability and movement," as Michelle White writes in her essay included in this volume.
is the seventh in a series of books by Horn gathering series of works, two of which--
bird
(2008) and
aka
(2010)--were published by Hauser & Wirth Publishers.
In the two series of drawings that comprise
Wits' End
, Roni Horn (born 1955) takes handwritten idioms, clichés and colloquialisms as her source material. Horn asked approximately 300 people to write down five of these vernacular phrases, which were then made into individual silkscreens. In
Wits' End Sampler
(2018), shown at the Menil Drawing Institute in Houston, Texas, in 2018-19, the idioms are screened in a unique configuration directly on the wall;
Wits End Mash
(2019) consists of compositions of 75 to 350 idioms silkscreened on paper.
These drawings engage the "moments when language fails and connotation migrates," with meaning that "delights in instability and movement," as Michelle White writes in her essay included in this volume.
is the seventh in a series of books by Horn gathering series of works, two of which--
bird
(2008) and
aka
(2010)--were published by Hauser & Wirth Publishers.