For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009 - Saint-Martin Bookshop
For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009 - Saint-Martin Bookshop

Holder Will

For the Blind Man in the Dark Room... - Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 2009

Curated by Anthony Huberman at the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis in 2009, the group exhibition and catalogue For the Blind Man in the Dark Room Looking for the Black Cat That Isn't There explores the speculative nature of knowledge and insists on the importance of curiosity and the things we don't understand. Arranged around the premise that the world—and art—is not a code that needs cracking, the works in the exhibition center on the fruitfulness of not-knowing, un-learning, and productive confusion. David Hullfish Bailey, Marcel Broodthaers, Hans-Peter Feldmann, Fischli & Weiss, Rachel Harrison, Giorgio Morandi, Matt Mullican, Rosalind Nashashibi & Lucy Skaer, Frances Stark, Rosemarie Trockel and others present explanations that playfully don't explain. Dedicated to the inquisitive mind, For The Blind Man celebrates our ability to get lost and the stories we use to find our way in the dark.
Published in an edition of 2.000 copies, the book was edited, arranged and designed by London-based writer Will Holder and includes an essay by Anthony Huberman.

200p - EN - 34x21cm - softcover - perfect condition