Thought Drawings and Philosophical Sketches are prominent typologies in the world of Sands’ practice. While maybe better known for his body-based performance works – which, I suppose, are all PERFORMALIST SELF-PORTRAITS in one way or another – Sands also has a long-standing mark-making practice that is apparent in his stacks and rolls and Albert Heijn bags and now archival boxes full of drawings and sketches on A4 paper and drawing paper and backs of drawing pads and specialty papers and rolls of paper and sometimes even a textile (though the TEXTILE PAINTINGS remain their own separate typology).
More
The Working 2000 grouping has around 350 sketches; the Rolled Paintings probably around 150 (though we only ever catalogued 20); the Computer Drawings around 58; and the Working 2010s, well, we’re not sure as we had to stop at around 65 but it’s likely closer to 200. Then there’s the horse drawings – thousands of them – which we never got to, but which live through the META-ARCHIVE PROCESS IMAGES and across social media. It’s a lot to take in, trust me, I know. And that’s part of it. A single drawing or sketch might be interesting or funny or compositionally seductive but taken in their accumulation – and sometimes in their repetition – they become something else. They form densely woven theoretical tracts unfolding in painterly space.
The sketches are layered, messy, chaotic and often, as Sands says, “irritatingly large” for what they are. They mischievously confuse the terms of what we understand value to be. The drawings are singular statements, sometimes coming in a pair that sits in Marx’s chiasmus, sometimes tracking herstories, sometimes examining truisms and falsehoods, and always connected to LABOR. All are ‘language as figuration,’ breaking apart wrought boundaries between the acting body and thinking body, the gestures of the hand and of the brain, the feeling and the language, the sex and the cerebral. Or, perhaps better put, they make such boundaries fluid. All open onto a lovingly idiosyncratic world-making systems, as Amalia described: ‘gay gay gay’ as a world structure and a stuttering prophetic chant. IS THIS GOOD FOR ANUS?
When no one else was looking, the drawings and sketches became what Radna coined a ‘DITZCOURSE’ of their own. – MH.
Image of Studio object
Close
Image of Studio object
Like the horse drawings, the letterhead drawings are not always on letterhead, but share amongst them use of the handwritten text.
“I printed this stationary to use for my business, but never really used it for that. I used it to start making drawings on. My Mom had sent me fruit scented markers with animals printed on them, which I had used in my childhood. I used these to make the drawings, declarative statements to find my way.” – SMW.
Close
Image of Studio object
Like the horse drawings, the letterhead drawings are not always on letterhead, but share amongst them use of the handwritten text.
“I printed this stationary to use for my business, but never really used it for that. I used it to start making drawings on. My Mom had sent me fruit scented markers with animals printed on them, which I had used in my childhood. I used these to make the drawings, declarative statements to find my way.” – SMW.
Close
Image of Studio object
The pages are yellowed and cracked with age. Dutch Curator Erik Hagoort gave SMW a few huge boxes of these French gay liberation magazines from the 80s, and SMW intuitively started painting on them. There are many more than those listed in the archive.
“I had to throw away a lot of these, there were also Dutch gay liberation magazines in the boxes Erik Hagoort gave me, called ‘De Verkeerde Krant’ or so, (‘van de verkeerde kant’ was a Dutch saying for a queer person) but due to storage I could not keep everything as a resource to use. There are hundreds of these painted drawings, and they get quite a good response. Paul Thek = newspaper paintings, Karen Finley = same as Paul Thek, Erik Hagoort is the partner of Dutch artist Albert van Westing and AA Bronson showed a fondness for the drawings.” – SMW.
Close
Image of Studio object
Verso: exhibition poster from ‘Does Not Equal’ at W139 (design by Karoline Swiezynski). SMW work in the exhibition: Carolee Schneemann Methodology: My Body for Women/ Paintings With the Sound of Their Own Making/Carolee Schneemann as a Painter/Dedicated to Robin Wassink-Murray + Miss Lady Betsie Bubble + WASSINQUE INC. Our Little Feminist Unit.
“It was such an uncomfortable experience. It was 9 o’clock in the morning and no one wanted to be photographed. The photographer started crying.” – SMW.
Close
Image of Studio object
Close
Image of Studio object
“All this archiving… I think it is also a form of self-care.” – SMW.
Close
Image of Studio object
Close
Image of Studio object
In response to the Linda Nochlin 1971 essay ‘Why are there no great women artists’.
