Set Margins'
Set Margins'
Because the original quotations are at times conflicting, this series of hand-drawn responses to each strategically universalist implication draws out a wide range of idiosyncratic symbolic approaches to interpretation – laying bare the struggle of different identities involved in the commitment to stand together.
“This is a delightful project about the promise and pitfalls of affiliative imaginaries. Daniel Tucker’s wry exploration of all the people and things we’ve claimed to “all be all now” should spark numerous and multifarious conversations!”
– Rebecca Zorach
“Strategic universalisms is great! Just when I thought it might get corny, it becomes more intense and interesting and goofy and quizzical and spot on and hilarious and all-too-familiar.”
– Brian Holmes
“The circle as the framing device they share implies a ground/tableau, and I am the viewer, outside, above, looking in… but the subjectivity is very particular, there is a strong sense of the mind of the situated artist thinking, and at the same time a (strategic) universal standpoint, like an aesthetic ‘common sense’, a mutual intelligibility of forms.”
– Eric Triantafillou