Email exchange – 22.09.20. “I am in such an art world bubble sometimes, even feminist art world bubble, that it is still fairly new and challenging to answer questions about my positioning in the general society at large in a materialist feminist sense.” – SMW.
Close
Image of Studio object
Some of the computer drawings have been printed and other have not. All could be printed at any scale in any material upon request.
“An elegant and typically strange solution for making work, which I was very proud of. I just type in a word document and print on cheap A4 printer paper. ‘Pure text, message as image’.” – SMW.
Close
Image of Studio object
Like the horse drawings, the letterhead drawings are not always on letterhead, but share amongst them use of the handwritten text.
“I printed this stationary to use for my business, but never really used it for that. I used it to start making drawings on. My Mom had sent me fruit scented markers with animals printed on them, which I had used in my childhood. I used these to make the drawings, declarative statements to find my way.” – SMW.
Close
Image of Studio object
The pages are yellowed and cracked with age. Dutch Curator Erik Hagoort gave SMW a few huge boxes of these French gay liberation magazines from the 80s, and SMW intuitively started painting on them. There are many more than those listed in the archive.
“I had to throw away a lot of these, there were also Dutch gay liberation magazines in the boxes Erik Hagoort gave me, called ‘De Verkeerde Krant’ or so, (‘van de verkeerde kant’ was a Dutch saying for a queer person) but due to storage I could not keep everything as a resource to use. There are hundreds of these painted drawings, and they get quite a good response. Paul Thek = newspaper paintings, Karen Finley = same as Paul Thek, Erik Hagoort is the partner of Dutch artist Albert van Westing and AA Bronson showed a fondness for the drawings.” – SMW.
Close
Image of Studio object
The pages are yellowed and cracked with age. Dutch Curator Erik Hagoort gave SMW a few huge boxes of these French gay liberation magazines from the 80s, and SMW intuitively started painting on them. There are many more than those listed in the archive.
“I had to throw away a lot of these, there were also Dutch gay liberation magazines in the boxes Erik Hagoort gave me, called ‘De Verkeerde Krant’ or so, (‘van de verkeerde kant’ was a Dutch saying for a queer person) but due to storage I could not keep everything as a resource to use. There are hundreds of these painted drawings, and they get quite a good response. Paul Thek = newspaper paintings, Karen Finley = same as Paul Thek, Erik Hagoort is the partner of Dutch artist Albert van Westing and AA Bronson showed a fondness for the drawings.” – SMW.
Close
Listings connecting to the keyword “Thought drawings” (623)
02180-1995…
Thought works
Letterhead Drawings
Pam Butler, Tracey Emin
1995-1998
Image of Studio object
Like the horse drawings, the letterhead drawings are not always on letterhead, but share amongst them use of the handwritten text.
“I printed this stationary to use for my business, but never really used it for that. I used it to start making drawings on. My Mom had sent me fruit scented markers with animals printed on them, which I had used in my childhood. I used these to make the drawings, declarative statements to find my way.” – SMW.
Close
02212-c201…
Thought works
Gai Pied drawings
A.A. Bronson, Albert van…
c. 2015
Image of Studio object
The pages are yellowed and cracked with age. Dutch Curator Erik Hagoort gave SMW a few huge boxes of these French gay liberation magazines from the 80s, and SMW intuitively started painting on them. There are many more than those listed in the archive.
“I had to throw away a lot of these, there were also Dutch gay liberation magazines in the boxes Erik Hagoort gave me, called ‘De Verkeerde Krant’ or so, (‘van de verkeerde kant’ was a Dutch saying for a queer person) but due to storage I could not keep everything as a resource to use. There are hundreds of these painted drawings, and they get quite a good response. Paul Thek = newspaper paintings, Karen Finley = same as Paul Thek, Erik Hagoort is the partner of Dutch artist Albert van Westing and AA Bronson showed a fondness for the drawings.” – SMW.
Close
02244-c201…
Thought works
Gai Pied drawings
A.A. Bronson, Albert van…
c. 2015
Image of Studio object
The pages are yellowed and cracked with age. Dutch Curator Erik Hagoort gave SMW a few huge boxes of these French gay liberation magazines from the 80s, and SMW intuitively started painting on them. There are many more than those listed in the archive.
“I had to throw away a lot of these, there were also Dutch gay liberation magazines in the boxes Erik Hagoort gave me, called ‘De Verkeerde Krant’ or so, (‘van de verkeerde kant’ was a Dutch saying for a queer person) but due to storage I could not keep everything as a resource to use. There are hundreds of these painted drawings, and they get quite a good response. Paul Thek = newspaper paintings, Karen Finley = same as Paul Thek, Erik Hagoort is the partner of Dutch artist Albert van Westing and AA Bronson showed a fondness for the drawings.” – SMW.
Close
02276-c201…
Thought works
Gai Pied drawings
A.A. Bronson, Albert van…
c. 2015
Image of Studio object
The pages are yellowed and cracked with age. Dutch Curator Erik Hagoort gave SMW a few huge boxes of these French gay liberation magazines from the 80s, and SMW intuitively started painting on them. There are many more than those listed in the archive.
“I had to throw away a lot of these, there were also Dutch gay liberation magazines in the boxes Erik Hagoort gave me, called ‘De Verkeerde Krant’ or so, (‘van de verkeerde kant’ was a Dutch saying for a queer person) but due to storage I could not keep everything as a resource to use. There are hundreds of these painted drawings, and they get quite a good response. Paul Thek = newspaper paintings, Karen Finley = same as Paul Thek, Erik Hagoort is the partner of Dutch artist Albert van Westing and AA Bronson showed a fondness for the drawings.” – SMW.
Close
02308-c201…
Thought works
Gai Pied drawings
A.A. Bronson, Albert van…
c. 2015
Image of Studio object
The pages are yellowed and cracked with age. Dutch Curator Erik Hagoort gave SMW a few huge boxes of these French gay liberation magazines from the 80s, and SMW intuitively started painting on them. There are many more than those listed in the archive.
“I had to throw away a lot of these, there were also Dutch gay liberation magazines in the boxes Erik Hagoort gave me, called ‘De Verkeerde Krant’ or so, (‘van de verkeerde kant’ was a Dutch saying for a queer person) but due to storage I could not keep everything as a resource to use. There are hundreds of these painted drawings, and they get quite a good response. Paul Thek = newspaper paintings, Karen Finley = same as Paul Thek, Erik Hagoort is the partner of Dutch artist Albert van Westing and AA Bronson showed a fondness for the drawings.” – SMW.
Close
00198-2001…
Philosophical…
Working 2000
Linda Nochlin
2001
Image of Studio object
“Art has to be risky. But this guy on Instagram told me, as an insult, that he 'wasn't afraid of my art.' I don't know if I needed anyone to be afraid. The people that I guess I want to be afraid of my art are the patriarchal.” – SMW.
Close
00232-2000…
Philosophical…
Working 2000
2000
Image of Studio object
Inventorying session + invited archivist (IA) meeting – 15.09.20. “How can you make it clear that there are multiple voices included in the archive, and not an institutional monolithic voice?” – MH.
Close
00265-2001…
Philosophical…
Working 2000
2001
Image of Studio object
Inventorying session + invited archivist (IA) meeting – 15.09.20. “My grandmother was an abstract expressionist painter, and she never exhibited her work in galleries, it was only for herself, and she only started painting when she was in her forties. This is the energy that I wanted to be part of.” – SMW.
Close
00297-c200…
Philosophical…
Working 2000
c. 2001
Image of Studio object
“Lineage as influence: existing in a line of other artists. The content is more important.” – SMW.
Close
00329-2000…
Philosophical…
Working 2000
2000
Image of Studio object
Close
00361-2000…
Philosophical…
Working 2000
2000
Image of Studio object
Close
00393-c200…
Philosophical…
Working 2000
c. 2002
Image of Studio object
“When do we become… an adult or anything else?” – AC. “It wasn’t about youth, it was about experience. I used to say ‘I’m 21, I’m 21’, and my friends would say ‘What will you say when you are 46?’ ‘I’m 46, I’m 46’.” – SMW.
Close
00426-2000…
Philosophical…
Working 2000
2000
Image of Studio object
“Is it a brain or testicles? Garbage brain Garbage testicles.” – SMW and AC. “It so sad… but it’s also powerful. When you name something trash, does it keep being trash? It’s a weapon. A good weapon.” – SMW.
Close
01237-c200…
Philosophical…
Working 2000
Jan Dibbets, Rudi Fuchs
c. 2000
Image of Studio object
“This is a weird one because it’s about selling a work to the Stedelijk — ‘I’m Proud of Myself’, a piece of gay portraiture (such a strange phrase — what is gay portraiture?)” – SMW paraphrased by MH.
Close
01435-2000…
Philosophical…
Working 2000
Divine
2000
Image of Studio object
Close